9,568 research outputs found
Evaluation of a closed-circuit television display in landing operations with a helicopter
Evaluating closed circuit television display in helicopter landing operation
The Greatest Questions In Christendom
https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/1366/thumbnail.jp
Pregnancy-associated breast cancer - Special features in diagnosis and treatment
For obvious psychological reasons it is difficult to associate pregnancy - a life-giving period of our existence with life-threatening malignancies. Symptoms pointing to malignancy are often ignored by both patients and physicians, and this, together with the greater difficulty of diagnostic imaging, probably results in the proven delay in the detection of breast cancers during pregnancy. The diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer are becoming more and more important, as the fulfillment of the desire to have children is increasingly postponed until a later age associated with a higher risk of carcinoma, and improved cure rates of solid tumors no longer exclude subsequent pregnancies. The following article summarizes the special features of the diagnosis and primary therapy of pregnancy-associated breast cancer with particular consideration of cytostatic therapy
Collisional effects in the formation of cold guided beams of polar molecules
High fluxes of cold polar molecules are efficiently produced by electric
guiding and velocity filtering. Here, we investigate different aspects of the
beam formation. Variations of the source parameters such as density and
temperature result in characteristic changes in the guided beam. These are
observed in the velocity distribution of the guided molecules as well as in the
dependence of the signal of guided molecules on the trapping electric field. A
model taking into account velocity-dependent collisional losses of cold
molecules in the region close to the nozzle accurately reproduces this
behavior. This clarifies an open question on the parameter dependence of the
detected signal and gives a more detailed understanding of the velocity
filtering and guiding process
Physical Nucleon Properties from Lattice QCD
We demonstrate that the extremely accurate lattice QCD data for the mass of
the nucleon recently obtained by CP-PACS, combined with modern chiral
extrapolation techniques, leads to a value for the mass of the physical nucleon
which has a systematic error of less than one percent.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Renormalization approach to many-particle systems
This paper presents a renormalization approach to many-particle systems. By
starting from a bare Hamiltonian with an
unperturbed part and a perturbation ,we define an
effective Hamiltonian which has a band-diagonal shape with respect to the
eigenbasis of . This means that all transition matrix elements are
suppressed which have energy differences larger than a given cutoff
that is smaller than the cutoff of the original Hamiltonian. This
property resembles a recent flow equation approach on the basis of continuous
unitary transformations. For demonstration of the method we discuss an exact
solvable model, as well as the Anderson-lattice model where the well-known
quasiparticle behavior of heavy fermions is derived.Comment: 11 pages, final version, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Velocity-selected molecular pulses produced by an electric guide
Electrostatic velocity filtering is a technique for the production of
continuous guided beams of slow polar molecules from a thermal gas. We extended
this technique to produce pulses of slow molecules with a narrow velocity
distribution around a tunable velocity. The pulses are generated by
sequentially switching the voltages on adjacent segments of an electric
quadrupole guide synchronously with the molecules propagating at the desired
velocity. This technique is demonstrated for deuterated ammonia (ND),
delivering pulses with a velocity in the range of and a
relative velocity spread of at FWHM. At velocities around
, the pulses contain up to molecules each. The data are
well reproduced by Monte-Carlo simulations, which provide useful insight into
the mechanisms of velocity selection.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Cold guided beams of water isotopologs
Electrostatic velocity filtering and guiding is an established technique to
produce high fluxes of cold polar molecules. In this paper we clarify different
aspects of this technique by comparing experiments to detailed calculations. In
the experiment, we produce cold guided beams of the three water isotopologs
H2O, D2O and HDO. Their different rotational constants and orientations of
electric dipole moments lead to remarkably different Stark shift properties,
despite the molecules being very similar in a chemical sense. Therefore, the
signals of the guided water isotopologs differ on an absolute scale and also
exhibit characteristic electrode voltage dependencies. We find excellent
agreement between the relative guided fractions and voltage dependencies of the
investigated isotopologs and predictions made by our theoretical model of
electrostatic velocity filtering.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures; small changes to the text, updated reference
Plankton ecology: The past two decades of progress
This is a selected account of recent developments
in plankton ecology. The examples have been
chosen for their degree of innovation during the
past two decades and for their general ecological
importance. They range from plankton autecology
over interactions between populations to community
ecology. The autecology of plankton is
represented by the hydromechanics of plankton
(the problem of life in a viscous environment) and
by the nutritional ecology of phyto- and zooplankton.
Population level studies are represented
by competition, herbivory (grazing), and zooplankton
responses to predation. Community
ecology is represented by the debate about bottom-
up vs. top-down control of community organization,
by the PEG model of seasonal plankton
succession, and by the recent discovery of the microbial
food web
Disturbance-diversity relationships in two lakes of similar nutrient chemistry but contrasting disturbance regimes
Phytoplankton diversity was studied in two North German lakes of comparable nutrient chemistry but different exposure to winds. In both lakes, phytoplankton was primarily N-limited but diatoms were Si-limited. Plußsee had a very constant mixing depth during summer, while week-to-week changes of several meters were quite common in the more exposed Behler See. In Plußsee, phytoplankton biomass during summer came closer to the carrying capacity as defined by the available total N. In Plußsee there was a marked decline of diversity during the summer maximum of biomass, while this decline was less pronounced in Behler See. It is concluded that disturbances which prevented phytoplankton from reaching the carrying capacity also maintained a high level of diversity. A negative response of diversity to undisturbed conditions became apparent, after phytoplankton biomass had exceeded about 5% of the carrying capacity
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