40,181 research outputs found
A city invests in its future
Events occurring during the past four years which led to the City of Burbank's decision to acquire an energy source adequate for the city's present and future power requirements are discussed. The community reaction to this unprecedented move is also covered. Burbank's long-range plans for the development of geothermal energy are outlined as well as the challenges which confront a public utility in implementing its projected goals. There are several advantages accurring to the city which in the opinion of the Burbank City Council and the administration justify this venture. The need for a cooperative climate which will enable all electrical utilities to better meet their obligations to the public, which is their prime responsibility before all other considerations, is analyzed
Logic-controlled occlusive cuff system
An occlusive cuff system comprises a pressure cuff and a source of regulated compressed gas feeding the cuff through an electrically operated fill valve. An electrically operated vent valve vents the cuff to the ambient pressure. The fill valve is normally closed and the vent valve is normally open. In response to an external start signal, a logic network opens the fill valve and closes the vent valve, thereby starting the pressurization cycle and a timer. A pressure transducer continuously monitors the pressure in the cuff. When the transducer's output equals a selected reference voltage, a comparator causes the logic network to close the fill valve. The timer, after a selected time delay, opens the vent valve to the ambient pressure, thereby ending the pressurization cycle
The cluster environments of radio loud quasars
We have carried out multi-colour imaging of the fields of a statistically
complete sample of low-frequency selected radio loud quasars at 0.6<z<1.1, in
order to determine the characteristics of their environments. The largest radio
sources are located in the field, and smaller steep-spectrum sources are more
likely to be found in richer environments, from compact groups through to
clusters. This radio-based selection (including source size) of high redshift
groups and clusters is a highly efficient method of detecting rich environments
at these redshifts. Although our single filter clustering measures agree with
those of other workers, we show that these statistics cannot be used reliably
on fields individually, colour information is required for this.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, contribution to "Tracing Cosmic Evolution with
Galaxy Clusters" (Sesto 2001), ASP Conference Serie
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A novel element upstream of the Vgamma2 gene in the murine T cell receptor gamma locus cooperates with the 3 enhancer to act as a locus control region.
Transgenic expression constructs were employed to identify a cis-acting transcription element in the T cell receptor (TCR)-gamma locus, called HsA, between the Vgamma5 and Vgamma2 genes. In constructs lacking the previously defined enhancer (3E(Cgamma1)), HsA supports transcription in mature but not immature T cells in a largely position-independent fashion. 3E(Cgamma1), without HsA, supports transcription in immature and mature T cells but is subject to severe position effects. Together, the two elements support expression in immature and mature T cells in a copy number-dependent, position-independent fashion. Furthermore, HsA was necessary for consistent rearrangement of transgenic recombination substrates. These data suggest that HsA provides chromatin-opening activity and, together with 3E(Cgamma1), constitutes a T cell-specific locus control region for the TCR-gamma locus
Tunable-filter imaging of quasar fields at z ~ 1. II. The star-forming galaxy environments of radio-loud quasars
We have scanned the fields of six radio-loud quasars using the Taurus Tunable
Filter to detect redshifted [OII] 3727 line-emitting galaxies at redshifts 0.8
< z < 1.3. Forty-seven new emission-line galaxy (ELG) candidates are found.
This number corresponds to an average space density about 100 times that found
locally and, at L([OII]) < 10^{42} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}, is 2 - 5 times greater
than the field ELG density at similar redshifts, implying that radio-loud
quasars inhabit sites of above-average star formation activity. The implied
star-formation rates are consistent with surveys of field galaxies at z ~ 1.
However, the variation in candidate density between fields is large and
indicative of a range of environments, from the field to rich clusters. The ELG
candidates also cluster -- both spatially and in terms of velocity -- about the
radio sources. In fields known to contain rich galaxy clusters, the ELGs lie at
the edges and outside the concentrated cores of red, evolved galaxies,
consistent with the morphology-density relation seen in low-redshift clusters.
