6,948 research outputs found
The Uses and Limitations of the United Nations
I limit this discussion primarily to the security aspects of the United Nations not because I am not interested in the non-security aspects but there just is not time to do justice to the economic, social and dependent territory problems
A Survey of Acidity in Drainage Waters and the Condition of Highway Drainage Installations
Every creek gulley and raw interrupted by roadway fills and embankments must be provided with an adequate drainage conduit under the pavement. If the natural drainage is impeded or the conduit is not functioning properly, impounded water over-runs the pavement, seeps through the fill, and eventually disintegrates the section or reduces its stability. The topography in Kentucky, through varied sectionally, requires on the average, one cross-drain for every thousand feet of roadway. Obviously, these drainage structures are of considerable economic importance in the highway program, not only from the standpoint of initial construction costs, but also from consideration of the service-efficiency or the permanence of the installation itself. Of these two factors, service-efficiency is undoubtedly the more important factor in determining an integrated service economy. Since permanence of a culvert or cross-drain depends largely on the specific properties of the material with which it is made, considerable advantage may be derived by selecting material for use in areas where their properties are compatible with the conditions of service, and excluding them where condition are known to be unfavorable
Discontinuous Galerkin method for the spherically reduced BSSN system with second-order operators
We present a high-order accurate discontinuous Galerkin method for evolving
the spherically-reduced Baumgarte-Shapiro-Shibata-Nakamura (BSSN) system
expressed in terms of second-order spatial operators. Our multi-domain method
achieves global spectral accuracy and long-time stability on short
computational domains. We discuss in detail both our scheme for the BSSN system
and its implementation. After a theoretical and computational verification of
the proposed scheme, we conclude with a brief discussion of issues likely to
arise when one considers the full BSSN system.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, uses revtex4. Revised in response to
referee's repor
Coupling molecular spin states by photon-assisted tunneling
Artificial molecules containing just one or two electrons provide a powerful
platform for studies of orbital and spin quantum dynamics in nanoscale devices.
A well-known example of these dynamics is tunneling of electrons between two
coupled quantum dots triggered by microwave irradiation. So far, these
tunneling processes have been treated as electric dipole-allowed
spin-conserving events. Here we report that microwaves can also excite
tunneling transitions between states with different spin. In this work, the
dominant mechanism responsible for violation of spin conservation is the
spin-orbit interaction. These transitions make it possible to perform detailed
microwave spectroscopy of the molecular spin states of an artificial hydrogen
molecule and open up the possibility of realizing full quantum control of a two
spin system via microwave excitation.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Convergence and Gauge Dependence Properties of the Resummed One-loop Quark-Quark Scattering Amplitude in Perturbative QCD
The one-loop QCD effective charge for quark-quark scattering
is derived by diagrammatic resummation of the one-loop amplitude using an
arbitary covariant gauge. Except for the particular choice of gauge parameter
, is found to {\it increase} with increasing
physical scale, , as or . For ,
decreases with increasing and satisfies a renormalisation group equation.
Also, except for the case , convergence radii of geometric series
are found to impose upper limits on .Comment: 28 pages, 5 tables, 5 figures. v3 The one-loop amplitudes in Section
2 are recalculated using dimensional regularisation, and several errors in
the on-shell calculation of Reference[1] are pointed out. v4 one figure
removed one added. Three tables and new text in Section 5 added. Published
versio
Sex-biased parental care and sexual size dimorphism in a provisioning arthropod
The diverse selection pressures driving the evolution of sexual size dimorphism (SSD) have long been debated. While the balance between fecundity selection and sexual selection has received much attention, explanations based on sex-specific ecology have proven harder to test. In ectotherms, females are typically larger than males, and this is frequently thought to be because size constrains female fecundity more than it constrains male mating success. However, SSD could additionally reflect maternal care strategies. Under this hypothesis, females are relatively larger where reproduction requires greater maximum maternal effort – for example where mothers transport heavy provisions to nests.
To test this hypothesis we focussed on digger wasps (Hymenoptera: Ammophilini), a relatively homogeneous group in which only females provision offspring. In some species, a single large prey item, up to 10 times the mother’s weight, must be carried to each burrow on foot; other species provide many small prey, each flown individually to the nest.
We found more pronounced female-biased SSD in species where females carry single, heavy prey. More generally, SSD was negatively correlated with numbers of prey provided per offspring. Females provisioning multiple small items had longer wings and thoraxes, probably because smaller prey are carried in flight.
