7,336 research outputs found
Pilot study of vegetation in the Alchichica-Perote region by remote sensing
A study of the application of satellite images to the identification of vegetation in a small area corresponding to the arid zone of Veracruz and part of Puebla is presented. This study is accomplished by means of images from the LANDSAT satellite obtained on January 19 and May 23, 1973. The interpretation of the different maps is made on the basis of information from the data bank of the Flora de Veracruz program, and various surveys made by land and air
Strain and order-parameter coupling in Ni-Mn-Ga Heusler alloys from resonant ultrasound spectroscopy
Resonant ultrasound spectroscopy and magnetic susceptibility experiments have
been used to characterize strain coupling phenomena associated with structural
and magnetic properties of the shape-memory Heusler alloy series
NiMnGa (, 2.5, 5.0, and 7.5). All samples exhibit
a martensitic transformation at temperature and ferromagnetic ordering at
temperature , while the pure end member () also has a premartensitic
transition at , giving four different scenarios: ,
without premartensitic transition, , and .
Fundamental differences in elastic properties i.e., stiffening versus
softening, are explained in terms of coupling of shear strains with three
discrete order parameters relating to magnetic ordering, a soft mode and the
electronic instability responsible for the large strains typical of martensitic
transitions. Linear-quadratic or biquadratic coupling between these order
parameters, either directly or indirectly via the common strains, is then used
to explain the stabilities of the different structures. Acoustic losses are
attributed to critical slowing down at the premartensite transition, to the
mobility of interphases between coexisting phases at the martensitic transition
and to mobility of some aspect of the twin walls under applied stress down to
the lowest temperatures at which measurements were made.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Quantum and classical echoes in scattering systems described by simple Smale horseshoes
We explore the quantum scattering of systems classically described by binary
and other low order Smale horseshoes, in a stage of development where the
stable island associated with the inner periodic orbit is large, but chaos
around this island is well developed. For short incoming pulses we find
periodic echoes modulating an exponential decay over many periods. The period
is directly related to the development stage of the horseshoe. We exemplify our
studies with a one-dimensional system periodically kicked in time and we
mention possible experiments.Comment: 7 pages with 6 reduced quality figures! Please contact the authors
([email protected]) for an original good quality pre-prin
Plio-Pleistocene time-averaged field in southern Patagonia recorded in lava flows
Paleomagnetic directions were obtained from stepwise alternating-field or thermal demagnetization of 53 lava flows from southern Patagonia (latitudes 49.5°-52.1 °S) that include the Pali-Aike volcanic field and the Meseta Viscachas plateau lavas. In addition to previous Miocene-late Quaternary ages of these flows, 40Ar/39Ar dates spanning from 0.1 to 15.4 Ma were obtained for 17 of the sites. All except one of the magnetic polarities coincide with the expected polarities of the magnetic polarity timescale [Cande and Kent, 1995] for the obtained 40Ar/39Ar ages. The mean direction from 33 sites (eliminating sites <4 Ma) that pass a selection criteria of α95 â€5° is Dec = 358.7°,Inc = - 68.2°, α95 = 3.5°, a value that coincides within the statistical uncertainty with the direction of the geocentric axial dipole for that area (Inc = - 68.1°). Likewise, the mean virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) coincides within the statistical uncertainty with the geographic North Pole. The secular variation described by the VGP angular standard deviation for these sites is 17.1°, a value expected for that latitude according to Model G of paleosecular variation [McFadden et al., 1988]. The characteristics of the data presented are optimum for time-averaged field (TAF) studies because of the good age control and good quality of the paleomagnetic data: (1) primary components of magnetization were obtained using principal component analysis [Kirschvink, 1980] from at least five points and maximum angular deviation â€5°, (2) site means were calculated with Fisher statistics using at least three samples, and (c) 38 of the 53 flows had α95 †5°. No results (five sites) or high α95 values (â€5°) were obtained primarily from sites affected by lightning.Fil: Mejia, V.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Opdyke, N. D.. University of Florida; Estados UnidosFil: Vilas, Juan Francisco A.. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de GeologĂa; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Oficina de CoordinaciĂłn Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de Geociencias BĂĄsicas, Aplicadas y Ambientales de Buenos Aires. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Geociencias BĂĄsicas, Aplicadas y Ambientales de Buenos Aires; ArgentinaFil: Singer, B. S.. University of Wisconsin; Estados UnidosFil: Stoner, J. S.. State University of Colorado at Boulder; Estados Unido
