12,606 research outputs found
Human Capital and Growth in the Post-Bellum South: A Separate but Unequal Story
This paper tests the importance of human capital in explaining convergence across states of the United States after 1880. Human capital levels are found to matter not only to a state's income level but also to its growth rate through technological diffusion. The South's low human capital levels immediately after the Civil War, combined with its active resistance in the Post-Bellum period to educating its population, both white and black, played an important role in reducing the speed of Southern conditional convergence toward the rest of the nation after the Civil War.
III-V Solar Cells
III-V materials show a wide range of gaps making them ideal for the design of
high efficiency solar cells. This chapter reviews relevant growth methods and
material properties of these materials and discusses methods of combining
heterogeneous materials, demonstrating the flexibility of design possible with
these materials. The fundamental loss mechanisms of solar cells are analysed
and quantified as a prelude to analysing high efficiency cell designs in
single, tandem, and triple junction solar cells. The detailed analysis of loss
mechanisms is used to obtain understanding of the limiting behaviour of these
designs, and show that bulk cells remain dominated by non-radiative losses
despite unity ideality factors. To conclude, this is contrasted with the
operating regime of nanostructured solar cells which can be shown to operate in
a radiatively dominated mode, and which therefore approach ideal solar cell
efficiency limits.Comment: Draft of chapter in Materials Challenges: Inorganic Photovoltaic
Solar Energy - RSC Energy and Environment Series v. 1
Pseudomonas aeruginosa can be detected in a polymicrobial competition model using impedance spectroscopy with a novel biosensor
Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) is a powerful technique that can be used to elicit information about an electrode interface. In this article, we highlight six principal processes by which the presence of microorganisms can affect impedance and show how one of these - the production of electroactive metabolites - changes the impedance signature of culture media containing Pseudomonas aeruginosa. EIS, was used in conjunction with a low cost screen printed carbon sensor to detect the presence of P. aeruginosa when grown in isolation or as part of a polymicrobial infection with Staphylococcus aureus. By comparing the electrode to a starting measurement, we were able to identify an impedance signature characteristic of P. aeruginosa. Furthermore, we are able to show that one of the changes in the impedance signature is due to pyocyanin and associated phenazine compounds. The findings of this study indicate that it might be possible to develop a low cost sensor for the detection of P. aeruginosa in important point of care diagnostic applications. In particular, we suggest that a development of the device described here could be used in a polymicrobial clinical sample such as sputum from a CF patient to detect P. aeruginosa
Changes in glass consumption in Pergamon (Turkey) from Hellenistic to late Byzantine and Islamic times
We present compositional data for nearly 100 glass samples from Pergamon, western Turkey, spanning 1500 years from the Hellenistic to Late Byzantine and Islamic periods. The data shows the use of already-known Roman glass groups during the first half of the time frame, for imported vessels as well as locally worked glass. No compositional change is seen related to the introduction of glass blowing for either of the glass groups in use during this time. During the first half of the 1st millennium AD, two previously little-known boron- and alumina-rich compositional groups emerge. These glass groups, thought to be regionally produced, dominate glass compositions in Pergamon during the mid-to late Byzantine and Islamic periods, indicating a major shift in glass supply and a fragmentation of the economy into more regional units. Plant-ash glass, from the 9th century AD replacing mineral natron glass in the Levant, plays only a minor role in Byzantine and Islamic Pergamon
Market Response to Two Alternative Packages for U.S. No. 2 Grapefruit
Packages, U.S. No. 2 Grapefruits, Grapefruit, Alternatives, Crop Production/Industries, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Marketing,
An Atypical Presentation of a Rare Disease
A 76-year-old white woman presented for evaluation of asymptomatic skin lesions on her right shin, right buttock, and left arm. All lesions initially underwent slow growth and plateaued and then remained stable in size. A complete review of systems revealed normal results. She had 3 well-demarcated erythematous round plaques ranging from 1.5 to 3 cm, all with a central depression, yellow hue, and prominent telangiectasias (Figs 1 and 2). An excisional biopsy was performed. Histologically, there were palisading granulomas within the papillary and reticular dermis, predominantly composed of a histiocytic cell population with multiple large giant cells (S100-; Fig 3)
