14,603 research outputs found
Nd:YAG development for spaceborne laser ranging system
The results of the development of a unique modelocked laser device to be utilized in future NASA space-based, ultraprecision laser ranger systems are summarized. The engineering breadboard constructed proved the feasibility of the pump-pulsed, actively modelocked, PTM Q-switched Nd:YAG laser concept for the generation of subnanosecond pulses suitable for ultra-precision ranging. The laser breadboard also included a double-pass Nd:YAG amplifier and provision for a Type II KD*P frequency doubler. The specific technical accomplishment was the generation of single 150 psec, 20-mJ pulses at 10 pps at a wavelength of 1.064 micrometers with 25 dB suppression of pre-and post-pulses
Industrial Policy: Diverting Resources from the Winners
This article argues that the various forms of industrial policy currently being proposed are inappropriate for the United States (U.S.). They would fail not only on economic grounds, but on political grounds as well. The article outlines the appropriate role for government in the economy
Water vapor on supergiants. The 12 micron TEXES spectra of mu Cephei
Several recent papers have argued for warm, semi-detached, molecular layers
surrounding red giant and supergiant stars, a concept known as a MOLsphere.
Spectroscopic and interferometric analyses have often corroborated this general
picture. Here, we present high-resolution spectroscopic data of pure rotational
lines of water vapor at 12 microns for the supergiant mu Cephei. This star has
often been used to test the concept of molecular layers around supergiants.
Given the prediction of an isothermal, optically thick water-vapor layer in
Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium around the star (MOLsphere), we expected the 12
micron lines to be in emission or at least in absorption but filled in by
emission from the molecular layer around the star. Our data, however, show the
contrary; we find definite absorption. Thus, our data do not easily fit into
the suggested isothermal MOLsphere scenario. The 12 micron lines, therefore,
put new, strong constraints on the MOLsphere concept and on the nature of water
seen in signatures across the spectra of early M supergiants. We also find that
the absorption is even stronger than that calculated from a standard,
spherically symmetric model photosphere without any surrounding layers. A cool
model photosphere, representing cool outer layers is, however, able to
reproduce the lines, but this model does not account for water vapor emission
at 6 microns. Thus, a unified model for water vapor on mu Cephei appears to be
lacking. It does seem necessary to model the underlying photospheres of these
supergiants in their whole complexity. The strong water vapor lines clearly
reveal inadequacies of classical model atmospheres.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Shell-model calculations for the three-nucleon system
We use Faddeev's decomposition to solve the shell-model problem for three
nucleons. The dependence on harmonic-oscillator excitations allowed in the
model space, up to in the present calculations, and on the
harmonic-oscillator frequency is studied. Effective interactions derived from
Nijmegen II and Reid93 potentials are used in the calculations. The binding
energies obtained are close to those calculated by other methods. The structure
of the Faddeev equations is discussed and a simple formula for matrix elements
of the permutation operators in a harmonic-oscillator basis is given. The Pauli
principle is properly treated in the calculations.Comment: 11 pages. REVTEX. 6 PostScript figure
Assessing factors that may predispose Minnesota farms to wolf depredations on cattle
Wolf (Canis lupus) depredations on livestock cause considerable conflict and expense in Minnesota. Furthermore, claims are made that such depredations are fostered by the type of animal husbandry practiced. Thus, we tried to detect factors that might predispose farms in Minnesota to wolf depredations. We compared results of interviews with 41 cattle farmers experiencing chronic cattle losses to wolves (chronic farms) with results from 41 nearby matched farms with no wolf losses to determine farm characteristics or husbandry practices that differed and that therefore might have affected wolf depredations. We also used a Geographic Information System (GIS) to detect any habitat differences between the 2 types of farms. We found no differences between chronic and matched farms in the 11 farm characteristics and management practices that we surveyed, except that farms with chronic losses were larger, had more cattle, and had herds farther from human dwellings. Habitat types were the same around farms with and without losses. The role of proper carcass disposal as a possible factor predisposing farms to wolf depredations remains unclear
Global climate forcing driven by altered BVOC fluxes from 1990 to 2010 land cover change in maritime Southeast Asia
Over the period of 1990–2010, maritime Southeast Asia experienced large-scale
land cover changes, including expansion of high-isoprene-emitting oil palm
plantations and contraction of low-isoprene-emitting natural forests. The
ModelE2-Yale Interactive terrestrial Biosphere global chemistry–climate
model is used to quantify the atmospheric composition changes, and for the
first time, the associated radiative forcing induced by the
land-cover-change-driven biogenic volatile organic compound (BVOC) emission
changes (+6.5 TgC y−1 isoprene, −0.5 TgC y−1 monoterpenes).
