15,591 research outputs found
Problems in J times B plasma acceleration Semiannual progress report
Shock tube accelerator, heat transfer gauge, homopolar accelerator theory, and transport effects in boundary layers in plasma
Metal shearing energy absorber
A metal shearing energy absorber is described. The absorber is composed of a flat thin strip of metal which is pulled through a slot in a cutter member of a metal, harder than the metal of the strip. The slot's length, in the direction perpendicular to the pull direction, is less than the strip's width so that as the strip is pulled through the slot, its edges are sheared off, thereby absorbing some of the pulling energy. In one embodiment the cutter member is a flat plate of steel, while in another embodiment the cutter member is U-shaped with the slot at its base
Self heating and nonlinear current-voltage characteristics in bilayer graphene
We demonstrate by experiments and numerical simulations that the
low-temperature current-voltage characteristics in diffusive bilayer graphene
(BLG) exhibit a strong superlinearity at finite bias voltages. The
superlinearity is weakly dependent on doping and on the length of the graphene
sample. This effect can be understood as a result of Joule heating. It is
stronger in BLG than in monolayer graphene (MLG), since the conductivity of BLG
is more sensitive to temperature due to the higher density of electronic states
at the Dirac point.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, REVTeX 4.
Status of the CMS electromagnetic calorimeter
CMSThe CMS electromagnetic calorimeter will provide excellent performance (in energy and position measurements) in a very hostile environnment (radiation beam crossing rates). It consists of a barrel made of 61200 lead tungstate crystals each read out by two avalanche photodiodes and of two end caps with 14488 crystals read out by vacuum phototriodes. In early 2002, the front-end electronics was redesigned and is now base on trigger towers that calculate the trigger primitives on detector at each bunch crossing and transmit raw data upon level-1 trigger acceptance. The status of the calorimeter construction is presented, as well as results of beam tests performed in 2003 using the new electronics scheme which confirm that the design performance can be reached
Air pollution from aircraft
A series of fundamental problems related to jet engine air pollution and combustion were examined. These include soot formation and oxidation, nitric oxide and carbon monoxide emissions mechanisms, pollutant dispension, flow and combustion characteristics of the NASA swirl can combustor, fuel atomization and fuel-air mixing processes, fuel spray drop velocity and size measurement, ignition and blowout. A summary of this work, and a bibliography of 41 theses and publications which describe this work, with abstracts, is included
Ag econ angst crisis revisited: a rejoinder
Poverty reduction has been an underlying goal of governments and the development community since the Second World War, but it was the 1973 Nairobi address of Robert S. McNamara, then President of the World Bank, that created a new commitment to directly address poverty reduction in the quest for development (McNamara 1973). More than half a century after the war and close to 30 years after Robert McNamara’s speech, poverty is still rampant in many parts of the globe. Reflections on why this scourge remains, and what we as agricultural economists can do about it, were the driving forces behind our paper with the late John L. Dillon entitled ‘Agricultural economists and world poverty: progress and prospects’ (Rola-Rubzen et al. 2001). The part of our paper that Johnson, Rossmiller and Sandiford-Rossmiller (JRS) have reacted to was deliberately provocative to stimulate thinking on ways to combat poverty. We are pleased that someone has taken the bait. As the two surviving authors, we find ourselves in agreement with much that JRS have written. However, in preparing this rejoinder we have sadly missed John Dillon, especially his broad international experience. We note that in several respects JRS amplify and support some of our points, as well as adding a new perspective of their own, dealing with the new institutional economics. We find it hard to work out just where they differ from us.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
Species Profiles: Life Histories and Environmental Requirements of Coastal Fishes and Invertebrates (Mid-Atlantic): Alewife/Blueback Herring
This profile covers life history
and environmental requirements of
both alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus)
and blueback herring (Alosa aestivalis),
since their distribution is
overlapping and their morphology,
ecological role, and environmental
requirements are similar.
The alewife is
an anadromous species found in
riverine, estuarine, and Atlantic
coastal habitats, depending on
life cycle stage, from Newfoundland
(Winters et al. 1973) to
Soutn Carolina (Berry 1964).
Landlocked populations are i n the
Great Lakes, Finger Lakes, and
many other freshwater lakes
(Bigelow and Sch roeder 1953;
Scott and Crossman 1973). The
blueback herring is an anadromous
species found in riverine,
estuarine, and Atlantic coastal
habitats, depending on life stage
cycle, from Nova Scotia to the
St. Johns River, Florida (Hildebrand
1963
Farm implement firms as symptomatic of the rise of regional grain cities : Winnipeg and Minneapolis, 1876-1926
38 p. : ill., maps ; 28 cm
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