3,299 research outputs found
A study of two-body strong interactions of elementary particles Final technical report, 27 Jan. 1969 - 1 May 1970
Two-body strong interactions of elementary particles including kaons, pions, hyperons, and proton
Quasiclassical analysis of Bloch oscillations in non-Hermitian tight-binding lattices
Many features of Bloch oscillations in one-dimensional quantum lattices with
a static force can be described by quasiclassical considerations for example by
means of the acceleration theorem, at least for Hermitian systems. Here the
quasiclassical approach is extended to non-Hermitian lattices, which are of
increasing interest. The analysis is based on a generalised non-Hermitian phase
space dynamics developed recently. Applications to a single-band tight-binding
system demonstrate that many features of the quantum dynamics can be understood
from this classical description qualitatively and even quantitatively. Two
non-Hermitian and -symmetric examples are studied, a Hatano-Nelson lattice
with real coupling constants and a system with purely imaginary couplings, both
for initially localised states in space or in momentum. It is shown that the
time-evolution of the norm of the wave packet and the expectation values of
position and momentum can be described in a classical picture.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, typos corrected, slightly extended, accepted for
publication in New Journal of Physics in Focus Issue on Parity-Time Symmetry
in Optics and Photonic
Projective equivalence of ideals in Noetherian integral domains
Let I be a nonzero proper ideal in a Noetherian integral domain R. In this
paper we establish the existence of a finite separable integral extension
domain A of R and a positive integer m such that all the Rees integers of IA
are equal to m. Moreover, if R has altitude one, then all the Rees integers of
J = Rad(IA) are equal to one and the ideals J^m and IA have the same integral
closure. Thus Rad(IA) = J is a projectively full radical ideal that is
projectively equivalent to IA. In particular, if R is Dedekind, then there
exists a Dedekind domain A having the following properties: (i) A is a finite
separable integral extension of R; and (ii) there exists a radical ideal J of A
and a positive integer m such that IA = J^m.Comment: 20 page
Development of a Low-Noise High Common-Mode-Rejection Instrumentation Amplifier
Several previously used instrumentation amplifier circuits were examined to find limitations and possibilities for improvement. One general configuration is analyzed in detail, and methods for improvement are enumerated. An improved amplifier circuit is described and analyzed with respect to common mode rejection and noise. Experimental data are presented showing good agreement between calculated and measured common mode rejection ratio and equivalent noise resistance. The amplifier is shown to be capable of common mode rejection in excess of 140 db for a trimmed circuit at frequencies below 100 Hz and equivalent white noise below 3.0 nv/square root of Hz above 1000 Hz
Containerless processing technology analysis
Research on acoustic levitation, air-jet levitation, and heat transfer from molten samples is reported. The goal was to obtain a better understanding and improving the quality of containerless processing systems. These systems are applied to the processing of materials in situations in which contact with a container must be avoided, and have potential application in both ground based and orbiting laboratories. Containerless processing is reviewed. The development of glasses from materials which normally crystallize upon cooling, are studied
Analysis of SPAR 8 single-axis levitation experiment
The melting and resolidification of SPAR 8 payload melting and resolidification of a glass specimen from the in a containerless condition and the retrieval and examination of the specimen from the. The absence of container contact was assured by use of a single-axis acoustic levitation system. However, the sample contacted a wire cage after being held without container contact by the acoustic field for only approximately 87 seconds. At this time, the sample was still molten and, therefore, flowed aroung the wire and continued to adhere to it. An analysis of why the sample did not remain levitated free of container contact is presented. The experiment is described, and experimental observations are discussed and analyzed
High-resolution width-modulated pulse rebalance electronics for strapdown gyroscopes and accelerometers
Three different rebalance electronic loops were designed, implemented, and evaluated. The loops were width-modulated binary types using a 614.4 kHz keying signal; they were developed to accommodate the following three inertial sensors with the indicated resolution values: (1) Kearfott 2412 accelerometer - resolution = 260 micro-g/data pulse, (2) Honeywell GG334 gyroscope - resolution = 3.9 milli-arc-sec/data pulse, (3) Kearfott 2401-009 accelerometer - resolution = 144 milli-g/data pulse. Design theory, details of the design implementation, and experimental results for each loop are presented
Differentiation of Cardiac from Noncardiac Pleural Effusions in Cats using Second-Generation Quantitative and Point-of-Care NT-proBNP Measurements
BACKGROUND: Pleural effusion is a common cause of dyspnea in cats. Nâterminal proâBâtype natriuretic peptide (NTâproBNP) measurement, using a firstâgeneration quantitative ELISA, in plasma and pleural fluid differentiates cardiac from noncardiac causes of pleural effusion. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To determine whether NTâproBNP measurements using secondâgeneration quantitative ELISA and pointâofâcare (POC) tests in plasma and pleural fluid distinguish cardiac from noncardiac pleural effusions and how results compare to the firstâgeneration ELISA. ANIMALS: Thirtyâeight cats (US cohort) and 40 cats (UK cohort) presenting with cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pleural effusion. METHODS: Prospective cohort study. Twentyâone and 17 cats in the US cohort, and 22 and 18 cats in the UK cohort were classified as having cardiac or noncardiac pleural effusion, respectively. NTâproBNP concentrations in paired plasma and pleural fluid samples were measured using secondâgeneration ELISA and POC assays. RESULTS: The secondâgeneration ELISA differentiated cardiac from noncardiac pleural effusion with good diagnostic accuracy (plasma: sensitivity, 95.2%, specificity, 82.4%; pleural fluid: sensitivity, 100%, specificity, 76.5%). NTâproBNP concentrations were greater in pleural fluid (719 pmol/L (134â1500)) than plasma (678 pmol/L (61â1500), P = 0.003), resulting in different cutâoff values depending on the sample type. The POC test had good sensitivity (95.2%) and specificity (87.5%) when using plasma samples. In pleural fluid samples, the POC test had good sensitivity (100%) but low specificity (64.7%). Diagnostic accuracy was similar between firstâ and secondâgeneration ELISA assays. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Measurement of NTâproBNP using a quantitative ELISA in plasma and pleural fluid or POC test in plasma, but not pleural fluid, distinguishes cardiac from noncardiac causes of pleural effusion in cats
An Agile Framework for Teaching with Scrum in the IT Project Management Classroom
This paper presents a framework for teaching a complete, semester-long IT project management course with traditional PMI-based content (sans software development) while featuring Scrum as the organizing logic for accomplishing coursework. This framework adapts widely-used Scrum practices from industry for use in the classroom, including how to organize student teams, homework, and activities. Organizing an existing course with Scrum is intended to maximize student learning of traditional project management content, as well as the difficult-to-teach, socially-complex, âsoftâ skills that lead to Scrum team success. This deep integration of Scrum into a traditional, predictive IT project management course goes well beyond single activities or units without crowding out valuable time and material. A brief overview of the agile philosophy and examples of teaching Scrum in the classroom situate this work in the teaching and learning literature. Classroom-tested Scrum rituals and example artifacts are provided to illustrate how to apply the framework. This group-based, iterative, and hands-on approach equips students to better internalize and understand the complex social interactions involved with a self-organizing team, concepts that are difficult to learn without first-hand experience. The proposed framework will help IS educators implement Scrum practices in their own courses, further addressing industryâs increasing demand for IS professionals with Scrum experience
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