20,773 research outputs found
A proposed adjustable RF cable connector
In system that requires negligible loss, it may be necessary to adjust cable length to exact multiple of transmitted wavelength. Adjustable cable connector saves time and cost by eliminating need to add to or cut from cable. Device was especially designed for use with high frequencies. For particular application, connector of suitable dimensions should be used
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Child Safety Seats and Seat Belts in Protecting Children from Injury
Young children are required to use child safety seats, and the age threshold at which children can legally graduate to seat belts has steadily increased. This paper tests the relative effectiveness of child safety seats, lap-and-shoulder seat belts, and lap belts in preventing injuries among motor vehicle passengers aged 2-6. We analyze three large, representative samples of crashes reported to police, as well as linked hospital data. We find no apparent difference in the two most serious injury categories for children in child safety seats versus lap-and-shoulder belts. Child safety seats provide a statistically significant 25% reduction in the least serious injury category. Lap belts are somewhat less effective than the two other types of restraints, but far superior to riding unrestrained.
Orthodontic palatal implants: clinical technique
The aim of this paper is to familiarize the readers with some of the clinical considerations necessary to ensure successful use of mid-palatal implants. Both surgical and technical aspects will be discussed along with a description of impression techniques used
Coronal hole boundaries at small scales: IV. SOT view Magnetic field properties of small-scale transient brightenings in coronal holes
We study the magnetic properties of small-scale transients in coronal hole.
We found all brightening events are associated with bipolar regions and caused
by magnetic flux emergence followed by cancellation with the pre-existing and
newly emerging magnetic flux. In the coronal hole, 19 of 22 events have a
single stable polarity which does not change its position in time. In eleven
cases this is the dominant polarity. The dominant flux of the coronal hole form
the largest concentration of magnetic flux in terms of size while the opposite
polarity is distributed in small concentrations. In the coronal hole the number
of magnetic elements of the dominant polarity is four times higher than the
non-dominant one. The supergranulation configuration appears to preserve its
general shape during approximately nine hours of observations although the
large concentrations in the network did evolve and were slightly displaced, and
their strength either increased or decreased. The emission fluctuations seen in
the X-ray bright points are associated with reoccurring magnetic cancellation
in the footpoints. Unique observations of an X-ray jet reveal similar magnetic
behaviour in the footpoints, i.e. cancellation of the opposite polarity
magnetic flux. We found that the magnetic flux cancellation rate during the jet
is much higher than in bright points. Not all magnetic cancellations result in
an X-ray enhancement, suggesting that there is a threshold of the amount of
magnetic flux involved in a cancellation above which brightening would occur at
X-ray temperatures. Our study demonstrates that the magnetic flux in coronal
holes is continuously recycled through magnetic reconnection which is
responsible for the formation of numerous small-scale transient events. The
open magnetic flux forming the coronal-hole phenomenon is largely involved in
these transient features.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, A&A in pres
Measuring device Patent
Expulsion and measuring device for determining quantity of liquid in tank under conditions of weightlessnes
Planetological implications of mass loss from the early Sun
The element lithium is observed to be underabundant in the Sun by a factor of approx. equal to 100. To account for this depletion, Boothroyd et al. (Ap. J., in press 1991) proposed a model in which the Sun's zero-age-main-sequence mass was approx. 1.1 solar magnitude. If this is the explanation for the lithium depletion, then astronomical observations of F/G dwarfs in clusters suggest that the timescale for mass loss is approx. equal to 0.6 Gyr. Assuming this approximate timescale, the authors investigated several planetological implications of the astrophysical model
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