25,133 research outputs found
On the Canonical Equivalence of Liouville and Free Fields
We obtain the parity invariant generating functional for the canonical
transformation mapping the Liouville theory into a free scalar field and
explain how it is related to the pseudoscalar transformationComment: 8 pages, Latex, Important earlier work by G.P. Jordadze acknowledge
Stability and reactivity of dimethylethoxysilane
The chemistry of the compound dimethylethoxysilane (DMES) is discussed especially as it relates to waterproofing silica surfaces. Some of the desirable properties of this compound are that it readily reacts with silica in the vapor phase, it is a low boiling point liquid (54 C), and the by-product of its reaction with silica is the rather inert substances ethanol. It is currently used by NASA to re-waterproof the HRSI shuttle tiles before relaunching the vehicle. Very little information is available on this particular compound in the literature or even on related silane compounds that have both a hydride group and an alkoxy group. Since the close proximity of two groups often drastically affects the chemical behavior of each group, chemical reactions were carried out in the laboratory with DMES to verify the expected behavior of these two functional groups located on DMES. Some of the reactions tested would be potentially useful for quantitative or qualitative measurements on DMES. To study the reactions of DMES with silica surfaces, cabosil was used as a silica substrate because of its high surface area and the ease of detection by infrared spectroscopy as well as other techniques
HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR PENNSYLVANIA DAIRY FARM MANAGERS
A survey of more than 1200 Pennsylvania dairy farm managers showed that almost 20% of those managers do not have health insurance. Of those farm managers with health insurance, 67% had insurance acquired through the farm business. Farm characteristics and demographic information were used to determine indicators of health insurance coverage. Age, education, net farm income, off-farm income, milk marketing cooperative membership, and intensity of hired labor use all had significant effects on the likelihood of having health insurance and on whether such insurance was provided by the farm business.Agribusiness, Health Economics and Policy,
High time resolution measurements of the thermosphere from Fabry-Perot Interferometer measurements of atomic oxygen
Recent advances in the performance of CCD detectors
have enabled a high time resolution study of the high
latitude upper thermosphere with Fabry-Perot Interferometers(FPIs) to be performed. 10-s integration times were used during a campaign in April 2004 on an FPI located in northern Sweden in the auroral oval. The FPI is used to study the thermosphere by measuring the oxygen red line emission at 630.0 nm, which emits at an altitude of approximately 240 km. Previous time resolutions have been 4 min at best, due to the cycle of look directions normally observed. By using 10 s rather than 40 s integration times, and by limiting the number of full cycles in a night, high resolution measurements down to 15 s were achievable. This has allowed the maximum variability of the thermospheric winds and temperatures, and 630.0 nm emission intensities, at approximately 240 km, to be determined as a few minutes. This is a significantly greater variability than the often assumed value of 1 h or more. A Lomb-Scargle analysis of this data has shown evidence of gravity wave activity with waves with short periods. Gravity waves are an important feature of mesospherelower thermosphere (MLT) dynamics, observed using many techniques and providing an important mechanism for energy transfer between atmospheric regions. At high latitudes gravity waves may be generated in-situ by localised auroral activity. Short period waves were detected in all four clear nights when this experiment was performed, in 630.0 nm intensities and thermospheric winds and temperatures. Waves with many periodicities were observed, from periods of several hours, down to 14 min. These waves were seen in all parameters over several nights, implying that this variability is a typical property of the thermosphere
Gravitons and Lightcone Fluctuations II: Correlation Functions
A model of a fluctuating lightcone due to a bath of gravitons is further
investigated. The flight times of photons between a source and a detector may
be either longer or shorter than the light propagation time in the background
classical spacetime, and will form a Gaussian distribution centered around the
classical flight time. However, a pair of photons emitted in rapid succession
will tend to have correlated flight times. We derive and discuss a correlation
function which describes this effect. This enables us to understand more fully
the operational significance of a fluctuating lightcone. Our results may be
combined with observational data on pulsar timing to place some constraints on
the quantum state of cosmological gravitons.Comment: 16 pages and two figures, uses eps
Prototyping scalable digital signal processing systems for radio astronomy using dataflow models
There is a growing trend toward using high-level tools for design and
implementation of radio astronomy digital signal processing (DSP) systems. Such
tools, for example, those from the Collaboration for Astronomy Signal
Processing and Electronics Research (CASPER), are usually platform-specific,
and lack high-level, platform-independent, portable, scalable application
specifications. This limits the designer's ability to experiment with designs
at a high-level of abstraction and early in the development cycle.
