1,489 research outputs found
Analysis of U.S. Senate Web Sites For Disability Accessibility
U.S. federal government web sites have increased significantly the level of services and information offered to various internal and external stakeholders. The Workforce Investment Act of 1998 amended Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which complemented the intent and aims of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). As a result, federal agencies and departments were mandated to provide disabled stakeholders with access to key information from federal web sites. However, since this enactment, some federal web sites still do not meet fully the legal requirements to accommodate users with disabilities. Additionally, web sites of members of the U.S. Congress technically do not fall under regulation. Without regulation, non-adherence to accessibility standards by congressional web sites may result in poor or ineffective utilization by citizen consumers or other stakeholders with disabilities. The purpose of this study is to examine the accessibility statistics for a pseudo-random sample of 50 web sites of U.S. Senators. The main web page of each site was evaluated with an online web site analysis software tool – Truwex. Three factors were used to gauge the level of accessibility: criteria based on Section 508, WCAG 1.0 standards, and WCAG 2.0 standards. Results suggest that the vast majority of the U.S. Senate web sites do not meet the federal legal guidelines that otherwise are imposed on other U.S. governmental agencies and departments. Many of the sites contain consistent patterns of non-compliance, and some minor changes could result in increased accessibility for disabled stakeholders
One dimensional chain of quantum molecule motors as a mathematical physics model for muscle fibre
A quantum chain model of many molecule motors is proposed as a mathematical
physics theory on the microscopic modeling of classical force-velocity relation
and tension transients of muscle fibre. We proposed quantum many-particle
Hamiltonian to predict the force-velocity relation for the slow release of
muscle fibre which has no empirical relation yet, it is much more complicate
than hyperbolic relation. Using the same Hamiltonian, we predicted the
mathematical force-velocity relation when the muscle is stimulated by
alternative electric current. The discrepancy between input electric frequency
and the muscle oscillation frequency has a physical understanding by Doppler
effect in this quantum chain model. Further more, we apply quantum physics
phenomena to explore the tension time course of cardiac muscle and insect
flight muscle. Most of the experimental tension transients curves found their
correspondence in the theoretical output of quantum two-level and three-level
model. Mathematically modeling electric stimulus as photons exciting a quantum
three-level particle reproduced most tension transient curves of water bug
Lethocerus Maximus.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, Arguments are adde
Dynamic Singularities in Cooperative Exclusion
We investigate cooperative exclusion, in which the particle velocity can be
an increasing function of the density. Within a hydrodynamic theory, an initial
density upsteps and downsteps can evolve into: (a) shock waves, (b) continuous
compression or rarefaction waves, or (c) a mixture of shocks and continuous
waves. These unusual phenomena arise because of an inflection point in the
current versus density relation. This anomaly leads to a group velocity that
can either be an increasing or a decreasing function of the density on either
side of these wave singularities.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 2 column revtex 4-1 format; version 2:
substantially rewritten and put in IOP format, mail results unchanged;
version 3: minor changes, final version for publication in JSTA
The Shocking Impact of Corporate Scandal on Directors\u27 and Officers\u27 Liability
Directors and officers liability (hereinafter D&O) serves as a deterrent to corporate wrongdoing. Recent cycles of corporate scandal have impacted the tools used to manage the risk that D&O liability creates. The impact of these scandals is a shock, which is a sudden event that alters the market profoundly. Market alteration has counter intuitively resulted in increased availability of D&O insurance at a lower price, despite an increase in D&O liability. With increased D&O coverage offerings at lower costs, the market has become soft, making coverage readily available. Carriers are competing for insureds and there is now a risk of undermining the deterrent effect that D&O liability provides. This paper explores whether D&O liability\u27s deterrent effect has been jeopardized in this soft D&O insurance marke
Management of submacular hemorrhage with intravitreal versus subretinal injection of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator
To compare the efficacy of pars plana vitrectomy (ppV) with intravitreal injection of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) and gas versus ppV with subretinal injection of rtPA and intravitreal injection of gas
Raman and fluorescence contributions to resonant inelastic soft x-ray scattering on LaAlO/SrTiO heterostructures
We present a detailed study of the Ti 3 carriers at the interface of
LaAlO/SrTiO heterostructures by high-resolution resonant inelastic soft
x-ray scattering (RIXS), with special focus on the roles of overlayer thickness
and oxygen vacancies. Our measurements show the existence of interfacial Ti
3 electrons already below the critical thickness for conductivity and an
increase of the total interface charge up to a LaAlO overlayer thickness of
6 unit cells before it levels out. By comparing stoichiometric and oxygen
deficient samples we observe strong Ti 3 charge carrier doping by oxygen
vacancies. The RIXS data combined with photoelectron spectroscopy and transport
measurements indicate the simultaneous presence of localized and itinerant
charge carriers. However, it is demonstrated that the relative amount of
localized and itinerant Ti electrons in the ground state cannot be deduced
from the relative intensities of the Raman and fluorescence peaks in excitation
energy dependent RIXS measurements, in contrast to previous interpretations.
