892 research outputs found
Scientific CCD technology at JPL
Charge-coupled devices (CCD's) were recognized for their potential as an imaging technology almost immediately following their conception in 1970. Twenty years later, they are firmly established as the technology of choice for visible imaging. While consumer applications of CCD's, especially the emerging home video camera market, dominated manufacturing activity, the scientific market for CCD imagers has become significant. Activity of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and its industrial partners in the area of CCD imagers for space scientific instruments is described. Requirements for scientific imagers are significantly different from those needed for home video cameras, and are described. An imager for an instrument on the CRAF/Cassini mission is described in detail to highlight achieved levels of performance
The amalgamated duplication of a ring along a multiplicative-canonical ideal
After recalling briefly the main properties of the amalgamated duplication of
a ring along an ideal , denoted by R\JoinI, we restrict our attention
to the study of the properties of R\JoinI, when is a multiplicative
canonical ideal of \cite{hhp}. In particular, we study when every regular
fractional ideal of is divisorial
The electrorheology of suspensions consisting of Na-Fluorohectorite synthetic clay particles in silicon oil
Under application of an electric field greater than a triggering electric
field kV/mm, suspensions obtained by dispersing particles of the
synthetic clay fluoro-hectorite in a silicon oil, aggregate into chain- and/or
column-like structures parallel to the applied electric field. This
micro-structuring results in a transition in the suspensions' rheological
behavior, from a Newtonian-like behavior to a shear-thinning rheology with a
significant yield stress. This behavior is studied as a function of particle
volume fraction and strength of the applied electric field, . The steady
shear flow curves are observed to scale onto a master curve with respect to
, in a manner similar to what was recently found for suspensions of laponite
clay [42]. In the case of Na-fluorohectorite, the corresponding dynamic yield
stress is demonstrated to scale with respect to as a power law with an
exponent , while the static yield stress inferred from
constant shear stress tests exhibits a similar behavior with . The suspensions are also studied in the framework of thixotropic fluids:
the bifurcation in the rheology behavior when letting the system flow and
evolve under a constant applied shear stress is characterized, and a
bifurcation yield stress, estimated as the applied shear stress at which
viscosity bifurcation occurs, is measured to scale as with to 0.6. All measured yield stresses increase with the particle
fraction of the suspension. For the static yield stress, a scaling law
, with , is found. The results are found to be
reasonably consistent with each other. Their similarities with-, and
discrepancies to- results obtained on laponite-oil suspensions are discussed
An effect evaluation of the psychosocial work environment of a university unit after a successfully implemented employeeship program
Purpose: This study examined whether a successful implementation of an intervention could result in an effect evaluated independently from a process evaluation. It achieved this by evaluating the effects of an intervention, the ‘employeeship program’, designed to strengthen the psychosocial work environment through raising employees’ awareness and competence in interpersonal relationships and increasing their responsibility for their everyday work and working environment.
Design/methodology/approach: An employeeship intervention program was developed to improve the psychosocial work environment through reducing conflict among employees and strengthening the social community, empowering leadership, and increasing trust in management. An earlier process evaluation of the program found that it had been implemented successfully. The present effect evaluation supplemented this by examining its effect on the psychosocial work environment using two waves of the organization’s internal survey and comparing changes in the intervention unit at two points and against the rest of the organization.
Findings: The intervention was effective in improving the psychosocial work environment through reducing conflicts among employees and strengthening the social community, empowering leadership, and increasing trust in management.
Research limitations/implications: More attention should be paid to developing and increasing positive while simultaneously reducing negative psychosocial experiences, as this employeeship intervention demonstrated.
Practical implications: An intervention focusing on employeeship is an effective way to achieve a healthier psychosocial work environment with demonstrable benefits for individuals and the working unit.
Originality/value: Although organizational-level interventions are complex processes, evaluations that focus on process and effect can offer insights into the workings of successful interventions
High-Frequency Oscillations in a Solar Active Region observed with the Rapid Dual Imager
High-cadence, synchronized, multiwavelength optical observations of a solar
active region (NOAA 10794) are presented. The data were obtained with the Dunn
Solar Telescope at the National Solar Observatory/Sacramento Peak using a newly
developed camera system : the Rapid Dual Imager. Wavelet analysis is undertaken
to search for intensity related oscillatory signatures, and periodicities
ranging from 20 to 370 s are found with significance levels exceeding 95%.
Observations in the H-alpha blue wing show more penumbral oscillatory phenomena
when compared to simultaneous G-band observations. The H-alpha oscillations are
interpreted as the signatures of plasma motions with a mean velocity of 20
km/s. The strong oscillatory power over H-alpha blue-wing and G-band penumbral
bright grains is an indication of the Evershed flow with frequencies higher
than previously reported.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
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