1,513 research outputs found

    The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope, VIII: The MIRI Focal Plane System

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    We describe the layout and unique features of the focal plane system for MIRI. We begin with the detector array and its readout integrated circuit (combining the amplifier unit cells and the multiplexer), the electronics, and the steps by which the data collection is controlled and the output signals are digitized and delivered to the JWST spacecraft electronics system. We then discuss the operation of this MIRI data system, including detector readout patterns, operation of subarrays, and data formats. Finally, we summarize the performance of the system, including remaining anomalies that need to be corrected in the data pipeline

    P3DB: a plant protein phosphorylation database

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    P3DB (http://www.p3db.org/) provides a resource of protein phosphorylation data from multiple plants. The database was initially constructed with a dataset from oilseed rape, including 14 670 nonredundant phosphorylation sites from 6382 substrate proteins, representing the largest collection of plant phosphorylation data to date. Additional protein phosphorylation data are being deposited into this database from large-scale studies of Arabidopsis thaliana and soybean. Phosphorylation data from current literature are also being integrated into the P3DB. With a web-based user interface, the database is browsable, downloadable and searchable by protein accession number, description and sequence. A BLAST utility was integrated and a phosphopeptide BLAST browser was implemented to allow users to query the database for phosphopeptides similar to protein sequences of their interest. With the large-scale phosphorylation data and associated web-based tools, P3DB will be a valuable resource for both plant and nonplant biologists in the field of protein phosphorylation

    Historical-institutionalist perspectives on the development of the EU budget system

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    The EU budget has only recently started to feature in theories of European integration. Studies typically adopt a historical-institutionalist framework, exploring notions such as path dependency. They have, however, generally been rather aggregated, or coarse-grained, in their approach. The EU budget has thus been treated as a single entity rather than a series of inter-linked institutions. This paper seeks to address these lacunae by adopting a fine-grained approach. This enables us to emphasize the connections that exist between EU budgetary institutions, in both time and space. We show that the initial set of budgetary institutions was unable, over time, to achieve consistently their treaty-based objectives. In response, rather than reform these institutions at potentially high political cost, additional institutions were layered on top of the extant structures. We thus demonstrate how some EU budgetary institutions have remained unchanged, whilst others have been added or changed over time

    'She's like a daughter to me': insights into care, work and kinship from rural Russia

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    This article draws on ethnographic research into a state-funded homecare service in rural Russia. The article discusses intersections between care, work and kinship in the relationships between homecare workers and their elderly wards and explores the ways in which references to kinship, as a means of authenticating paid care and explaining its emotional content, reinforce public and private oppositions while doing little to relieve the tensions and conflicts of care work. The discussion brings together detailed empirical insights into local ideologies and practices as a way of generating new theoretical perspectives, which will be of relevance beyond the particular context of study

    The Influence of Magnetic Imperfections on the Low Temperature Properties of D-wave Superconductors

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    We consider the influence of planar ``magnetic" imperfections which destroy the local magnetic order, such as Zn impurities or Cu2+Cu^{2+} vacancies, on the low temperature properties of the cuprate superconductors. In the unitary limit, at low temperatures, for a dx2−y2d_{x^2-y^2} pairing state such imperfections produce low energy quasiparticles with an anistropic spectrum in the vicinity of the nodes. We find that for the La2−xSrxCuO4La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4 system, one is in the {\em quasi-one-dimensional} regime of quasiparticle scattering, discussed recently by Altshuler, Balatsky, and Rosengren, for impurity concentrations in excess of ∌0.16%\sim 0.16\% whereas YBCO7_7 appears likely to be in the true 2D scattering regime for Zn concentrations less than 1.6%1.6\%. We show the neutron scattering results of Mason et al. \cite{Aeppli} on La1.86Sr0.14CuO4La_{1.86}Sr_{0.14}CuO_4 provide strong evidence for ``dirty d-wave" superconductivity in their samples. We obtain simple expressions for the dynamic spin susceptibility and 63Cu^{63}Cu spin-lattice relaxation time, 63T1^{63}T_1, in the superconducting state.Comment: 10 pages; revtex; Los Alamos preprint LA-UR-94-53

    A comparative framework: how broadly applicable is a 'rigorous' critical junctures framework?