Despite much theorising, few empirical studies have tested how sex-biased parental care can affect SSD. Our study reveals that such costs can be associated with the evolution of dimorphism, and this should be investigated in other clades where parental care costs differ between sexes and species
On-disk coronal rain
Small and elongated, cool and dense blob-like structures are being reported
with high resolution telescopes in physically different regions throughout the
solar atmosphere. Their detection and the understanding of their formation,
morphology and thermodynamical characteristics can provide important
information on their hosting environment, especially concerning the magnetic
field, whose understanding constitutes a major problem in solar physics. An
example of such blobs is coronal rain, a phenomenon of thermal non- equilibrium
observed in active region loops, which consists of cool and dense chromospheric
blobs falling along loop-like paths from coronal heights. So far, only off-limb
coronal rain has been observed and few reports on the phenomenon exist. In the
present work, several datasets of on-disk H{\alpha} observations with the CRisp
Imaging SpectroPolarimeter (CRISP) at the Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope (SST) are
analyzed. A special family of on-disk blobs is selected for each dataset and a
statistical analysis is carried out on their dynamics, morphology and
temperatures. All characteristics present distributions which are very similar
to reported coronal rain statistics. We discuss possible interpretations
considering other similar blob-like structures reported so far and show that a
coronal rain interpretation is the most likely one. Their chromospheric nature
and the projection effects (which eliminate all direct possibility of height
estimation) on one side, and their small sizes, fast dynamics, and especially,
their faint character (offering low contrast with the background intensity) on
the other side, are found as the main causes for the absence until now of the
detection of this on-disk coronal rain counterpart.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for Solar Physic
Using keystroke logging to understand writers’ processes on a reading-into-writing test
Background
Integrated reading-into-writing tasks are increasingly used in large-scale language proficiency tests. Such tasks are said to possess higher authenticity as they reflect real-life writing conditions better than independent, writing-only tasks. However, to effectively define the reading-into-writing construct, more empirical evidence regarding how writers compose from sources both in real-life and under test conditions is urgently needed. Most previous process studies used think aloud or questionnaire to collect evidence. These methods rely on participants’ perceptions of their processes, as well as their ability to report them.
Findings
This paper reports on a small-scale experimental study to explore writers’ processes on a reading-into-writing test by employing keystroke logging. Two L2 postgraduates completed an argumentative essay on computer. Their text production processes were captured by a keystroke logging programme. Students were also interviewed to provide additional information. Keystroke logging like most computing tools provides a range of measures. The study examined the students’ reading-into-writing processes by analysing a selection of the keystroke logging measures in conjunction with students’ final texts and interview protocols.
Conclusions
The results suggest that the nature of the writers’ reading-into-writing processes might have a major influence on the writer’s final performance. Recommendations for future process studies are provided
Comparative Network Analysis of Preterm vs. Full-Term Infant-Mother Interactions
Several studies have reported that interactions of mothers with preterm infants show differential characteristics compared to that of mothers with full-term infants. Interaction of preterm dyads is often reported as less harmonious. However, observations and explanations concerning the underlying mechanisms are inconsistent. In this work 30 preterm and 42 full-term mother-infant dyads were observed at one year of age. Free play interactions were videotaped and coded using a micro-analytic coding system. The video records were coded at one second resolution and studied by a novel approach using network analysis tools. The advantage of our approach is that it reveals the patterns of behavioral transitions in the interactions. We found that the most frequent behavioral transitions are the same in the two groups. However, we have identified several high and lower frequency transitions which occur significantly more often in the preterm or full-term group. Our analysis also suggests that the variability of behavioral transitions is significantly higher in the preterm group. This higher variability is mostly resulted from the diversity of transitions involving non-harmonious behaviors. We have identified a maladaptive pattern in the maternal behavior in the preterm group, involving intrusiveness and disengagement. Application of the approach reported in this paper to longitudinal data could elucidate whether these maladaptive maternal behavioral changes place the infant at risk for later emotional, cognitive and behavioral disturbance
Mathematical Explanations and Mathematical Applications
One of the key questions in the philosophy of mathematics is the role and status of mathematical applications in the natural sciences. The importance of mathematics for science is indisputable, but philosophers have disagreed on what the relation between mathematical theories and scientific theories are. This chapter presents these topics through a distinction between mathematical applications and mathematical explanations. Particularly important is the question whether mathematical applications are ever indispensable. If so, it has often been argued, such applications should count as proper mathematical explanations. Following Quine, many philosophers have also contended that if there are indispensable mathematical applications in the natural sciences, then the mathematical objects posited in those applications have an independent existence like the scientific objects. Thus the question of mathematical explanations and applications has an important relevance for the ontology of mathematics.Peer reviewe
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