34,635 research outputs found

    The capital gains and losses on U. S. government debt: 1942-1986

    Get PDF
    Deficit financing ; Government securities

    Triple mode Cepheid masses

    Get PDF
    Unconventional composition structures are proposed to explain the periods of the triple mode Cepheid aC And. A strong Cepheid wind appears to enrich helium in the convection zones down to about 60,000 K or 70,000 K. Then some downward partial mixing occurs to the bottom of a layer with about 1-q = .0005 of the stellar mass. It was found that AC And was not unlike anomalous Cepheids. However, masses of betwen one and two solar masses are suggested and the population is more likely a type two

    Stereospecific synthesis of the aglycone of pseudopterosin E

    Get PDF
    No description supplie

    Extremely low longā€term erosion rates around the Gamburtsev Mountains in interior East Antarctica

    Get PDF
    The high elevation and rugged relief (>3 km) of the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains (GSM) have long been considered enigmatic. Orogenesis normally occurs near plate boundaries, not cratonic interiors, and largeā€scale tectonic activity last occurred in East Antarctica during the Panā€African (480ā€“600 Ma). We sampled detrital apatite from Eocene sands in Prydz Bay at the terminus of the Lambert Graben, which drained a large preā€glacial basin including the northern Gamburtsev Mountains. Apatite fissionā€track and (Uā€Th)/He cooling ages constrain bedrock erosion rates throughout the catchment. We doubleā€dated apatites to resolve individual cooling histories. Erosion was very slow, averaging 0.01ā€“0.02 km/Myr for >250 Myr, supporting the preservation of high elevation in interior East Antarctica since at least the cessation of Permian rifting. Longā€term topographic preservation lends credence to postulated highā€elevation mountain ice caps in East Antarctica since at least the Cretaceous and to the idea that coldā€based glaciation can preserve tectonically inactive topography

    Surface versus bulk characterization of the electronic inhomogeneity in a VO_{2} film

    Full text link
    We investigated the inhomogeneous electronic properties at the surface and interior of VO_{2} thin films that exhibit a strong first-order metal-insulator transition (MIT). Using the crystal structural change that accompanies a VO_{2} MIT, we used bulk-sensitive X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements to estimate the fraction of metallic volume p^{XRD} in our VO_{2} film. The temperature dependence of the pXRD^{XRD} was very closely correlated with the dc conductivity near the MIT temperature, and fit the percolation theory predictions quite well: Ļƒ\sigma āˆ¼\sim (p - p_{c})^{t} with t = 2.0Ā±\pm0.1 and p_{c} = 0.16Ā±\pm0.01. This agreement demonstrates that in our VO2_{2} thin film, the MIT should occur during the percolation process. We also used surface-sensitive scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) to investigate the microscopic evolution of the MIT near the surface. Similar to the XRD results, STS maps revealed a systematic decrease in the metallic phase as temperature decreased. However, this rate of change was much slower than the rate observed with XRD, indicating that the electronic inhomogeneity near the surface differs greatly from that inside the film. We investigated several possible origins of this discrepancy, and postulated that the variety in the strain states near the surface plays an important role in the broad MIT observed using STS. We also explored the possible involvement of such strain effects in other correlated electron oxide systems with strong electron-lattice interactions.Comment: 27 pages and 7 figure

    Writing the Live Coding Book

    Get PDF
    This paper is a speculation on the relationship between coding and writing, and the ways in which technical innovations and capabilities enable us to rethink each in terms of the other. As a case study, we draw on recent experiences of preparing a book on live coding, which integrates a wide range of personal, historical, technical and critical perspectives. This book project has been both experimental and reflective, in a manner that allows us to draw on critical understanding of both code and writing, and point to the potential for new practices in the future

    A Study of Feature Extraction Using Divergence Analysis of Texture Features

    Get PDF
    An empirical study of texture analysis for feature extraction and classification of high spatial resolution remotely sensed imagery (10 meters) is presented in terms of specific land cover types. The principal method examined is the use of spatial gray tone dependence (SGTD). The SGTD method reduces the gray levels within a moving window into a two-dimensional spatial gray tone dependence matrix which can be interpreted as a probability matrix of gray tone pairs. Haralick et al (1973) used a number of information theory measures to extract texture features from these matrices, including angular second moment (inertia), correlation, entropy, homogeneity, and energy. The derivation of the SGTD matrix is a function of: (1) the number of gray tones in an image; (2) the angle along which the frequency of SGTD is calculated; (3) the size of the moving window; and (4) the distance between gray tone pairs. The first three parameters were varied and tested on a 10 meter resolution panchromatic image of Maryville, Tennessee using the five SGTD measures. A transformed divergence measure was used to determine the statistical separability between four land cover categories forest, new residential, old residential, and industrial for each variation in texture parameters

    Exit times in non-Markovian drifting continuous-time random walk processes

    Get PDF
    By appealing to renewal theory we determine the equations that the mean exit time of a continuous-time random walk with drift satisfies both when the present coincides with a jump instant or when it does not. Particular attention is paid to the corrections ensuing from the non-Markovian nature of the process. We show that when drift and jumps have the same sign the relevant integral equations can be solved in closed form. The case when holding times have the classical Erlang distribution is considered in detail.Comment: 9 pages, 3 color plots, two-column revtex 4; new Appendix and references adde

    Reply to Loudianos et al.

    Get PDF

    Bankruptcy and Creditors\u27 Rights

    Get PDF
    • ā€¦
    corecore