805 research outputs found

    Redesigning the Future of Experiential Learning

    Get PDF
    In response to the call for more work-ready graduates, many academic programs have looked toward experiential learning to close the gap between theory and practice. Rather than sending students off campus, we have chosen instead to create an on-campus experience consisting of a series of two credit courses. Each course is the outcome of a collaborative process that relies on the expertise and experience of industry professionals who help develop and ultimately deliver a customized learning experience. These activity-based, guided learning experiences provide an inside look at how core knowledge can be applied to real work processes and problems

    High energy, high current synchrotron injector

    Full text link
    The construction and testing of a pulsed 450 keV injector for an electron synchrotron are described. High voltage is obtained with a spark gap and pulse transformer. The electron-optical system consists of a series of electrodes connected to a voltage divider programmed so as to approximate the field in a space-charge-limited plane diode. Quadrupole lenses are used to optimize the shape of the beam spot and to counteract space-charge spreading. Details are given of the dependence of beam current on energy and on filament power.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/49108/2/siv36i7p306.pd

    Gamma-ray transitions in 32S following proton capture by 31P

    Full text link
    Gamma-ray spectra, angular distributions and coincidence spectra have been studied in the reaction 31P(p, [gamma]) 32S at bombarding energies of 355, 440 and 540 keV. Several cascades have been identified and branching ratios have been measured. The spins and parities of the 9.39, 9.29, 9.21 and 4.70 MeV levels in 32S are found to be 2(-), 1+, (1+) and 1+, respectively.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/32258/1/0000320.pd

    Cost of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus at individual farm level – An economic disease model

    Get PDF
    Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is reported to be among the diseases with the highest economic impact in modern pig production worldwide. Yet, the economic impact of the disease at farm level is not well understood as, especially in endemically infected pig herds, losses are often not obvious. It is therefore difficult for farmers and veterinarians to appraise whether control measures such as virus elimination or vaccination will be economically beneficial for their farm. Thus, aim of this study was to develop an epidemiological and economic model to determine the costs of PRRS for an individual pig farm. In a production model that simulates farm outputs, depending on farm type, farrowing rhythm or length of suckling period, an epidemiological model was integrated. In this, the impact of PRRS infection on health and productivity was estimated. Financial losses were calculated in a gross margin analysis and a partial budget analysis based on the changes in health and production parameters assumed for different PRRS disease severities. Data on the effects of endemic infection on reproductive performance, morbidity and mortality, daily weight gain, feed efficiency and treatment costs were obtained from literature and expert opinion. Nine different disease scenarios were calculated, in which a farrow-to-finish farm (1000 sows) was slightly, moderately or severely affected by PRRS, based on changes in health and production parameters, and either in breeding, in nursery and fattening or in all three stages together. Annual losses ranged from a median of € 75′724 (90% confidence interval (C.I.): € 78′885–€ 122′946), if the farm was slightly affected in nursery and fattening, to a median of € 650′090 (90% C.I. € 603′585–€ 698′379), if the farm was severely affected in all stages. Overall losses were slightly higher if breeding was affected than if nursery and fattening were affected. In a herd moderately affected in all stages, median losses in breeding were € 46′021 and € 422′387 in fattening, whereas costs were € 25′435 lower in nursery, compared with a PRRSV-negative farm. The model is a valuable decision-support tool for farmers and veterinarians if a farm is proven to be affected by PRRS (confirmed by laboratory diagnosis). The output can help to understand the need for interventions in case of significant impact on the profitability of their enterprise. The model can support veterinarians in their communication to farmers in cases where costly disease control measures are justified

    Two-neutron transfer reaction mechanisms in 12^{12}C(6^6He,4^{4}He)14^{14}C using a realistic three-body 6^{6}He model

    Get PDF
    The reaction mechanisms of the two-neutron transfer reaction 12^{12}C(6^6He,4^4He) have been studied at 30 MeV at the TRIUMF ISAC-II facility using the SHARC charged-particle detector array. Optical potential parameters have been extracted from the analysis of the elastic scattering angular distribution. The new potential has been applied to the study of the transfer angular distribution to the 22+^+_2 8.32 MeV state in 14^{14}C, using a realistic 3-body 6^6He model and advanced shell model calculations for the carbon structure, allowing to calculate the relative contributions of the simultaneous and sequential two-neutron transfer. The reaction model provides a good description of the 30 MeV data set and shows that the simultaneous process is the dominant transfer mechanism. Sensitivity tests of optical potential parameters show that the final results can be considerably affected by the choice of optical potentials. A reanalysis of data measured previously at 18 MeV however, is not as well described by the same reaction model, suggesting that one needs to include higher order effects in the reaction mechanism.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure

    Parents just don't understand: Parent-offspring conflict over mate choice

    Get PDF
    Previous research reveals that children and parents are not in complete agreement over which traits are most important for the mate of the child. Children tend to prefer traits that suggest genetic quality, whereas parents prefer characteristics that suggest high parental investment and cooperation with the ingroup. Using a sample of parents, mothers (n = 234) and fathers (n =240) the hypothesis was supported; parents perceived characteristics indicating a lack of genetic quality as being more unacceptable to the child, while characteristics indicating a lack of parental investment and cooperation with the ingroup were more unacceptable to themselves. Sex differences between mothers and fathers and sons and daughters were explored
    corecore