60,520 research outputs found
Spin fluctuations and superconductivity in powders of Fe_1+xTe_0.7Se_0.3 as a function of interstitial iron concentration
Using neutron inelastic scattering, we investigate the role of interstitial
iron on the low-energy spin fluctuations in powder samples of
Fe_{1+x}Te_{0.7}Se_{0.3}. We demonstrate how combining the principle of
detailed balance along with measurements at several temperatures allows us to
subtract both temperature-independent and phonon backgrounds from S(Q,\omega)
to obtain purely magnetic scattering. For small values of interstitial iron
(x=0.009(3)), the sample is superconducting (T_{c}=14 K) and displays a spin
gap of 7 meV peaked in momentum at wave vector q_{0}=(\pi,\pi) consistent with
single crystal results. On populating the interstitial iron sites, the
superconducting volume fraction decreases and we observe a filling in of the
low-energy magnetic fluctuations and a decrease of the characteristic wave
vector of the magnetic fluctuations. For large concentrations of interstitial
iron (x=0.048(2)) where the superconducting volume fraction is minimal, we
observe the presence of gapless spin fluctuations at a wave vector of
q_{0}=(\pi,0). We estimate the absolute total moment for the various samples
and find that the amount of interstitial iron does not change the total
magnetic spectral weight significantly, but rather has the effect of shifting
the spectral weight in Q and energy. These results show that the
superconducting and magnetic properties can be tuned by doping small amounts of
iron and are suggestive that interstitial iron concentration is also a
controlling dopant in the Fe_{1+x}Te_{1-y}Se_{y} phase diagram in addition to
the Te/Se ratio.Comment: (10 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. B
Natural environment design criteria for the Space Station definition and preliminary design
The natural environment design criteria for the Space Station Program (SSP) definition and preliminary design are presented. Information on the atmospheric, dynamic and thermodynamic environments, meteoroids, radiation, magnetic fields, physical constants, etc. is provided with the intension of enabling all groups involved in the definition and preliminary design studies to proceed with a common and consistent set of natural environment criteria requirements. The space station program elements (SSPE) shall be designed with no operational sensitivity to natural environment conditions during assembly, checkout, stowage, launch, and orbital operations to the maximum degree practical
Broiler Farms' Organization, Management, and Performance
This study provides a comprehensive view of the organization, management, and financial performance of U.S. broiler farms. Using data from USDA's Agricultural Resource Management Study (ARMS, formerly known as the Farm Costs and Returns Survey), we examine farm size, financial structure, household income, management practices, and spousal participation in decision-making. We compare broiler operations with other farming enterprises and their earnings with that of the average U.S. household. Because most of the 7 billion broilers produced in the United States in 1995 were raised under contract, we also explore the use of contracts and the effects of contracting on the broiler sector.contracting, broilers, poultry, farm characteristics, farm income, farm operator characteristics, risk management strategies, Livestock Production/Industries,
Age-dependent female responses to a male ejaculate signal alter demographic opportunities for selection
A central tenet of evolutionary explanations for ageing is that the strength of selection wanes with age. However, data on age-specific expression and benefits of sexually selected traits are lacking—particularly for traits subject to sexual conflict. We addressed this by using as a model the responses of Drosophila melanogaster females of different ages to receipt of sex peptide (SP), a seminal fluid protein transferred with sperm during mating. SP can mediate sexual conflict, benefitting males while causing fitness costs in females. Virgin and mated females of all ages showed significantly reduced receptivity in response to SP. However, only young virgin females also showed increased egg laying; hence, there was a narrow demographic window of maximal responses to SP. Males gained significant ‘per mating’ fitness benefits only when mating with young females. The pattern completely reversed in matings with older females, where SP transfer was costly. The overall benefits of SP transfer (hence opportunity for selection) therefore reversed with female age. The data reveal a new example of demographic variation in the strength of selection, with convergence and conflicts of interest between males and ageing females occurring over different facets of responses to a sexually antagonistic trait
Building capacity for evidence-based public health: Reconciling the pulls of practice and the push of research
Timely implementation of principles of evidence-based public health (EBPH) is critical for bridging the gap between discovery of new knowledge and its application. Public health organizations need sufficient capacity (the availability of resources, structures, and workforce to plan, deliver, and evaluate the preventive dose of an evidence-based intervention) to move science to practice. We review principles of EBPH, the importance of capacity building to advance evidence-based approaches, promising approaches for capacity building, and future areas for research and practice. Although there is general agreement among practitioners and scientists on the importance of EBPH, there is less clarity on the definition of evidence, how to find it, and how, when, and where to use it. Capacity for EBPH is needed among both individuals and organizations. Capacity can be strengthened via training, use of tools, technical assistance, assessment and feedback, peer networking, and incentives. Modest investments in EBPH capacity building will foster more effective public health practice
Single-channel digital command-detection system
System, fabricated of highly-reliable digital logic elements, operates on binary pulse-code-modulated signals and derives internal synchronization from data signal. All-digital implementation of detector develops synchronization from data signal by computer cross-correlation of command modulation signal with its expected forms in sequence and adjusts detector phases in accordance with correlation peaks
Quantum Theory from Quantum Gravity
We provide a mechanism by which, from a background independent model with no
quantum mechanics, quantum theory arises in the same limit in which spatial
properties appear. Starting with an arbitrary abstract graph as the microscopic
model of spacetime, our ansatz is that the microscopic dynamics can be chosen
so that 1) the model has a low low energy limit which reproduces the
non-relativistic classical dynamics of a system of N particles in flat
spacetime, 2) there is a minimum length, and 3) some of the particles are in a
thermal bath or otherwise evolve stochastically. We then construct simple
functions of the degrees of freedom of the theory and show that their
probability distributions evolve according to the Schroedinger equation. The
non-local hidden variables required to satisfy the conditions of Bell's theorem
are the links in the fundamental graph that connect nodes adjacent in the graph
but distant in the approximate metric of the low energy limit. In the presence
of these links, distant stochastic fluctuations are transferred into universal
quantum fluctuations.Comment: 17 pages, 2 eps figure
Correlation of stress-wave-emission characteristics with fracture in aluminum alloys, 1 September - 1 December 1969
Cryogenic testing of aluminum alloy specimens for fracture toughness and stress wave dat
- …