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    The paper tests Hogan and Doyle's (2007, 2008) framework for examining critical junctures. This framework sought to incorporate the concept of ideational change in understanding critical junctures. Until its development, frameworks utilized in identifying critical junctures were subjective, seeking only to identify crisis, and subsequent policy changes, arguing that one invariably led to the other, as both occurred around the same time. Hogan and Doyle (2007, 2008) hypothesized ideational change as an intermediating variable in their framework, determining if, and when, a crisis leads to radical policy change. Here we test this framework on cases similar to, but different from, those employed in developing the exemplar. This will enable us determine whether the framework's relegation of ideational change to a condition of crisis holds, or, if ideational change has more importance than is ascribed to it by this framework. This will also enable us determined if the framework itself is robust, and fit for the purposes it was designed to perform — identifying the nature of policy change

    Level structure of 69Se

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    15 pĂĄgs.; 9 figs.; 5 tabs. ; PACS number(s): 23.20.Lv, 21.10.Re, 27.50.1e, 21.60.2nExcited levels in 69Se have been studied using the 40Ca(32S,2pn)69Se reaction at 95- and 105-MeV beam energy, Îł rays have been detected with the EUROBALL spectrometer operated in conjunction with the neutron wall and the charged-particle detector array EUCLIDES. New level sequences with positive and negative parities have been identified from n-γγ and n-γγγ coincidences. Spins have been assigned to many of the levels on the basis of angular distribution and directional correlation measurements. Excitation energies of the positive-parity yrast band and the branching ratios of its decay are compared with the predictions of the rigid triaxial rotor plus particle model. ©2004 The American Physical SocietyA. J. acknowledges financial support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinshaft (DPG) within the Heisenberg program. This work was supported by BMBF under Contract Nos. 06 OK 958 and 06 GÖ 951 and the EUROVIV Contract No. HPRI-CT-1999-000783.Peer Reviewe

    The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope, III: MIRIM, The MIRI Imager

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    In this article, we describe the MIRI Imager module (MIRIM), which provides broad-band imaging in the 5 - 27 microns wavelength range for the James Webb Space Telescope. The imager has a 0"11 pixel scale and a total unobstructed view of 74"x113". The remainder of its nominal 113"x113" field is occupied by the coronagraphs and the low resolution spectrometer. We present the instrument optical and mechanical design. We show that the test data, as measured during the test campaigns undertaken at CEA-Saclay, at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, and at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, indicate that the instrument complies with its design requirements and goals. We also discuss the operational requirements (multiple dithers and exposures) needed for optimal scientific utilization of the MIRIM.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figure

    Four-quasiparticle alignments in 66Ge

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    13 pĂĄgs.; 7 figs.; 1 tab. ; PACS number(s): 23.20.Lv, 21.10.Re, 25.70.Hi, 27.50.1eThe neutron-deficient nucleus 66Ge was populated at high spin in two experiments using the reaction 40Ca(32S, α2p) at beam energies of 105 and 95 MeV. In the first experiment, a self-supporting 40Ca target was used, while a gold-backed target of similar thickness was used in the second experiment, Îł rays were detected with the EUROBALL array, combined with the charged-particle detector array EUCLIDES and the Neutron Wall. The level scheme of 66Ge was extended up to E ≈ 18 MeV and Iπ = (23-). Above angular momentum 10+, we found two sequences, connected by energetically staggered ΔI = 1 M 1 transitions. The total Routhian surface calculations describe 66Ge at lower spins as a Îł-soft nucleus having a moderate deformation of ÎČ2 ≈ 0.23, while a triaxial deformation is predicted for the band structures above Iπ = 10+. To our knowledge, this is the first observation of staggered Ml transitions in a deformed four-quasiparticle π(g9/2 2) Îœ(g9/2 2) structure. ©2003 American Physical SocietyThis work was supported by BMBF 06 GOš 951 and TMR/LSF Contract No. HPRI-CT-1999-00078. The authors are indebted to the crew of the VIVITRON accelerator and the EUROBALL facility at IReS for their dedicated efforts and cooperation.Peer Reviewe
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