3,603 research outputs found
Extraction of the electron mass from factor measurements on light hydrogenlike ions
The determination of the electron mass from Penning-trap measurements with
C ions and from theoretical results for the bound-electron
factor is described in detail. Some recently calculated contributions slightly
shift the extracted mass value. Prospects of a further improvement of the
electron mass are discussed both from the experimental and from the theoretical
point of view. Measurements with He ions will enable a consistency
check of the electron mass value, and in future an improvement of the He
nuclear mass and a determination of the fine-structure constant
Mechanical Translation
Contains research objectives and reports on four research projects.National Science Foundation (Grant G-24047
Rational approximation and arithmetic progressions
A reasonably complete theory of the approximation of an irrational by
rational fractions whose numerators and denominators lie in prescribed
arithmetic progressions is developed in this paper. Results are both, on the
one hand, from a metrical and a non-metrical point of view and, on the other
hand, from an asymptotic and also a uniform point of view. The principal
novelty is a Khintchine type theorem for uniform approximation in this context.
Some applications of this theory are also discussed
Improved Thermoelectric Cooling Based on the Thomson Effect
Traditional thermoelectric Peltier coolers exhibit a cooling limit which is
primarily determined by the figure of merit, zT. Rather than a fundamental
thermodynamic limit, this bound can be traced to the difficulty of maintaining
thermoelectric compatibility. Self-compatibility locally maximizes the cooler's
coefficient of performance for a given zT and can be achieved by adjusting the
relative ratio of the thermoelectric transport properties that make up zT. In
this study, we investigate the theoretical performance of thermoelectric
coolers that maintain self-compatibility across the device. We find such a
device behaves very differently from a Peltier cooler, and term self-compatible
coolers "Thomson coolers" when the Fourier heat divergence is dominated by the
Thomson, as opposed to the Joule, term. A Thomson cooler requires an
exponentially rising Seebeck coefficient with increasing temperature, while
traditional Peltier coolers, such as those used commercially, have
comparatively minimal change in Seebeck coefficient with temperature. When
reasonable material property bounds are placed on the thermoelectric leg, the
Thomson cooler is predicted to achieve approximately twice the maximum
temperature drop of a traditional Peltier cooler with equivalent figure of
merit (zT). We anticipate the development of Thomson coolers will ultimately
lead to solid state cooling to cryogenic temperatures.Comment: The Manuscript has been revised for publication in PR
Evaluating implicit feedback models using searcher simulations
In this article we describe an evaluation of relevance feedback (RF) algorithms using searcher simulations. Since these algorithms select additional terms for query modification based on inferences made from searcher interaction, not on relevance information searchers explicitly provide (as in traditional RF), we refer to them as implicit feedback models. We introduce six different models that base their decisions on the interactions of searchers and use different approaches to rank query modification terms. The aim of this article is to determine which of these models should be used to assist searchers in the systems we develop. To evaluate these models we used searcher simulations that afforded us more control over the experimental conditions than experiments with human subjects and allowed complex interaction to be modeled without the need for costly human experimentation. The simulation-based evaluation methodology measures how well the models learn the distribution of terms across relevant documents (i.e., learn what information is relevant) and how well they improve search effectiveness (i.e., create effective search queries). Our findings show that an implicit feedback model based on Jeffrey's rule of conditioning outperformed other models under investigation
Agreement on the perception of moral character
This study tested for inter-judge agreement on moral character. A sample of students and community members rated their own moral character using a measure that tapped six moral character traits. Friends, family members, and/or acquaintances rated these targets on the same traits. Self/other and inter-informant agreement was found at the trait level for both a general character factor and for residual variance explained by individual moral character traits, as well as at the individual level (judges agreed on targets’ “moral character profiles”). Observed inter-judge agreement constitutes evidence for the existence of moral character, and raises questions about the nature of moral character traits
Search based software engineering: Trends, techniques and applications
© ACM, 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of ACM for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive version is available from the link below.In the past five years there has been a dramatic increase in work on Search-Based Software Engineering (SBSE), an approach to Software Engineering (SE) in which Search-Based Optimization (SBO) algorithms are used to address problems in SE. SBSE has been applied to problems throughout the SE lifecycle, from requirements and project planning to maintenance and reengineering. The approach is attractive because it offers a suite of adaptive automated and semiautomated solutions in situations typified by large complex problem spaces with multiple competing and conflicting objectives.
This article provides a review and classification of literature on SBSE. The work identifies research trends and relationships between the techniques applied and the applications to which they have been applied and highlights gaps in the literature and avenues for further research.EPSRC and E
The Expanding Nebular Remnant of the Recurrent Nova RS Ophiuchi (2006): II. Modeling of Combined Hubble Space Telescope Imaging and Ground-based Spectroscopy
We report Hubble Space Telescope imaging, obtained 155 and 449 days after the
2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi, together with ground-based
spectroscopic observations, obtained from the Observatorio Astron\'omico
Nacional en San Pedro M\'artir, Baja California, M\'exico and at the
Observatorio Astrof\'isico Guillermo Haro, at Cananea, Sonora, M\'exico. The
observations at the first epoch were used as inputs to model the geometry and
kinematic structure of the evolving RS Oph nebular remnant. We find that the
modeled remnant comprises two distinct co-aligned bipolar components; a
low-velocity, high-density innermost (hour glass) region and a more extended,
high-velocity (dumbbell) structure. This overall structure is in agreement with
that deduced from radio observations and optical interferometry at earlier
epochs. We find that the asymmetry observed in the west lobe is an instrumental
effect caused by the profile of the HST filter and hence demonstrate that this
lobe is approaching the observer. We then conclude that the system has an
inclination to the line of sight of 39 degrees. This is in
agreement with the inclination of the binary orbit and lends support to the
proposal that this morphology is due to the interaction of the outburst ejecta
with either an accretion disk around the central white dwarf and/or a
pre-existing red giant wind that is significantly denser in the equatorial
regions of the binary than at the poles. The second epoch HST observation was
also modeled. However, as no spectra were taken at this epoch, it is more
difficult to constrain any model. Nevertheless, we demonstrate that between the
two HST epochs the outer dumbbell structure seems to have expanded linearly.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
- …