Rather, we attribute the observation of either the Raman or the fluorescence
signal to the spatial extension of the intermediate state reached in the RIXS
excitation process.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
The Narrow-Line Regions of LINERs as Resolved with the Hubble Space Telescope
LINERs exist in the nuclei of a large fraction of luminous galaxies, but
their connection with the AGN phenomenon has remained elusive. We present
Hubble Space Telescope narrowband [O III]5007 and H-alpha+[N II] emission-line
images of the central regions of 14 galaxies with LINER nuclei. The compact, ~1
arcsec-scale, unresolved emission that dominates the line flux in ground-based
observations is mostly resolved by HST. The bulk of this emission comes from
regions with sizes of tens to hundreds of parsecs that are resolved into knots,
filaments, and diffuse gas whose morphology differs from galaxy to galaxy. Most
of the galaxies do not show clear linear structures or ionization cones
analogous to those often seen in Seyfert galaxies. An exception is NGC 1052,
the prototypical LINER, in which we find a 3 arcsec-long (~ 250 pc) biconical
structure that is oriented on the sky along the galaxy's radio jet axis. Seven
of the galaxies have been shown in previously published HST images to have a
bright compact ultraviolet nuclear source, while the other seven do not have a
central UV source. Our images find evidence of dust in the nuclear regions of
all 14 galaxies, with clear indications of nuclear obscuration in most of the
"UV-dark" cases. The data suggest that the line-emitting gas in most LINERs is
photoionized by a central source (which may be stellar, nonstellar, or a
combination thereof) but that this source is often hidden from direct view. We
find no obvious morphological differences between LINERs with detected weak
broad H-alpha wings in their spectra and those with only narrow lines.
Likewise, there is no clear morphological distinction between objects whose UV
spectra are dominated by hot stars (e.g., NGC 4569) and those that are AGN-like
(e.g., NGC 4579).Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ. 25 pages, 3 tables, 9 JPEG
Figure
The Host Galaxies of Narrow-Line Seyfert 1s: Evidence for Bar-Driven Fueling
We present a study of the host-galaxy morphologies of narrow- and broad-line
Seyfert 1 galaxies (NLS1s and BLS1s) based on broad-band optical images from
the Hubble Space Telescope archives. We find that large-scale stellar bars,
starting at ~1 kpc from the nucleus, are much more common in NLS1s than BLS1s.
Furthermore, the fraction of NLS1 spirals that have bars increases with
decreasing full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) of the broad component of H-beta.
These results suggest a link between the large-scale bars, which can support
high fueling rates to the inner kpc, and the high mass-accretion rates
associated with the supermassive black holes in NLS1s.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures (1a, 1b, 2, and 3), Accepted for publication in
the Astronomical Journa
The transition of people’s preferences for the intervention of the government in the economy of re-unified Germany
Covering the first fifteen years immediately after German re- unification, this paper analyzes the people’s support to the transition. The focus is on individuals’ preferences for the intervention of the government in the economy and on the opinion about competition per se. Eastern German data are compared with Western German data. Using suitable data that allow for interpersonal comparisons, the paper shows that Eastern Germans have always preferred an intervention of the public hand in the economy deeper than Western Germans; these different positions have hardly converged during the examined period of time. However there are no significant differences with respect to how Germans perceive competition per se: it is considered as a good by the people living in both parts of the country.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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