29,415 research outputs found
Contour surveying system Patent
Describing device for surveying contour of surface using X-Y plotter and traveling transduce
An evaluation: The potential of discarded tires as a source of fuel
The destructive distillation of rubber tire samples was studied by thermogravimetry, differential scanning calorimetry, combustion calorimetry, and mass spectroscopy. The decomposition reaction was found to be exothermic and produced a mass loss of 65 percent. The gas evolution curves that were obtained indicate that a variety of organic materials are evolved simultaneously during the decomposition of the rubber polymer
X-raying the Winds of Luminous Active Galaxies
We briefly describe some recent observational results, mainly at X-ray
wavelengths, on the winds of luminous active galactic nuclei (AGNs). These
winds likely play a significant role in galaxy feedback. Topics covered include
(1) Relations between X-ray and UV absorption in Broad Absorption Line (BAL)
and mini-BAL quasars; (2) X-ray absorption in radio-loud BAL quasars; and (3)
Evidence for relativistic iron K BALs in the X-ray spectra of a few bright
quasars. We also mention some key outstanding problems and prospects for future
advances; e.g., with the International X-ray Observatory (IXO).Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proceedings of the conference "The
Monster's Fiery Breath: Feedback in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters", June
2009, Madison, Wisconsi
A Chandra Survey of the X-ray Properties of Broad Absorption Line Radio-Loud Quasars
This work presents the results of a Chandra study of 21 broad absorption line
(BAL) radio-loud quasars (RLQs). We conducted a Chandra snapshot survey of 12
bright BAL RLQs selected from SDSS/FIRST data and possessing a wide range of
radio and CIV absorption properties. Optical spectra were obtained nearly
contemporaneously with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope; no strong flux or BAL
variability was seen between epochs. We also include in our sample 9 additional
BAL RLQs possessing archival Chandra coverage. We compare the properties of
(predominantly high-ionization) BAL RLQs to those of non-BAL RLQs as well as to
BAL radio-quiet quasars (RQQs) and non-BAL RQQs for context.
All 12 snapshot and 8/9 archival BAL RLQs are detected, with observed X-ray
luminosities less than those of non-BAL RLQs having comparable optical/UV
luminosities by typical factors of 4.1-8.5. (BAL RLQs are also X-ray weak by
typical factors of 2.0-4.5 relative to non-BAL RLQs having both comparable
optical/UV and radio luminosities.) However, BAL RLQs are not as X-ray weak
relative to non-BAL RLQs as are BAL RQQs relative to non-BAL RQQs. While some
BAL RLQs have harder X-ray spectra than typical non-BAL RLQs, some have
hardness ratios consistent with those of non-BAL RLQs, and there does not
appear to be a correlation between X-ray weakness and spectral hardness, in
contrast to the situation for BAL RQQs. RLQs are expected to have X-ray
continuum contributions from both disk-corona and small-scale jet emission.
While the entire X-ray continuum in BAL RLQs cannot be obscured to the same
degree as in BAL RQQs, we calculate that the jet is likely partially covered in
many BAL RLQs. We comment briefly on implications for geometries and source
ages in BAL RLQs.Comment: 48 pages, 5 tables, 14 figures, accepted by Ap
Broad Absorption Line Variability in Radio-Loud Quasars
We investigate C IV broad absorption line (BAL) variability within a sample
of 46 radio-loud quasars (RLQs), selected from SDSS/FIRST data to include both
core-dominated (39) and lobe-dominated (7) objects. The sample consists
primarily of high-ionization BAL quasars, and a substantial fraction have large
BAL velocities or equivalent widths; their radio luminosities and
radio-loudness values span ~2.5 orders of magnitude. We have obtained 34 new
Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) spectra of 28 BAL RLQs to compare to earlier SDSS
data, and we also incorporate archival coverage (primarily dual-epoch SDSS) for
a total set of 78 pairs of equivalent width measurements for 46 BAL RLQs,
probing rest-frame timescales of ~80-6000 d (median 500 d). In general, only
modest changes in the depths of segments of absorption troughs are observed,
akin to those seen in prior studies of BAL RQQs. Also similar to previous
findings for RQQs, the RLQs studied here are more likely to display BAL
variability on longer rest-frame timescales. However, typical values of
|Delta_EW| and |Delta_EW|/ are about 40+/-20% lower for BAL RLQs when
compared with those of a timescale-matched sample of BAL RQQs. Optical
continuum variability is of similar amplitude in BAL RLQs and BAL RQQs; for
both RLQs and RQQs, continuum variability tends to be stronger on longer
timescales. BAL variability in RLQs does not obviously depend upon their radio
luminosities or radio-loudness values, but we do find tentative evidence for
greater fractional BAL variability within lobe-dominated RLQs. Enhanced BAL
variability within more edge-on (lobe-dominated) RLQs supports some geometrical
dependence to the outflow structure.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figures, 6 tables, accepted to MNRAS, full Appendix A at
http://www.macalester.edu/~bmille13/balrlqs.htm
Constructing blame for school exclusion in an online comments forum: Membership categorisation analysis and endogenous category work
In this article we use Membership Categorisation Analysis to analyse conversations in an online forum in the British newspaper The Guardian. The comments thread followed an Op Ed piece that discussed the exclusion of ‘under-performing’ children in British secondary schools. Our analysis of these comments contributes to existing studies of online forums as a mode of public discourse and demonstrates the importance of research that focusses on interactional practices rather than on notions such as ‘politeness’ or ‘framing’. We show the ways that participants used endogenous conversational categories to produce epistemic alignment and disalignment with each other, employing various strategies such as expanding category collections, creating relations between ‘culpable’ categories and ‘trouble’ categories, and re-describing categories through alternate category predicates. Through this, we see that the conversational actions undertaken in the forum are much more complicated than current concepts allow for, and we reflect on what such complexity might mean for the study and design of news forums
Trypanosomes are monophyletic: evidence from genes for glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase and small subunit ribosomal RNA.
The genomes of Trypanosoma brucei, Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania major have been sequenced, but the phylogenetic relationships of these three protozoa remain uncertain. We have constructed trypanosomatid phylogenies based on genes for glycosomal glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase (gGAPDH) and small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA). Trees based on gGAPDH nucleotide and amino acid sequences (51 taxa) robustly support monophyly of genus Trypanosoma, which is revealed to be a relatively late-evolving lineage of the family Trypanosomatidae. Other trypanosomatids, including genus Leishmania, branch paraphyletically at the base of the trypanosome clade. On the other hand, analysis of the SSU rRNA gene data produced equivocal results, as trees either robustly support or reject monophyly depending on the range of taxa included in the alignment. We conclude that the SSU rRNA gene is not a reliable marker for inferring deep level trypanosome phylogeny. The gGAPDH results support the hypothesis that trypanosomes evolved from an ancestral insect parasite, which adapted to a vertebrate/insect transmission cycle. This implies that the switch from terrestrial insect to aquatic leech vectors for fish and some amphibian trypanosomes was secondary. We conclude that the three sequenced pathogens, T. brucei, T. cruzi and L. major, are only distantly related and have distinct evolutionary histories
AN INTRODUCTION TO VIRGINIA ISSUES: INFORMATION AND ANALYSIS: SPECIAL REPORT FOR VIRGINIA COOPERATIVE EXTENSION
Community/Rural/Urban Development, Labor and Human Capital, Land Economics/Use,
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