26,546 research outputs found
Reconciling visions and realities of virtual working: findings from the UK chemicals industry
The emergence of advanced technologies such as Grid computing will, some suggest, allow the final realisation of visions of virtual organisations. This will, according to its advocates, have entirely positive impacts, creating communities of experts, increasing flexibility, reducing the need for travel and making communications more efficient by crossing boundaries of time and space. Such predictions about future patterns of virtual working are, unfortunately, rarely grounded in real working practices, and often neglect to account for both the rich and varied interpretations that may exist of what constitutes virtual working and the constraints and concerns of those who would do it. This chapter gives attention to the consequences of different views over what virtuality might mean in practice and, in particular, considers virtuality in relation to customer and supplier relationships in a competitive and commercial context. The discussion is based upon a three year study that investigated contrasting visions of what was technically feasible and might be organisationally desirable in the UK Chemicals industry. Through interviews with managers and staff of companies both large and small that research provided insights into the different meanings that organisations attribute to the virtuality of work and to the acceptability of potential implementations of a middleware technology. It was found that interpretations of virtuality amongst the potential users and participants were strongly influenced by established work practices and by previous experiences of relationships-at-a-distance with suppliers and customers. There was a sharp contrast with the enthusiastic visions of virtual working that were already being encapsulated in the middleware by the technical developers; visions of internet-only interaction were perceived as rigid, alienating from well-established ways of working with suppliers and customers and unworkable. In this chapter we shall capture these differences by making a distinction amongst compet
Splitting Sensitivity of the Ground and 7.6 eV Isomeric States of 229Th
The lowest-known excited state in nuclei is the 7.6 eV isomer of 229Th. This
energy is within the range of laser-based investigations that could allow
accurate measurements of possible temporal variation of this energy splitting.
This in turn could probe temporal variation of the fine-structure constant or
other parameters in the nuclear Hamiltonian. We investigate the sensitivity of
this transition energy to these quantities. We find that the two states are
predicted to have identical deformations and thus the same Coulomb energies
within the accuracy of the model (viz., within roughly 30 keV). We therefore
find no enhanced sensitivity to variation of the fine-structure constant. In
the case of the strong interaction the energy splitting is found to have a
complicated dependence on several parameters of the interaction, which makes an
accurate prediction of sensitivity to temporal changes of fundamental constants
problematical. Neither the strong- nor Coulomb-interaction contributions to the
energy splitting of this doublet can be constrained within an accuracy better
than a few tens of keV, so that only upper limits can be set on the possible
sensitivity to temporal variations of the fundamental constants.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Loss-tolerant operations in parity-code linear optics quantum computing
A heavy focus for optical quantum computing is the introduction of
error-correction, and the minimisation of resource requirements. We detail a
complete encoding and manipulation scheme designed for linear optics quantum
computing, incorporating scalable operations and loss-tolerant architecture.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Optimal cooling strategies for magnetically trapped atomic Fermi-Bose mixtures
We discuss cooling efficiency for different-species Fermi-Bose mixtures in
magnetic traps. A better heat capacity matching between the two atomic species
is achieved by a proper choice of the Bose cooler and the magnetically
trappable hyperfine states of the mixture. When a partial spatial overlap
between the two species is also taken into account, the deepest Fermi
degeneracy is obtained for an optimal value of the trapping frequency ratio.
This can be achieved by assisting the magnetic trap with a deconfining light
beam, as shown in the case of fermionic 6Li mixed with 23Na, 87Rb, and 133Cs,
with optimal conditions found for the not yet explored 6Li-87Rb mixture.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Investigation of fast initialization of spacecraft bubble memory systems
Bubble domain technology offers significant improvement in reliability and functionality for spacecraft onboard memory applications. In considering potential memory systems organizations, minimization of power in high capacity bubble memory systems necessitates the activation of only the desired portions of the memory. In power strobing arbitrary memory segments, a capability of fast turn on is required. Bubble device architectures, which provide redundant loop coding in the bubble devices, limit the initialization speed. Alternate initialization techniques are investigated to overcome this design limitation. An initialization technique using a small amount of external storage is demonstrated
The phase transition in the localized ferromagnet EuO probed by muSR
We report results of muon spin rotation measurements performed on the
ferromagnetic semiconductor EuO, which is one of the best approximations to a
localized ferromagnet. We argue that implanted muons are sensitive to the
internal field primarily through a combination of hyperfine and Lorentz fields.
