2,126 research outputs found
Theoretical and experimental studies of error in square-law detector circuits
Square law detector circuits to determine errors from the ideal input/output characteristic function were investigated. The nonlinear circuit response is analyzed by a power series expansion containing terms through the fourth degree, from which the significant deviation from square law can be predicted. Both fixed bias current and flexible bias current configurations are considered. The latter case corresponds with the situation where the mean current can change with the application of a signal. Experimental investigations of the circuit arrangements are described. Agreement between the analytical models and the experimental results are established. Factors which contribute to differences under certain conditions are outlined
Transnational reflections on transnational research projects on men, boys and gender relations
This article reflects on the research project, ‘Engaging South African and Finnish youth towards new traditions of non-violence, equality and social well-being’, funded by the Finnish and South African national research councils, in the context of wider debates on research, projects and transnational processes. The project is located within a broader analysis of research projects and projectization (the reduction of research to separate projects), and the increasing tendencies for research to be framed within and as projects, with their own specific temporal and organizational characteristics. This approach is developed further in terms of different understandings of research across borders: international, comparative, multinational and transnational. Special attention is given to differences between research projects that are in the Europe and the EU, and projects that are between the global North and the global South. The theoretical, political and practical challenges of the North-South research project are discussed
A high resolution solar atlas for fluorescence calculations
The characteristics required of a solar atlas to be used for studying the fluorescence process in comets are examined. Several sources of low resolution data were combined to provide an absolutely calibrated spectrum from 2250 A to 7000A. Three different sources of high resolution data were also used to cover this same spectral range. The low resolution data were then used to put each high resolution spectrum on an absolute scale. The three high resolution spectra were then combined in their overlap regions to produce a single, absolutely calibrated high resolution spectrum over the entire spectral range
A new two-dimensional lattice model that is "consistent around a cube"
For two-dimensional lattice equations one definition of integrability is that
the model can be naturally and consistently extended to three dimensions, i.e.,
that it is "consistent around a cube" (CAC). As a consequence of CAC one can
construct a Lax pair for the model. Recently Adler, Bobenko and Suris conducted
a search based on this principle and certain additional assumptions. One of
those assumptions was the "tetrahedron property", which is satisfied by most
known equations. We present here one lattice equation that satisfies the
consistency condition but does not have the tetrahedron property. Its Lax pair
is also presented and some basic properties discussed.Comment: 8 pages in LaTe
Search for cosmic gamma radiation with a vidicon spark chamber Final report
Cosmic gamma radiation searched with vidicon spark chamber flown in high-altitude balloo
Mechanical control of spin-orbit splitting in GaAs and InGaAs epilayers
Time-resolved Kerr rotation spectroscopy as a function of pump-probe
distance, voltage and magnetic field is used to measure the momentum-dependent
spin splitting energies in GaAs and InGaAs epilayers. The strain of the samples
can be reproducibly controlled in the cryostat using three- and four-point
bending applied with a mechanical vise. We find that the magnitude of the spin
splitting increases linearly with applied tension and voltage. A strain-drift
diffusion model is used to relate the magnitude of the measured spin-orbit
splitting to the amount of strain in the sample.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Confidentiality and public protection: ethical dilemmas in qualitative research with adult male sex offenders
This paper considers the ethical tensions present when engaging in in-depth interviews with convicted sex offenders. Many of the issues described below are similar to those found in other sensitive areas of research. However, confidentiality and public protection are matters that require detailed consideration when the desire to know more about men who have committed serious and harmful offences is set against the possibility of a researcher not disclosing previously unknown sensitive information that relates to the risk of someone being harmed.</p
Chandra Observations of Extended X-ray Emission in Arp 220
We resolve the extended X-ray emission from the prototypical ultraluminous
infrared galaxy Arp 220. Extended, faint edge-brightened, soft X-ray lobes
outside the optical galaxy are observed to a distance of 10 to 15 kpc on each
side of the nuclear region. Bright plumes inside the optical isophotes coincide
with the optical line emission and extend 11 kpc from end to end across the
nucleus. The data for the plumes cannot be fit by a single temperature plasma,
and display a range of temperatures from 0.2 to 1 keV. The plumes emerge from
bright, diffuse circumnuclear emission in the inner 3 kpc centered on the
Halpha peak, which is displaced from the radio nuclei. There is a close
morphological correspondence between the Halpha and soft X-ray emission on all
spatial scales. We interpret the plumes as a starburst-driven superwind, and
discuss two interpretations of the emission from the lobes in the context of
simulations of the merger dynamics of Arp 220.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; see also astro-ph/0208477 (Paper 1
Rotating Relativistic Thin Disks
Two families of models of rotating relativistic disks based on Taub-NUT and
Kerr metrics are constructed using the well-known "displace, cut and reflect"
method. We find that for disks built from a generic stationary axially
symmetric metric the "sound velocity", , is equal to
the geometric mean of the prograde and retrograde geodesic circular velocities
of test particles moving on the disk. We also found that for generic disks we
can have zones with heat flow. For the two families of models studied the
boundaries that separate the zones with and without heat flow are not stable
against radial perturbations (ring formation).Comment: 18 eps figures, to be published PR
Historical trends of PBDEs and HBCDs in sediment cores from Sydney estuary, Australia
This paper presents the first historical data on the occurrence of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDs) in estuarine sediment from Australia. Sediment cores and surficial sediment samples were collected from four locations within Sydney estuary, Australia. Large increases in concentrations were observed for all compounds between 1980 and 2014, especially for BDE-209 (representative usage of Deca-BDE commercial mixture), which was found in surficial sediment at an average concentration of 42 ng/g thy wt (21-65 ng/g dry wt). PBDE congeners representative of both the Penta- and Octa-BDE commercial mixtures (Sigma 6PBDEs) were also found in their highest concentrations in surficial sediments (average: 1.3 ng/g dry wt; range: 0.65-2.5 ng/g dry wt). PBDE concentrations in surficial sediments were relatively high when compared with those presented in the available literature. This suggests that their input into the Sydney estuary has not decreased since their bans almost a decade earlier. After a sharp increase in the 1990s, HBCD concentrations peaked at an average of 3.5 ng/g dry wt (1.8-53 ng/g dry wt) in surficial samples. With global legislation on HBCDs allowing its usage for the next 10 years, it is expected that its input into the estuary is likely to continue. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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