2,796 research outputs found
A Status Study of Business and Office Occupations Education in the Community Colleges of Washington State
The purpose of this study was to determine the status of business and office education in the community colleges of the State of Washington in the areas of (1) curricula, (2) plant facilities and equipment, (3) instructional personnel, and (4) student enrollment
X-ray spectroscopy of organic materials
The radiation-induced decomposition of glycine is studied using a combination of Near Edge X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (NEXAFS) measurements and density functional theory calculations. Principal Component Analysis was used to determine the number of distinct molecules that were needed to explain the observed changes in the measured spectra, and the emerging absorption features are assigned to various product molecules through comparison with simulated spectra of several model compounds. It is clear from the experiment that the major effect of soft X-ray irradiation is the fragmentation of the molecule, primarily at the carbonyl sites. Peptide formation is shown to occur under irradiation; a condensation reaction initiated by the removal of a carbonyl oxygen is the proposed mechanism. This study utilizes a novel approach to the study of radiation damage that can occur during measurements, and suggests that it may be possible to use simulated model spectra to correct for these effects in measured spectra.
A study of oligothiophene-based molecular semiconductor materials with potential applications in light-emitting and photovoltaic devices is undertaken. Angle-resolved NEXAFS measurements of the star-shaped 4(HPBT) molecules on an amorphous indium surface show a strong dichroic signal indicating a well-ordered, uniformly upright arrangement of planar molecules. The X-ray excited optical luminescence (XEOL) measurements showed several sharp features associated with vibronic splitting of the LUMO-HOMO luminescent transition. The HOMO-LUMO gap determined from the XEOL measurements is 2.28 eV; this value is in agreement with previously published optical measurements as well as with the value that is estimated from the combination of NEXAFS and X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) measurements. Films formed from blended solutions of 4(HPBT) and the hole-transporting molecular semiconductor PCBM are shown to form a bilayer structure with the PCBM adjacent to the substrate. Annealing causes desorption of the 4(HPBT) from the surface
The overlap parameter across an inverse first order phase transition in a 3D spin-glass
We investigate the thermodynamic phase transition taking place in the
Blume-Capel model in presence of quenched disorder in three dimensions (3D). In
particular, performing Exchange Montecarlo simulations, we study the behavior
of the order parameters accross the first order phase transition and its
related coexistence region. This transition is an Inverse Freezing.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, Contribution to the XII International Workshop on
Complex System
Petawatt laser absorption bounded
The interaction of petawatt () lasers with solid matter
forms the basis for advanced scientific applications such as table-top particle
accelerators, ultrafast imaging systems and laser fusion. Key metrics for these
applications relate to absorption, yet conditions in this regime are so
nonlinear that it is often impossible to know the fraction of absorbed light
, and even the range of is unknown. Here using a relativistic
Rankine-Hugoniot-like analysis, we show for the first time that exhibits a
theoretical maximum and minimum. These bounds constrain nonlinear absorption
mechanisms across the petawatt regime, forbidding high absorption values at low
laser power and low absorption values at high laser power. For applications
needing to circumvent the absorption bounds, these results will accelerate a
shift from solid targets, towards structured and multilayer targets, and lead
the development of new materials
Developmental changes in perceived moral standing of robots
We live in an age where robots are increasingly present in the social and moral world. Here, we explore how children and adults think about the mental lives and moral standing of robots. In Experiment 1 (N = 116), we found that children granted humans and robots with more mental life and vulnerability to harm than an anthropomorphized control (i.e., a toy bear). In Experiment 2 (N = 157), we found that, relative to children, adults ascribed less mental life and vulnerability to harm to robots. In Experiment 3 (N = 152), we modified our experiment to be within-subjects and measured beliefs concerning moral standing. Though younger children again appeared willing to assign mental capacities — particularly those related to experience (e.g., being capable of experiencing hunger) — to robots, older children and adults did so to a lesser degree. This diminished attribution of mental life tracked with diminished ratings of robot moral standing. This informs ongoing debates concerning emerging attitudes about artificial life
Focusing of Intense Subpicosecond Laser Pulses in Wedge Targets
Two dimensional particle-in-cell simulations characterizing the interaction
of ultraintense short pulse lasers in the range 10^{18} \leq I \leq 10^{20}
W/cm^{2} with converging target geometries are presented. Seeking to examine
intensity amplification in high-power laser systems, where focal spots are
typically non-diffraction limited, we describe key dynamical features as the
injected laser intensity and convergence angle of the target are systematically
varied. We find that laser pulses are focused down to a wavelength with the
peak intensity amplified by an order of magnitude beyond its vacuum value, and
develop a simple model for how the peak location moves back towards the
injection plane over time. This performance is sustained over hundreds of
femtoseconds and scales to laser intensities beyond 10^{20} W/cm^{2} at 1 \mu m
wavelength.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physics of Plasma
On the accuracy of retrieved wind information from Doppler lidar observations
A single pulsed Doppler lidar was successfully deployed to measure air flow and turbulence over the Malvern hills, Worcester, UK. The DERA Malvern lidar used was a CO2 µm pulsed Doppler lidar. The lidar pulse repetition rate was 120 Hz and had a pulse duration of 0.6 µs The system was set up to have 41 range gates with range resolution of 112 m. This gave a theoretical maximum range of approximately 4.6 km. The lidar site was 2 km east of the Malvern hill ridge which runs in a north-south direction and is approximately 6 km long. The maximum height of the ridge is 430 m. Two elevation scans (Range-Height Indicators) were carried out parallel and perpendicular to the mean surface flow. Since the surface wind was primarily westerly the scans were carried out perpendicular and parallel to the ridge of the Malvern hills.
The data were analysed and horizontal winds, vertical winds and turbulent fluxes were calculated for profiles throughout the boundary layer. As an aid to evaluating the errors associated with the derivation of velocity and turbulence profiles, data from a simple idealized profile was also analysed using the same method. The error analysis shows that wind velocity profiles can be derived to an accuracy of 0.24 m s-1 in the horizontal and 0.3 m s-1 in the vertical up to a height of 2500 m. The potential for lidars to make turbulence measurements, over a wide area, through the whole depth of the planetary boundary layer and over durations from seconds to hours is discussed
The random Blume-Capel model on cubic lattice: first order inverse freezing in a 3D spin-glass system
We present a numerical study of the Blume-Capel model with quenched disorder
in 3D. The phase diagram is characterized by spin-glass/paramagnet phase
transitions of both first and second order in the thermodynamic sense.
Numerical simulations are performed using the Exchange-Monte Carlo algorithm,
providing clear evidence for inverse freezing. The main features at criticality
and in the phase coexistence region are investigated. The whole inverse
freezing transition appears to be first order. The second order transition
appears to be in the same universality class of the Edwards-Anderson model. The
nature of the spin-glass phase is analyzed by means of the finite size scaling
behavior of the overlap distribution functions and the four-spins real-space
correlation functions. Evidence for a replica symmetry breaking-like
organization of states is provided.Comment: 18 pages, 24 figures, 7 table
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