The temperature dependences of the internal field and the relaxation rate have
been measured and are compared with previous theoretical predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Neutrino-12C scattering in the ab initio shell model with a realistic three-body interaction
We investigate cross sections for neutrino-12C exclusive scattering and for
muon capture on 12C using wave functions obtained in the ab initio no-core
shell model. In our parameter-free calculations with basis spaces up to the 6
hbarOmega we show that realistic nucleon-nucleon interactions, like e.g. the
CD-Bonn, under predict the experimental cross sections by more than a factor of
two. By including a realistic three-body interaction, Tucson-Melbourne TM'(99),
the cross sections are enhanced significantly and a much better agreement with
experiment is achieved. At the same time,the TM'(99) interaction improves the
calculated level ordering in 12C. The comparison between the CD-Bonn and the
three-body calculations provides strong confirmation for the need to include a
realistic three-body interaction to account for the spin-orbit strength in
p-shell nuclei.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Electron-scattering form factors for 6Li in the ab initio symmetry-guided framework
We present an ab initio symmetry-adapted no-core shell-model description for
Li. We study the structure of the ground state of Li and the impact
of the symmetry-guided space selection on the charge density components for
this state in momentum space, including the effect of higher shells. We
accomplish this by investigating the electron scattering charge form factor for
momentum transfers up to fm. We demonstrate that this
symmetry-adapted framework can achieve significantly reduced dimensions for
equivalent large shell-model spaces while retaining the accuracy of the form
factor for any momentum transfer. These new results confirm the previous
outcomes for selected spectroscopy observables in light nuclei, such as binding
energies, excitation energies, electromagnetic moments, E2 and M1 reduced
transition probabilities, as well as point-nucleon matter rms radii.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; accepted to Physical Review
VLT/MUSE view of the highly ionized outflow cones in the nearby starburst ESO338-IG04
The Ly line is an important diagnostic for star formation at high
redshift, but interpreting its flux and line profile is difficult because of
the resonance nature of Ly. Trends between the escape of Ly
photons and dust and properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) have been
found, but detailed comparisons between Ly emission and the properties
of the gas in local high-redshift analogs are vital for understanding the
relation between Ly emission and galaxy properties. For the first time,
we can directly infer the properties of the ionized gas at the same location
and similar spatial scales of the extended Ly halo around ESO 338-IG04.
We obtained VLT/MUSE integral field spectra. We used ionization parameter
mapping of the [SII]/[OIII] line ratio and the kinematics of H to study
the ionization state and kinematics of the ISM of ESO338-IG04. The velocity map
reveals two outflows. The entire central area of the galaxy is highly ionized
by photons leaking from the HII regions around the youngest star clusters.
Three highly ionized cones have been identified, of which one is associated
with an outflow. We propose a scenario where the outflows are created by
mechanical feedback of the older clusters, while the highly ionized gas is
caused by the hard ionizing photons emitted by the youngest clusters. A
comparison with the Ly map shows that the (approximately bipolar)
asymmetries observed in the Ly emission are consistent with the base of
the outflows detected in H. No clear correlation with the ionization
cones is found. The mechanical and ionization feedback of star clusters
significantly changes the state of the ISM by creating ionized cones and
outflows. The comparison with Ly suggests that especially the outflows
could facilitate the escape of Ly photons [Abridged].Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letters, 4 pages, 2 figure
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