Regionally, surface-level ozone concentrations largely decreased (−3.8 to
+0.8 ppbv). The tropical land cover changes occurred in a region of strong
convective transport, providing a mechanism for the BVOC perturbations to
affect the composition of the upper troposphere. Enhanced concentrations of
isoprene and its degradation products are simulated in the upper troposphere,
and, on a global-mean basis, land cover change had a stronger impact on ozone
in the upper troposphere (+0.5 ppbv) than in the lower troposphere (<0.1 ppbv increase). The positive climate forcing from ozone changes
(+9.2 mW m−2) was partially offset by a negative forcing
(−0.8 mW m−2) associated with an enhancement in secondary organic
aerosol (SOA). The sign of the net forcing is sensitive to uncertainty in the
SOA yield from BVOCs. The global-mean ozone forcing per unit of regional oil
palm expansion is +1 mW m−2 Mha−1. In light of expected
continued expansion of oil palm plantations, regional land cover changes may
play an increasingly important role in driving future global ozone radiative
forcing.</p
Sustaining Urban Forests in Post-Industrial Cities: Place Attachment, Ecology, and Stewardship Potential
People value urban green spaces for enjoying nature and socializing with friends, family, and other park users. However, overgrown urban forests without clear access points can be perceived as dark, dangerous, and wild places. As many cities experience reduced budgets, they struggle to maintain green spaces established in more prosperous times. We conducted a descriptive analysis of how constrained parks budgets and subsequent city decisions about maintenance are associated with patterns of forest use, place attachment, and social capital and their impacts on the potential for stewardship of forested parks. We selected Springfield, Massachusetts for our study because it is typical of former industrial cities with highly constrained budgets. We used both qualitative and quantitative analyses of field observations and interviews with park users and nearby residents. We found that access to forests and park use were the strongest predictors of place attachment, and that on-site services, access, and maintenance level were the strongest predictors of use rather than surrounding socioeconomic conditions. Users valued the ecology of the sites, even while park managers highlighted invasive plants as a major maintenance issue. Even though many sites had low levels of use, there remains a strong sense of ownership, community, and safety. Taken together, there is a great deal of untapped stewardship potential in the city, with few organized avenues for users and residents to engage in stewardship. The findings support the hypothesized ‘virtuous circle’ whereby higher levels of maintenance and access beget greater use and attachment, which motivates stewardship. Alternatively, the more neglected forested parks become, the less use they will have, and the more unknown and unloved they will become. In high use sites, some outreach may be all that is needed to move into the ‘virtuous circle,’ while greater interventions will be needed in low use sites with no facilities, and these sites are the ones at greatest risk. Since the long-term sustainability of urban forests requires that local residents appreciate, use, and steward them, Springfield and other post-industrial cities need to find creative models for supporting greater involvement of residents in park stewardship while recognizing these residents frequently inhabit communities under stress
Cage-induced stereotypic behaviour in laboratory mice covaries with nucleus accumbens FosB/ΔFosB expression.
Stereotypic behaviour (SB) occurs in certain human disorders (e.g. autism), and animals treated with stimulants or raised in impoverished conditions, including laboratory mice in standard cages. Dysfunctional cortico-basal ganglia pathways have been implicated in these examples, but for cage-induced forms of SB, the relative roles of ventral versus dorsal striatum had not been fully ascertained. Here, we used immunohistochemical staining of FosB and ΔFosB to assess long-term activation within the nucleus accumbens and caudate-putamen of C57BL/6 mice. Housed in typical laboratory cages, these mice spontaneously developed different degrees of route-tracing, bar-mouthing and other forms of SB (spending 0% to over 50% of their active time budgets in this behaviour). The most highly stereotypic mice showed the most elevated FosB/ΔFosB activity in the nucleus accumbens. No such patterns occurred in the caudate-putamen. The cage-induced SB common in standard-housed mice thus involves elevated activity within the ventral striatum, suggesting an aetiology closer to compulsive gambling, eating and drug-seeking than to classic amphetamine stereotypies and other behaviours induced by motor loop over-activation
Correlation function of weakly interacting bosons in a disordered lattice
One of the most important issues in disordered systems is the interplay of
the disorder and repulsive interactions. Several recent experimental advances
on this topic have been made with ultracold atoms, in particular the
observation of Anderson localization, and the realization of the disordered
Bose-Hubbard model. There are however still questions as to how to
differentiate the complex insulating phases resulting from this interplay, and
how to measure the size of the superfluid fragments that these phases entail.
It has been suggested that the correlation function of such a system can give
new insights, but so far little experimental investigation has been performed.
Here, we show the first experimental analysis of the correlation function for a
weakly interacting, bosonic system in a quasiperiodic lattice. We observe an
increase in the correlation length as well as a change in shape of the
correlation function in the delocalization crossover from Anderson glass to
coherent, extended state. In between, the experiment indicates the formation of
progressively larger coherent fragments, consistent with a fragmented BEC, or
Bose glass.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Symmetric Versus Nonsymmetric Structure of the Phosphorus Vacancy on InP(110)
The atomic and electronic structure of positively charged P vacancies on
InP(110) surfaces is determined by combining scanning tunneling microscopy,
photoelectron spectroscopy, and density-functional theory calculations. The
vacancy exhibits a nonsymmetric rebonded atomic configuration with a charge
transfer level 0.75+-0.1 eV above the valence band maximum. The scanning
tunneling microscopy (STM) images show only a time average of two degenerate
geometries, due to a thermal flip motion between the mirror configurations.
This leads to an apparently symmetric STM image, although the ground state
atomic structure is nonsymmetric.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures. related publications can be found at
http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
- …