Designing III-V Multijunction Solar Cells on Silicon
Single junction Si solar cells dominate photovoltaics but are close to their
efficiency limits. This paper presents ideal limiting efficiencies for tandem
and triple junction multijunction solar cells subject only to the constraint of
the Si bandgap and therefore recommending optimum cell structures departing
from the single junction ideal. The use of III-V materials is considered, using
a novel growth method capable of yielding low defect density III-V layers on
Si. In order to evaluate the real potential of these proposed multijunction
designs, a quantitative model is presented, the strength of which is the joint
modelling of external quantum efficiency and current-voltage characteristics
using the same parameters. The method yields a single parameter fit in terms of
the Shockley-Read-Hall lifetime. This model is validated by fitting
experimental data of external quantum efficiency, dark current, and conversion
efficiency of world record tandem and triple junction cells under terrestrial
solar spectra without concentration. We apply this quantitative model to the
design of tandem and triple junction solar cells, yielding cell designs capable
of reaching efficiencies without concentration of 32% for the best tandem cell
and 36% for the best triple junction cell. This demonstrates that efficiencies
within a few percent of world records are realistically achievable without the
use of concentrating optics, with growth methods being developed for
multijunction cells combining III-V and Si materials.Comment: Preprint of the paper submitted to the journal Progress in
Photovoltaics, selected by the Executive Committee of the 28th EU PVSEC 2013
for submission to Progress in Photovoltaics. 10 pages, 7 figure
Adjacent channel interference due to wavelength drift of a tunable laser in base-band and subcarrier multiplexed system
In this paper, we examine the amplitude and the duration of a wavelength drift of the tunable lasers at the most crucial moment, which is the time after the wavelength switch and measure the impact of this drift on the performance of the DWDM system spaced by 12.5 GHz. The adjacent channel interference is examined for two cases: firstly when the TL is modulated with base-band (BB) data, secondly when subcarrier multiplexing (SCM) is use
Fast tunable lasers in radio-over-fiber access networks
The authors present a novel concept of employing optical wavelength packet switching (WPS) in radio-over-fiber (RoF) access networks. The Central Station is equipped with a fast tunable laser (TL), which is externally modulated with a data signal upconverted to a radio frequency. The information transmitted over the network is encoded onto different wavelengths depending on the destination base station (determined by an optical band-pass filter at that BS). Routing of traffic could be performed on a packet-by-packet basis. In such a system dynamic bandwidth allocation could be realised by varying the time the TL transmits on a particular wavelength, depending on the amount of data that needs to be sent from/to the BS. The feasibility of employing TLs in the realisation of such a system is verified by building a basic WPS RoF system. The measurements of the cross-channel interference due to the TL wavelength instability and drift are also presented. No power penalty was observed due to switching of the laser, suggesting that RoF systems based on TLs are a feasible solution to the last mile proble
Simultaneous Multicolor Detection of Faint Galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field
We present a novel way to detect objects when multiband images are available.
Typically, object detection is performed in one of the available bands or on a
somewhat arbitrarily co-added image. Our technique provides an almost optimal
way to use all the color information available. We build up a composite image
of the N passbands where each pixel value corresponds to the probability that
the given pixel is just sky. By knowing the probability distribution of sky
pixels (a chi-square distribution with N degrees of freedom), the data can be
used to derive the distribution of pixels dominated by object flux. From the
two distributions an optimal segmentation threshold can be determined. Clipping
the probability image at this threshold yields a mask, where pixels unlikely to
be sky are tagged. After using a standard connected-pixel criterion, the
regions of this mask define the detected objects. Applying this technique to
the Hubble Deep Field data, we find that we can extend the detection limit of
the data below that possible using linearly co-added images. We also discuss
possible ways of enhancing object detection probabilities for certain well
defined classes of objects by using various optimized linear combinations of
the pixel fluxes (optimal subspace filtering).Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures (4 postscript, 1 JPEG). To be published in A
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