19,549 research outputs found
State Record for Stenamma foveolocephalum (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Missouri
We report the first known collection of Stenamma foveolocephalum (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) from Missouri. Two specimens were collected in pitfall traps during a field study at Sand Prairie Conservation Area, Scott County, Missouri
Connected to the Organization: A Survey of Communication Technologies in the Modern Organizational Landscape
In today’s organizations, traditional and cutting-edge technologies compete for increased usage. This exploratory project provides a snapshot of the communication technology (CT) landscape by examining the use of 25 different CTs and their relations to a variety of common demographic variables. Results suggest that, although newer CTs are in use today, more traditional and established CTs such as e-mail, Internet, telephones, and voicemail still dominate the landscape
Burgess bounds for short mixed character sums
This paper proves nontrivial bounds for short mixed character sums by
introducing estimates for Vinogradov's mean value theorem into a version of the
Burgess method.Comment: 20 page
Top quark asymmetry and dijet resonances
CDF recently reported an anomaly in the distribution of dijet events
produced in association with a boson. If this anomaly is associated with a
new flavor conserving vector resonance, , one might have expected to observe
effects in the analogous distribution produced in association with a
. No such excess is observed. A single flavor changing
coupling, however, can contribute to the anomaly while being
consistent with other resonance searches. Furthermore, it gives a potential
explanation of the observed forward-backward asymmetry in top quark production.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Simultaneous Integer Values of Pairs of Quadratic Forms
We prove that a pair of integral quadratic forms in 5 or more variables will
simultaneously represent "almost all" pairs of integers that satisfy the
necessary local conditions, provided that the forms satisfy a suitable
nonsingularity condition. In particular such forms simultaneously attain prime
values if the obvious local conditions hold. The proof uses the circle method,
and in particular pioneers a two-dimensional version of a Kloosterman
refinement.Comment: 63 page
The leaking mode problem in atmospheric acoustic-gravity wave propagation
The problem of predicting the transient acoustic pressure pulse at long horizontal distances from large explosions in the atmosphere is examined. Account is taken of poles off the real axis and of branch line integrals in the general integral governing the transient waveform. Perturbation techniques are described for the computation of the imaginary ordinate of the poles and numerical studies are described for a model atmosphere terminated by a halfspace with c = 478 m/sec above 125 km. For frequencies less than 0.0125 rad/sec, the GR sub 1 mode, for example, is found to have a frequency dependent amplitude decay of the order of 0.0001 nepers/km. Examples of numerically synthesized transient waveforms are exhibited with and without the inclusion of leaking modes. The inclusion of leaking modes results in waveforms with a more marked beginning rather than a low frequency oscillating precursor of gradually increasing amplitude. Also, the revised computations indicate that waveforms invariably begin with a pressure rise, a result supported by other theoretical considerations and by experimental data
Aircraft noise propagation
Sound diffraction experiments conducted at NASA Langley Research Center to study the acoustical implications of the engine over wing configuration (noise-shielding by wing) and to provide a data base for assessing various theoretical approaches to the problem of aircraft noise reduction are described. Topics explored include the theory of sound diffraction around screens and wedges; the scattering of spherical waves by rectangular patches; plane wave diffraction by a wedge with finite impedence; and the effects of ambient flow and distribution sources
Diffraction of sound by nearly rigid barriers
The diffraction of sound by barriers with surfaces of large, but finite, acoustic impedance was analyzed. Idealized source-barrier-receiver configurations in which the barriers may be considered as semi-infinite wedges are discussed. Particular attention is given to situations in which the source and receiver are at large distances from the tip of the wedge. The expression for the acoustic pressure in this limiting case is compared with the results of Pierce's analysis of diffraction by a rigid wedge. An expression for the insertion loss of a finite impedance barrier is compared with insertion loss formulas which are used extensively in selecting or designing barriers for noise control
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