We address some of these issues using a model-based design approach employing
dataflow models. We demonstrate this approach by applying it to the design of a
tunable digital downconverter (TDD) used for narrow-bandwidth spectroscopy. Our
design is targeted toward an FPGA platform, called the Interconnect Break-out
Board (IBOB), that is available from the CASPER. We use the term TDD to refer
to a digital downconverter for which the decmation factor and center frequency
can be reconfigured without the need for regenerating the hardware code. Such a
design is currently not available in the CASPER DSP library.
The work presented in this paper focuses on two aspects. Firstly, we
introduce and demonstrate a dataflow-based design approach using the dataflow
interchange format (DIF) tool for high-level application specification, and we
integrate this approach with the CASPER tool flow. Secondly, we explore the
trade-off between the flexibility of TDD designs and the low hardware cost of
fixed-configuration digital downconverter (FDD) designs that use the available
CASPER DSP library. We further explore this trade-off in the context of a
two-stage downconversion scheme employing a combination of TDD or FDD designs.Comment: Accepted for publication in Radio Scienc
Effect of socioeconomic deprivation on waiting time for cardiac surgery: retrospective cohort study
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the priority given to patients referred for cardiac surgery is associated with socioeconomic status. DESIGN: Retrospective study with multivariate logistic regression analysis of the association between deprivation and classification of urgency with allowance for age, sex, and type of operation. Multivariate linear regression analysis was used to determine association between deprivation and waiting time within each category of urgency, with allowance for age, sex, and type of operation. SETTING: NHS waiting lists in Scotland. PARTICIPANTS: 26 642 patients waiting for cardiac surgery, 1 January 1986 to 31 December 1997. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Deprivation as measured by Carstairs deprivation category. Time spent on NHS waiting list. RESULTS: Patients who were most deprived tended to be younger and were more likely to be female. Patients in deprivation categories 6 and 7 (most deprived) waited about three weeks longer for surgery than those in category 1 (mean difference 24 days, 95% confidence interval 15 to 32). Deprived patients had an odds ratio of 0.5 (0.46 to 0.61) for having their operations classified as urgent compared with the least deprived, after allowance for age, sex, and type of operation. When urgent and routine cases were considered separately, there was no significant difference in waiting times between the most and least deprived categories. CONCLUSIONS: Socioeconomically deprived patients are thought to be more likely to develop coronary heart disease but are less likely to be investigated and offered surgery once it has developed. Such patients may be further disadvantaged by having to wait longer for surgery because of being given lower priority
Quantum Field Theory Constrains Traversable Wormhole Geometries
Recently a bound on negative energy densities in four-dimensional Minkowski
spacetime was derived for a minimally coupled, quantized, massless, scalar
field in an arbitrary quantum state. The bound has the form of an uncertainty
principle-type constraint on the magnitude and duration of the negative energy
density seen by a timelike geodesic observer. When spacetime is curved and/or
has boundaries, we argue that the bound should hold in regions small compared
to the minimum local characteristic radius of curvature or the distance to any
boundaries, since spacetime can be considered approximately Minkowski on these
scales. We apply the bound to the stress-energy of static traversable wormhole
spacetimes. Our analysis implies that either the wormhole must be only a little
larger than Planck size or that there is a large discrepancy in the length
scales which characterize the wormhole. In the latter case, the negative energy
must typically be concentrated in a thin band many orders of magnitude smaller
than the throat size. These results would seem to make the existence of
macroscopic traversable wormholes very improbable.Comment: 26 pages, plain LaTe
Maxwell symmetries and some applications
The Maxwell algebra is the result of enlarging the Poincar\'{e} algebra by
six additional tensorial Abelian generators that make the fourmomenta
non-commutative. We present a local gauge theory based on the Maxwell algebra
with vierbein, spin connection and six additional geometric Abelian gauge
fields. We apply this geometric framework to the construction of Maxwell
gravity, which is described by the Einstein action plus a generalized
cosmological term. We mention a Friedman-Robertson-Walker cosmological
approximation to the Maxwell gravity field equations, with two scalar fields
obtained from the additional gauge fields. Finally, we outline further
developments of the Maxwell symmetries framework.Comment: 8pages. Presented at the XV-th International Conf. on 'Symmetry
Methods in Physics' (Dubna, July 2011) and at the '3rd Galileo-Xu Guangqi
meeting' (Beijing, October 2011), to appear in IJMP
- …
