7,465 research outputs found
A free boundary model for oxygen diffusion in a spherical medium
The goal of this article is to find a correct approximated solution using a
polynomial of sixth degree for the free boundary problem corresponding to the
diffusion of oxygen in a spherical medium with simultaneous absorption at a
constant rate, and to show some mistakes in previously published solutions.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures and 2 tables. Paper accepted, in press in Journal
of Biological Systems (2015
Errors in algebraic statements translation during the creation of an algebraic domino
We present a research study which main objective is to inquire into secondary school students´ ability to translate and relate algebraic statements which are presented in the symbolic and verbal representation systems. Data collection was performed with 26 14-15 years old students to whom we proposed the creation of an algebraic domino, designed for this research, and its subsequent use in a tournament. Here we present an analysis of the errors made in such translations. Among the obtained results, we note that the students found easier to translate statements from the symbolic to the verbal representation and that most errors in translating from verbal to symbolic expressions where derived from the particular characteristics of algebraic language. Other types of errors are also identified.
KEYWORDS: Algebraic language, domino, errors, translation between representation systems, verbal representation
Neutron capture on ^{205}Tl: depicting the abundance pattern of lead isotopes in s-process nucleosynthesis
Proposal: Neutron capture on 205Tl: depicting the abundance pattern of lead isotopes in s-process nucleosynthesisWe propose to use the TOF technique to measure the neutron capture cross section of 205Tl(n,gamma) over the full energy range of stellar interest. An accurate measurement of this cross section is needed for a complete and consistent understanding of the s-process nucleosynthesis of the heaviest nuclei which are produced in low-mass and low metallicity AGB-stars. The only previous TOF measurement has yield only a partial information, insufficient for a reliable analysis of the complex branching pattern around 205Pb and 205Tl. Furthermore, there is also a discrepancy of 40% between the two previous activation measurements made at kT=24 keV. The cross section of 205Tl(n,gamma) is particularly relevant because it affects the equilibrium that is established in some stellar conditions between the 205Tl -> 205Pb bound-state Beta-decay and the 205Pb -> 205Tl E.C. decay. This effect induces a complex interplay which influences the final s-process abundance of both nuclei. We propose to measure accurately and with high resolution the 205Tl(n,gamma) cross section by using a set of four C6D6 detectors in combination with the pulsed neutron-source of CERN n_TOF.Preprin
Approaching the precursor nuclei of the third r-process peak with RIBs
The rapid neutron nucleosynthesis process involves an enormous amount of very exotic neutron-rich nuclei, which represent a theoretical and experimental challenge. Two of the
main decay properties that affect the final abundance distribution the most are half-lives and neutron branching ratios. Using fragmentation of a primary 238U beam at GSI we were able to measure such properties for several neutron-rich nuclei from 208Hg to 218Pb. This contribution provides a short update on the status of the data analysis of this experiment, together with a compilation of the latest results published in this mass region, both experimental and theoretical.
The impact of the uncertainties connected with the eta-decay rates and with beta-delayed neutron emission is illustrated on the basis of r-process network calculations. In order to
obtain a reasonable reproduction of the third r-process peak, it is expected that both half-lives and neutron branching ratios are substantially smaller, than those based on FRDM+QRPA,
commonly used in r-process model calculations. Further measurements around N 126 are required for a reliable modelling of the underlying nuclear structure, and for performing more realistic r-process abundance calculations.Postprint (published version
Dirac Quantization of Two-Dimensional Dilaton Gravity Minimally Coupled to N Massless Scalar Fields
It is shown that the Callan-Giddings-Harvey-Strominger theory on the cylinder
can be consistently quantized (using Dirac's approach) without imposing any
constraints on the sign of the gravitational coupling constant or the sign (or
value) of the cosmological constant. The quantum constraints in terms of the
original geometrical variables are also derived
New Stellar Cross Sections and The "Karlsruhe Astrophysical Database of Nucleosynthesis in Stars"
Since April 2005 a regularly updated stellar neutron cross section
compilation is available online at http://nuclear-astrophysics.fzk.de/kadonis.
This online-database is called the "Karlsruhe Astrophysical Database of
Nucleosynthesis in Stars" project and is based on the previous Bao et al.
compilation from the year 2000. The present version \textsc{KADoNiS} v0.2
(January 2007) includes recommended cross sections for 280 isotopes between
H and Po and 75 semi-empirical estimates for isotopes without
experimental information. Concerning stellar cross sections of the
32 stable, proton-rich isotopes produced by the process experimental
information is only available for 20 isotopes, but 9 of them have rather large
uncertainties of 9%. The first part of a systematic study of stellar
cross sections of the -process isotopes Se, Sr,
Pd, Te, Ba, Ba, Dy, and Hf is
presented. In another application \textsc{KADoNiS} v0.2 was used for an
modification of a reaction library of Basel university. With this modified
library -process network calculations were carried out and compared to
previous results.Comment: Proceedings "International Conference on Nuclear Data for Science and
Technology 2007", Nice/ Franc
Airport mobile internet an innovation
This paper studies the adoption of mobile Internet by airports. Using a new theoretical model, the study tests whether early adopters of mobile Internet for airports can be considered real innovators. Seventy-five international airports from four different geographical areas and of three different sizes are analyzed. The paper complements the analysis with an additional innovation adoption, the PC-Website, and two dimensions are analyzed: the time of adoption and the degree of maturation. Our findings show that there are four real innovator airports: London Heathrow, London Stansted, Amsterdam Schiphol and Copenhagen. Airport innovation is found to be related to geographical location and commercial revenue rather than to airport size. The four real innovator airports iPhone apps are used as case studies to identity best practices for the delivery of airport mobile services
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