2,240 research outputs found
Health hazards of ultrafine metal and metal oxide powders
Study reveals that suggested threshold limit values are from two to fifty times lower than current recommended threshold limit values. Proposed safe limits of exposure to the ultrafine dusts are based on known toxic potential of various materials as determined in particle size ranges
Reply to ``Comment on `Hole-burning experiments within glassy models with infinite range interactions' ''
This is a reply to the comments by Richter and Chamberlin, and Diezemann and
Bohmer to our paper (Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 3448 (2000)). As further evidence for
the claims in this Letter, we here reproduce the nonlinear spectral
hole-burning experimental protocol in an equilibrated fully connected
spin-glass model and we exhibit frequency selectivity, together with a shift in
the base of the spectral hole.Comment: 1 page, two figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Global Energetics of Thirty-Eight Large Solar Eruptive Events
We have evaluated the energetics of 38 solar eruptive events observed by a
variety of spacecraft instruments between February 2002 and December 2006, as
accurately as the observations allow. The measured energetic components
include: (1) the radiated energy in the GOES 1 - 8 A band; (2) the total energy
radiated from the soft X-ray (SXR) emitting plasma; (3) the peak energy in the
SXR-emitting plasma; (4) the bolometric radiated energy over the full duration
of the event; (5) the energy in flare-accelerated electrons above 20 keV and in
flare-accelerated ions above 1 MeV; (6) the kinetic and potential energies of
the coronal mass ejection (CME); (7) the energy in solar energetic particles
(SEPs) observed in interplanetary space; and (8) the amount of free
(nonpotential) magnetic energy estimated to be available in the pertinent
active region. Major conclusions include: (1) the energy radiated by the
SXR-emitting plasma exceeds, by about half an order of magnitude, the peak
energy content of the thermal plasma that produces this radiation; (2) the
energy content in flare-accelerated electrons and ions is sufficient to supply
the bolometric energy radiated across all wavelengths throughout the event; (3)
the energy contents of flare-accelerated electrons and ions are comparable; (4)
the energy in SEPs is typically a few percent of the CME kinetic energy
(measured in the rest frame of the solar wind); and (5) the available magnetic
energy is sufficient to power the CME, the flare-accelerated particles, and the
hot thermal plasma
Performance of SM8 on a Test To Predict Small-Molecule Solvation Free Energies
The SM8 quantum mechanical aqueous continuum solvation model is applied to a 17-molecule test set proposed by Nicholls et al. (J. Med. Chem.2008, 51, 769) to predict free energies of solvation. With the M06-2X density functional, the 6-31G(d) basis set, and CM4M charge model, the root-mean-square error (RMSE) of SM8 is 1.08 kcal molā1 for aqueous geometries and 1.14 kcal molā1 for gas-phase geometries. These errors compare favorably with optimal explicit and continuum models reported by Nicholls et al., having RMSEs of 1.33 and 1.87 kcal molā1, respectively. Other models examined by these workers had RMSEs of 1.5ā2.6 kcal molā1. We also explore the use of other density functionals and charge models with SM8 and the RMSE increases to 1.21 kcal molā1 for mPW1/CM4 with gas-phase geometries, to 1.50 kcal molā1 for M06-2X/CM4 with gas-phase geometries, and to 1.27ā1.64 kcal molā1 with three different models at B3LYP gas-phase geometries
A linear programming analysis of human diets based upon major staple crops: sensitivity of low cost formulations to caloric, protein and bulk constraints,
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1971.Two unnumbered leaves included in paging.Includes bibliographical references.by John G. Chamberlin.M.S
RDF Querying
Reactive Web systems, Web services, and Web-based publish/
subscribe systems communicate events as XML messages, and in
many cases require composite event detection: it is not sufficient to react
to single event messages, but events have to be considered in relation to
other events that are received over time.
Emphasizing language design and formal semantics, we describe the
rule-based query language XChangeEQ for detecting composite events.
XChangeEQ is designed to completely cover and integrate the four complementary
querying dimensions: event data, event composition, temporal
relationships, and event accumulation. Semantics are provided as
model and fixpoint theories; while this is an established approach for rule
languages, it has not been applied for event queries before
In Solidarity
This edition of Next Page is a departure from our usual question and answer format with a featured campus reader. Instead, we asked speakers who participated in the Collegeās recent Student Solidarity Rally (March 1, 2017) to recommend readings that might further our understanding of the topics on which they spoke
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