9,695 research outputs found

    Atomic Hydrogen Cleaning of Polarized GaAs Photocathodes

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    Atomic hydrogen cleaning followed by heat cleaning at 450^\circC was used to prepare negative-electron-affinity GaAs photocathodes. When hydrogen ions were eliminated, quantum efficiencies of 15% were obtained for bulk GaAs cathodes, higher than the results obtained using conventional 600^\circC heat cleaning. The low-temperature cleaning technique was successfully applied to thin, strained GaAs cathodes used for producing highly polarized electrons. No depolarization was observed even when the optimum cleaning time of about 30 seconds was extended by a factor of 100

    The Mid-Late Holocene Evolution of Southern Walland Marsh and the Origin of the ‘Midley Sand’

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    This paper documents new litho-, bio- and chronostratigraphic information and sedimentological data from sites at Sandyland on Broomhill Level, Midley and Lydd. These locations are situated between former tidal inlets at Romney and Rye which were instrumental in driving Foreland and Marshland environmental change during the last 2000 years. Peat formation commenced c. 4500 cal. yr BP at Sandyland and after 3700 cal. yr BP at Lydd. At Sandyland, eutrophic fen carr communities were replaced by acidic, nutrient-poor Myrica-dominated vegetation from c. 4100 cal. yr BP, a shift reported from other sites on Walland Marsh and from neighbouring areas. At Lydd, there was no local development of Myrica, probably due to the proximity of the site to tidal channels associated with an opening in the barrier at Hythe. Inundation occurred sometime after c. 2300 cal. yr BP at both sites although the upper contacts of the peat are sharp and have probably been eroded. The sedimentological investigations of the surface outcrops of ‘Midley Sand’ at Sandyland and Midley, combined with other stratigraphic and palaeogeographic evidence, are consistent with deposition in a tidal channel. The data support the existence of an open-ended channel connecting the inlets at Romney and Rye between AD 700 and the 12th century AD, which had already begun to infill and become reclaimed prior to the storms of the 13th century AD. The Wainway Channel appears to be a later feature which developed in the area after the closure of the Romney inlet and enlargement of the Rye inlet as a result of these storms

    The theory of the exponential differential equations of semiabelian varieties

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    The complete first order theories of the exponential differential equations of semiabelian varieties are given. It is shown that these theories also arises from an amalgamation-with-predimension construction in the style of Hrushovski. The theory includes necessary and sufficient conditions for a system of equations to have a solution. The necessary condition generalizes Ax's differential fields version of Schanuel's conjecture to semiabelian varieties. There is a purely algebraic corollary, the "Weak CIT" for semiabelian varieties, which concerns the intersections of algebraic subgroups with algebraic varieties.Comment: 53 pages; v3: Substantial changes, including a completely new introductio

    Triangulum II: Not Especially Dense After All

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    Among the Milky Way satellites discovered in the past three years, Triangulum II has presented the most difficulty in revealing its dynamical status. Kirby et al. (2015a) identified it as the most dark matter-dominated galaxy known, with a mass-to-light ratio within the half-light radius of 3600 +3500 -2100 M_sun/L_sun. On the other hand, Martin et al. (2016) measured an outer velocity dispersion that is 3.5 +/- 2.1 times larger than the central velocity dispersion, suggesting that the system might not be in equilibrium. From new multi-epoch Keck/DEIMOS measurements of 13 member stars in Triangulum II, we constrain the velocity dispersion to be sigma_v < 3.4 km/s (90% C.L.). Our previous measurement of sigma_v, based on six stars, was inflated by the presence of a binary star with variable radial velocity. We find no evidence that the velocity dispersion increases with radius. The stars display a wide range of metallicities, indicating that Triangulum II retained supernova ejecta and therefore possesses or once possessed a massive dark matter halo. However, the detection of a metallicity dispersion hinges on the membership of the two most metal-rich stars. The stellar mass is lower than galaxies of similar mean stellar metallicity, which might indicate that Triangulum II is either a star cluster or a tidally stripped dwarf galaxy. Detailed abundances of one star show heavily depressed neutron-capture abundances, similar to stars in most other ultra-faint dwarf galaxies but unlike stars in globular clusters.Comment: accepted to ApJ, Table 5 available as a machine-readable table by clicking on "Other formats" on the right. Proof corrections reflected in version

    Process support for evolving active architectures

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    This work is supported by the EC Framework V project ArchWare (IST-001-32360), and the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under grants GR/R51872 (Reflective Application Framework for Distributed Architectures) and GR/R67743 (my Grid: Directly Supporting the E-Scientist).Long-lived, architecture-based software. systems are increasingly important. Effective process support for these systems depends upon recognising their compositional nature and the active, role of their architecture in guiding evolutionary development. Current process approaches have difficulty with run-time architecture changes that are not known a priori, and dealing with extant data during system evolution. This paper describes an approach that deals with these issues. It is based on a process-aware architecture description language (ADL), with explicit compose and decompose constructs, and with a hyper-code representation for dealing with extant data and code. An example is given to illustrate the ease-of-use benefits of this approach

    Criteria for flatness and injectivity

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    Let RR be a commutative Noetherian ring. We give criteria for flatness of RR-modules in terms of associated primes and torsion-freeness of certain tensor products. This allows us to develop a criterion for regularity if RR has characteristic pp, or more generally if it has a locally contracting endomorphism. Dualizing, we give criteria for injectivity of RR-modules in terms of coassociated primes and (h-)divisibility of certain \Hom-modules. Along the way, we develop tools to achieve such a dual result. These include a careful analysis of the notions of divisibility and h-divisibility (including a localization result), a theorem on coassociated primes across a \Hom-module base change, and a local criterion for injectivity.Comment: 19 page

    Prevalence of sexual harassment among Norwegian female elite athletes in relation to sport type

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    Although it is often assumed that the prevalence of sexual harassment is different in different sports, this assumption has not been empirically tested. This study considers whether the experience of sexual harassment varies by sport. The female elite athletes (N = 553) in the study participated in 56 different sport disciplines. These were grouped as follows :1) team or individual sports; 2) extent to which clothing required for competition is revealing ; 3) gender structure (male-or female dominated membership statistics); and 4) gender culture (masculine, gender-neutral, or feminine). The data show that sexual harassment occurs in every sport group. Female elite athletes who participated in ‘masculine’ sports appear to experience more harassment than women in the other groups. We conclude that, when it comes to female athletes’ experiences of sexual harassment, sport type matters far less than sport participation per se

    Electron Conditioning of Technical Aluminium Surfaces: Effect on the Secondary Electron Yield

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    The effect of electron conditioning on commercially aluminium alloys 1100 and 6063 were investigated. Contrary to the assumption that electron conditioning, if performed long enough, can reduce and stabilize the SEY to low values (1.3\leq 1.3, value of many pure elements), the SEY of aluminium did not go lower than 1.8. In fact, it reincreases with continued electron exposure dose.Comment: 36 pages, 25 figures, submitted to JVST
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