7,843 research outputs found
Adobe Flash as a medium for online experimentation: a test of reaction time measurement capabilities
Adobe Flash can be used to run complex psychological experiments over the Web. We examined the reliability of using Flash to measure reaction times (RTs) using a simple binary-choice task implemented both in Flash and in a Linux-based system known to record RTs with millisecond accuracy. Twenty-four participants were tested in the laboratory using both implementations; they also completed the Flash version on computers of their own choice outside the lab. RTs from the trials run on Flash outside the lab were approximately 20 msec slower than those from trials run on Flash in the lab, which in turn were approximately 10 msec slower than RTs from the trials run on the Linux-based system (baseline condition). RT SDs were similar in all conditions, suggesting that although Flash may overestimate RTs slightly, it does not appear to add significant noise to the data recorded
A rotating helical filament in the L1251 dark cloud
(Abridged) Aims. We derive the physical properties of a filament discovered
in the dark cometary-shaped cloud L1251. Methods. Mapping observations in the
NH3(1,1) and (2,2) inversion lines, encompassing 300 positions toward L1251,
were performed with the Effelsberg 100-m telescope at a spatial resolution of
40 arcsec and a spectral resolution of 0.045 km/s. Results. The filament L1251A
consists of three condensations (alpha, beta, and gamma) of elongated
morphology, which are combined in a long and narrow structure covering a 38
arcmin by 3 arcmin angular range. The opposite chirality (dextral and
sinistral) of the alpha+beta and gamma condensations indicates magnetic field
helicities of two types, negative and positive, which were most probably caused
by dynamo mechanisms. We estimated the magnetic Reynolds number Rm > 600 and
the Rossby number R < 1, which means that dynamo action is important.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&
THE ROLE OF IMPORTS IN THE CHANGING NATURE OF THE U.S. FARM MACHINERY INDUSTRY
Agribusiness, International Relations/Trade,
Health Care Expenditures in OECD Countries: A Panel Unit Root and Cointegration Analysis
This paper examines the linkationship between health care expenditures and gdp for 21 oecd countries using panel cointegration techniques. the analysis accounts for the fact that health care expenditures are not solely driven by income, but also by medical progress, where different measures are used. in the extended models, cointegration can be established. the income elasticity is not different from unity, implying that health care is not a luxury good. this finding is robust for alternative proxies of medical progress, and various estimators of the cointegration vector. in addition, cointegration can be detected even between nonstationary common factors.health care expenditures; medical progress, panel cointegration, common factors
Solar-Like Cycle in Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars
I propose that the mechanism behind the formation of concentric semi-periodic
shells found in several planetary nebulae (PNs) and proto-PNs, and around one
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star, is a solar-like magnetic activity cycle in
the progenitor AGB stars. The time intervals between consecutive ejection
events is about 200-1,000 years, which is assumed to be the cycle period (the
full magnetic cycle can be twice as long, as is the 22-year period in the sun).
The magnetic field has no dynamical effects; it regulates the mass loss rate by
the formation of magnetic cool spots. The enhanced magnetic activity at the
cycle maximum results in more magnetic cool spots, which facilitate the
formation of dust, hence increasing the mass loss rate. The strong magnetic
activity implies that the AGB star is spun up by a companion, via a tidal or
common envelope interaction. The strong interaction with a stellar companion
explains the observations that the concentric semi-periodic shells are found
mainly in bipolar PNs.Comment: 10 pages, submitted to Ap
Finding the First Stars: The Hamburg/ESO Objective Prism Survey
We report on a search for extremely metal-poor ([Fe/H]<-3.0) turnoff stars in
the Hamburg/ESO objective prism survey (HES). Metal-poor stars are selected by
automatic spectral classification. Extensive simulations show that the
selection efficiency for turnoff stars of [Fe/H]25% at B<16.5. Since
the HES is more than 1 mag deeper than the HK survey of Beers et al. (1992),
the HES offers the possibility to efficiently increase the total number of
metal-poor stars by at least a factor of 4.Comment: To appear in: Proceedings of ESO/MPA conference "The First Stars". 2
pages, 1 figur
Cosmological Reionization
In popular cosmological scenarios, some time beyond a redshift of 10, stars
within protogalaxies created the first heavy elements; these systems, together
perhaps with an early population of quasars, generated the ultraviolet
radiation and mechanical energy that reheated and reionized the cosmos. The
history of the Universe during and soon after these crucial formative stages is
recorded in the all-pervading intergalactic medium (IGM), which contains most
of the ordinary baryonic material left over from the big bang. Throughout the
epoch of structure formation, the IGM becomes clumpy and acquires peculiar
motions under the influence of gravity, and acts as a source for the gas that
gets accreted, cools, and forms stars within galaxies, and as a sink for the
metal enriched material, energy, and radiation which they eject.Comment: LateX, 13 pages, 4 figures, slightly revised version (corrected
several typos), to appear in Phil. Trans. R. Soc. London A (2000) 35
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