This work, combined with other studies, suggests that the ELG environments of
powerful AGN look very much the same from moderate to high redshifts, i.e. 0.8
< z < 4.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures, uses emulateapj.cls. Accepted for publication
in A
Gradual diffusion and punctuated phase space density enhancements of highly relativistic electrons: Van Allen Probes observations
Abstract The dual-spacecraft Van Allen Probes mission has provided a new window into mega electron volt (MeV) particle dynamics in the Earth\u27s radiation belts. Observations (up to E ~10 MeV) show clearly the behavior of the outer electron radiation belt at different timescales: months-long periods of gradual inward radial diffusive transport and weak loss being punctuated by dramatic flux changes driven by strong solar wind transient events. We present analysis of multi-MeV electron flux and phase space density (PSD) changes during March 2013 in the context of the first year of Van Allen Probes operation. This March period demonstrates the classic signatures both of inward radial diffusive energization and abrupt localized acceleration deep within the outer Van Allen zone (L ~4.0 ± 0.5). This reveals graphically that both competing mechanisms of multi-MeV electron energization are at play in the radiation belts, often acting almost concurrently or at least in rapid succession. Key Points Clear observations to higher energy than ever before Precise detection of where and how acceleration takes place Provides new eyes on megaelectron Volt
Confinement: Understanding the Relation Between the Wilson Loop and Dual Theories of Long Distance Yang Mills Theory
In this paper we express the velocity dependent, spin dependent heavy quark
potential in QCD in terms of a Wilson Loop determined
by pure Yang Mills theory. We use an effective dual theory of long-distance
Yang Mills theory to calculate for large loops; i.e. for loops of
size . ( is the flux tube radius, fixed by the value of the
Higgs (monopole) mass of the dual theory, which is a concrete realization of
the Mandelstam 't Hooft dual superconductor mechanism of confinement).
We replace by , given by a functional integral
over the dual variables, which for can be evaluated by a
semiclassical expansion, since the dual theory is weakly coupled at these
distances. The classical approximation gives the leading contribution to
and yields a velocity dependent heavy quark potential which
for large becomes linear in , and which for small approaches lowest
order perturbative QCD. This latter fact means that these results should remain
applicable down to distances where radiative corrections giving rise to a
running coupling constant become important. The spin dependence of the
potential reflects the vector coupling of the quarks at long range as well as
at short range. The methods developed here should be applicable to any
realization of the dual superconductor mechanism. They give an expression
determining independent of the classical approximation, but
semi classical corrections due to fluctuations of the flux tube are not worked
out in this paper. Taking these into account should lead to an effective string
theory free from the conformal anomaly.Comment: 39 pages, latex2e, 1 figure(fig.eps
Prompt energization of relativistic and highly relativistic electrons during a substorm interval: Van Allen Probes observations
Abstract On 17 March 2013, a large magnetic storm significantly depleted the multi-MeV radiation belt. We present multi-instrument observations from the Van Allen Probes spacecraft Radiation Belt Storm Probe A and Radiation Belt Storm Probe B at ~6 Re in the midnight sector magnetosphere and from ground-based ionospheric sensors during a substorm dipolarization followed by rapid reenergization of multi-MeV electrons. A 50% increase in magnetic field magnitude occurred simultaneously with dramatic increases in 100 keV electron fluxes and a 100 times increase in VLF wave intensity. The 100 keV electrons and intense VLF waves provide a seed population and energy source for subsequent radiation belt enhancements. Highly relativistic (\u3e2 MeV) electron fluxes increased immediately at L* ~ 4.5 and 4.5 MeV flux increased \u3e90 times at L* = 4 over 5 h. Although plasmasphere expansion brings the enhanced radiation belt multi-MeV fluxes inside the plasmasphere several hours postsubstorm, we localize their prompt reenergization during the event to regions outside the plasmasphere. Key Points Substorm dynamics are important for highly relativistic electron energization Cold plasma preconditioning is significant for rapid relativistic energization Relativistic / highly relativistic electron energization can occur in \u3c 5 hrs
Supersymmetric Open Wilson Lines
In this paper we study Open Wilson Lines (OWL's) in the context of two
Supersymmetric Yang Mills theories. First we consider four dimensional N=2
Supersymmetric Yang Mills Theory with hypermultiplets transforming in the
fundamental representation of the gauge group, and find supersymmetric OWL's
only in the superconformal versions of these theories. We then consider four
dimensional N=4 SYM coupled to a three dimensional defect hypermultiplet. Here
there is a semi-circular supersymmetric OWL, which is related to the ray by a
conformal transformation. We perform a perturbative calculation of the
operators in both theories, and discuss using localization to compute them
non-perturbatively.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
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