Promoting Social Justice through Service-Learning in Urban Teacher Education: The Role of Student Voice
Although service-learning is becoming more common in teacher education programs (Anderson & Erickson 2003), few detailed case descriptions show how service-learning can help to promote a social justice orientation for prospective teachers. A comparative descriptive analysis of projects within two teacher preparation programs--one focused on training undergraduates and one focused on training graduate students--illustrates how service-learning, when undergirded by student voice work, prepares prospective educators to teach for social justice in urban classrooms. We identify commonalities in our two approaches to integrating service-learning and student voice into the teacher education curriculum, and we show how our distinctive efforts support prospective teachers in developing the relationships, reflections, and practices they need to become effective educators of urban youth
High order non-unitary split-step decomposition of unitary operators
We propose a high order numerical decomposition of exponentials of hermitean
operators in terms of a product of exponentials of simple terms, following an
idea which has been pioneered by M. Suzuki, however implementing it for complex
coefficients. We outline a convenient fourth order formula which can be written
compactly for arbitrary number of noncommuting terms in the Hamiltonian and
which is superiour to the optimal formula with real coefficients, both in
complexity and accuracy. We show asymptotic stability of our method for
sufficiently small time step and demonstrate its efficiency and accuracy in
different numerical models.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures (5 eps files) Submitted to J. of Phys. A: Math.
Ge
Orchestrating corporate social responsibility in the multinational enterprise
Multinational enterprises (MNEs) invest significant resources in corporate social responsibility (CSR), but their attempts to build a global âsocial brandâ may clash with the execution of operational strategies at a subsidiary level. Using a game-theoretic model, this research addresses the complex interplay of different contingencies that shape the coordination and control challenges facing MNEs when they implement global CSR strategies, including brand spillovers, the risk of public scandals caused by irresponsible behavior, the size of the MNE network, as well as the roles played by non-governmental organizations and altruistic managers. Challenging the view of CSR as insurance against lapses of responsible conduct, our model shows that investment in social brands helps avoid irresponsible practices across the MNE network, thereby inducing subsidiaries to âwalk the talkâ
Improving Reliability of Subject-Level Resting-State fMRI Parcellation with Shrinkage Estimators
A recent interest in resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging
(rsfMRI) lies in subdividing the human brain into anatomically and functionally
distinct regions of interest. For example, brain parcellation is often used for
defining the network nodes in connectivity studies. While inference has
traditionally been performed on group-level data, there is a growing interest
in parcellating single subject data. However, this is difficult due to the low
signal-to-noise ratio of rsfMRI data, combined with typically short scan
lengths. A large number of brain parcellation approaches employ clustering,
which begins with a measure of similarity or distance between voxels. The goal
of this work is to improve the reproducibility of single-subject parcellation
using shrinkage estimators of such measures, allowing the noisy
subject-specific estimator to "borrow strength" in a principled manner from a
larger population of subjects. We present several empirical Bayes shrinkage
estimators and outline methods for shrinkage when multiple scans are not
available for each subject. We perform shrinkage on raw intervoxel correlation
estimates and use both raw and shrinkage estimates to produce parcellations by
performing clustering on the voxels. Our proposed method is agnostic to the
choice of clustering method and can be used as a pre-processing step for any
clustering algorithm. Using two datasets---a simulated dataset where the true
parcellation is known and is subject-specific and a test-retest dataset
consisting of two 7-minute rsfMRI scans from 20 subjects---we show that
parcellations produced from shrinkage correlation estimates have higher
reliability and validity than those produced from raw estimates. Application to
test-retest data shows that using shrinkage estimators increases the
reproducibility of subject-specific parcellations of the motor cortex by up to
30%.Comment: body 21 pages, 11 figure
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