52,309 research outputs found
The Super-Kamiokande Experiment
Super-Kamiokande is a 50 kiloton water Cherenkov detector located at the
Kamioka Observatory of the Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of
Tokyo. It was designed to study neutrino oscillations and carry out searches
for the decay of the nucleon. The Super-Kamiokande experiment began in 1996 and
in the ensuing decade of running has produced extremely important results in
the fields of atmospheric and solar neutrino oscillations, along with setting
stringent limits on the decay of the nucleon and the existence of dark matter
and astrophysical sources of neutrinos. Perhaps most crucially,
Super-Kamiokande for the first time definitively showed that neutrinos have
mass and undergo flavor oscillations. This chapter will summarize the published
scientific output of the experiment with a particular emphasis on the
atmospheric neutrino results.Comment: Prepared for inclusion in "Neutrino Oscillations: Present Status and
Future Plans", J. Thomas and P. Vahle editors, World Scientific Publishing
Company, 2008. This version is 12 pages in REVTeX4 two-column forma
[Review of] John Anthony Scott. Hard Trials on My Way: Slavery and the Struggle Against It, 1800-1860
In the beginning the history of slavery was written in political and institutional terms, and very little attention was paid to what the day-to-day participants in this odious adventure had to say. With time, historians realized they had to take into account personal views, feelings, and reminiscences of the participants, but this realization brought about predominantly the recollections and opinions of white people. This was so because it was generally accepted that most black people were illiterate and had little to say for themselves. It was understood also that when they said anything, it would be exaggerated and self-serving and, consequently, would be of little historical value. Exceptions, of course, were made for people like Frederick Douglass, William Wells Brown, and Solomon Northrup because, clearly, they were extraordinary
[Review of] Cary D. Wintz. Black Culture and the Harlem Renaissance
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the control largely of his own objectives ... which were none other than the ideals of American institutions and democracy. This allowed for blacks everywhere to be called New Negroes but nowhere were there as many New Negroes as in Harlem. The activities of these people in politics, arts, literature, music and the like between World War I and the Depression Era came to be called the Harlem Renaissance
Introduction to Library Trends 16 (2) Fall 1967: Library Uses of the New Media of Communication
published or submitted for publicatio
Improving Health Care
This essay confirms Dr. Bornemeier\u27s personal concern as well as organized medicine\u27s concern for the medically deprived. At the same time it realistically appraises the progress which the profession has made to meet the medical-social challenges of our times
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