101,637 research outputs found
Using Manipulatives in Undergraduate Mathematics Courses
Students in undergraduate mathematics classes not only beneïŹt from the use of manipulatives in the classroom, but also enjoy them. This paper speciïŹcally outlines one successful activity that used manipulatives in a large section of a precalculus course and then explores possibilities in other courses. It also addresses the use of mathematics manipulatives as a platform to introduce both active and cooperative learning in a large lecture setting
Transport Coefficients in Large Gauge Theory: Testing Hard Thermal Loops
We compute shear viscosity and flavor diffusion coefficients for
ultra-relativistic gauge theory with many fermionic species, Nf >> 1, to
leading order in 1/Nf. The calculation is performed both at leading order in
the effective coupling strength g^2 Nf, using the Hard Thermal Loop (HTL)
approximation, and completely to all orders in g^2 Nf. This constitutes a
nontrivial test of how well the HTL approximation works. We find that in this
context, the HTL approximation works well wherever the renormalization point
sensitivity of the leading order HTL result is small.Comment: 31 pages, including 9 figures. Error in vacuum self-energy, arising
from trusting Arthur Weldon, fixed, thank you Tony Rebhan. Results and
conclusions slightly but not significantly change
Transport Coefficients in Hot QCD
I give a physical explanation of what shear viscosity is, and what physics
determines its value. Then I explain why determining the shear viscosity of the
Quark-Gluon Plasma is interesting. I outline the leading-order calculation of
the QGP shear viscosity (and baryon number diffusion constant), explaining why
the quite complicated physics of parton splitting and Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal
interference effects are required for its calculation. Then I briefly explore
the range of applicability, emphasizing the importance of plasma instabilities.Comment: 10 pages, invited talk given at the conference "Strong and
Electroweak Matter," Helsinki, Finland 16-19 June 200
Problems with lattice methods for electroweak preheating
Recently Garcia Bellido et. al. have proposed that electroweak baryogenesis
may occur at the end of inflation, in a scenario where the reheat temperature
is too low for electroweak symmetry restoration. I show why the scenario is
difficult to test reliably by classical field techniques on the lattice.Comment: 10 pages with 3 figure
Desiderata for an Every Citizen Interface to the National Information Infrastructure: Challenges for NLP
In this paper, I provide desiderata for an interface that would enable ordinary people to properly access the capabilities of the NII. I identify some of the technologies that will be needed to achieve these desiderata, and discuss current and future research directions that could lead to the development of such technologies. In particular, I focus on the ways in which theory and techniques from natural language processing could contribute to future interfaces to the NII. Introduction The evolving national information infrastructure (NII) has made available a vast array of on-line services and networked information resources in a variety of forms (text, speech, graphics, images, video). At the same time, advances in computing and telecommunications technology have made it possible for an increasing number of households to own (or lease or use) powerful personal computers that are connected to this resource. Accompanying this progress is the expectation that people will be able to more..
Intellectual Property and the Prisonerâs Dilemma: A Game Theory Justification of Copyrights, Patents, and Trade Secrets
In this article, I will offer an argument for the protection of intellectual property based on individual self-interest and prudence. In large part, this argument will parallel considerations that arise in a prisonerâs dilemma game. In brief, allowing content to be unprotected in terms of free access leads to a sub-optimal outcome where creation and innovation are suppressed. Adopting the institutions of copyright, patent, and trade secret is one way to avoid these sub-optimal results
Electroweak Bubble Wall Friction: Analytic Results
We present an entirely analytic, leading log order determination of the
friction an electroweak bubble wall feels during a first order electroweak
phase transition. The friction is dominated by W bosons, and gives a wall
velocity parametrically ~ alpha_w, and numerically small, ~ .01 -- 0.1
depending on the Higgs mass.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. Slight revision of introduction: published
version (JHEP
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