16,099 research outputs found
Jury Instructions Concerning Multiple Defendants and Strict Liability after the Pennsylvania Comparative Negligence Act
A theoretical model of the ionosphere dynamics with interhemispheric coupling
Dynamic model for ionospheric plasma with interhemispheric couplin
How Should We Foster the Professional Integrity of Engineers in Japan? A Pride-Based Approach
I discuss the predicament that engineering-ethics education in Japan now faces and propose a solution to this. The predicament is professional motivation, i.e., the problem of how to motivate engineering students to maintain their professional integrity. The special professional responsibilities of engineers are often explained either as an implicit social contract between the profession and society (the “social-contract” view), or as requirements for membership in the profession (the “membership-requirement” view). However, there are empirical data that suggest that such views will not do in Japan, and this is the predicament that confronts us. In this country, the profession of engineering did not exist 10 years ago and is still quite underdeveloped. Engineers in this country do not have privileges, high income, or high social status. Under such conditions, neither the social-contract view nor the membership-requirement view is convincing. As an alternative approach that might work in Japan, I propose a pride-based view. The notion of pride has been analyzed in the virtue-ethics literature, but the full potential of this notion has not been explored. Unlike other kinds of pride, professional pride can directly benefit the general public by motivating engineers to do excellent work even without social rewards, since being proud of themselves is already a reward. My proposal is to foster a particular kind of professional pride associated with the importance of professional services in society, as the motivational basis for professional integrity. There is evidence to suggest that this model works
Exact, E=0, Solutions for General Power-Law Potentials. I. Classical Orbits
For zero energy, , we derive exact, classical solutions for {\em all}
power-law potentials, , with and . When the angular momentum is non-zero, these solutions lead to
the orbits , for all . When , the orbits are bound and go through the origin.
This leads to discrete discontinuities in the functional dependence of
and , as functions of , as the orbits pass through the origin. We
describe a procedure to connect different analytic solutions for successive
orbits at the origin. We calculate the periods and precessions of these bound
orbits, and graph a number of specific examples. Also, we explain why they all
must violate the virial theorem. The unbound orbits are also discussed in
detail. This includes the unusual orbits which have finite travel times to
infinity and also the special case.Comment: LaTeX, 27 pages with 12 figures available from the authors or can be
generated from Mathematica instructions at end of the fil
Dynamical percolation on general trees
H\"aggstr\"om, Peres, and Steif (1997) have introduced a dynamical version of
percolation on a graph . When is a tree they derived a necessary and
sufficient condition for percolation to exist at some time . In the case
that is a spherically symmetric tree, H\"aggstr\"om, Peres, and Steif
(1997) derived a necessary and sufficient condition for percolation to exist at
some time in a given target set . The main result of the present paper
is a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of percolation, at
some time , in the case that the underlying tree is not necessary
spherically symmetric. This answers a question of Yuval Peres (personal
communication). We present also a formula for the Hausdorff dimension of the
set of exceptional times of percolation.Comment: 24 pages; to appear in Probability Theory and Related Field
Matrix Black Holes
Four and five dimensional extremal black holes with nonzero entropy have
simple presentations in M-theory as gravitational waves bound to configurations
of intersecting M-branes. We discuss realizations of these objects in matrix
models of M-theory, investigate the properties of zero-brane probes, and
propose a measure of their internal density. A scenario for black hole dynamics
is presented.Comment: 26 pages, harvmac; a few more references and additional comment
Observation of anomalous decoherence effect in a quantum bath at room temperature
Decoherence of quantum objects is critical to modern quantum sciences and
technologies. It is generally believed that stronger noises cause faster
decoherence. Strikingly, recent theoretical research discovers the opposite
case for spins in quantum baths. Here we report experimental observation of the
anomalous decoherence effect for the electron spin-1 of a nitrogen-vacancy
centre in high-purity diamond at room temperature. We demonstrate that under
dynamical decoupling, the double-transition can have longer coherence time than
the single-transition, even though the former couples to the nuclear spin bath
as twice strongly as the latter does. The excellent agreement between the
experimental and the theoretical results confirms the controllability of the
weakly coupled nuclear spins in the bath, which is useful in quantum
information processing and quantum metrology.Comment: 22 pages, related paper at http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.557
First principles simulations of liquid Fe-S under Earth's core conditions
First principles electronic structure calculations, based upon density
functional theory within the generalized gradient approximation and ultra-soft
Vanderbilt pseudopotentials, have been used to simulate a liquid alloy of iron
and sulfur at Earth's core conditions. We have used a sulfur concentration of
wt, in line with the maximum recent estimates of the sulfur
abundance in the Earth's outer core. The analysis of the structural, dynamical
and electronic structure properties has been used to report on the effect of
the sulfur impurities on the behavior of the liquid. Although pure sulfur is
known to form chains in the liquid phase, we have not found any tendency
towards polymerization in our liquid simulation. Rather, a net S-S repulsion is
evident, and we propose an explanation for this effect in terms of the
electronic structure. The inspection of the dynamical properties of the system
suggests that the sulfur impurities have a negligible effect on the viscosity
of Earth's liquid core.Comment: 24 pages (including 8 figures
Aspects of structural health and condition monitoring of offshore wind turbines
Wind power has expanded significantly over the past years, although reliability of wind turbine systems, especially of offshore wind turbines, has been many times unsatisfactory in the past. Wind turbine failures are equivalent to crucial financial losses. Therefore, creating and applying strategies that improve the reliability of their components is important for a successful implementation of such systems. Structural health monitoring (SHM) addresses these problems through the monitoring of parameters indicative of the state of the structure examined. Condition monitoring (CM), on the other hand, can be seen as a specialized area of the SHM community that aims at damage detection of, particularly, rotating machinery. The paper is divided into two parts: in the first part, advanced signal processing and machine learning methods are discussed for SHM and CM on wind turbine gearbox and blade damage detection examples. In the second part, an initial exploration of supervisor control and data acquisition systems data of an offshore wind farm is presented, and data-driven approaches are proposed for detecting abnormal behaviour of wind turbines. It is shown that the advanced signal processing methods discussed are effective and that it is important to adopt these SHM strategies in the wind energy sector
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