6,058 research outputs found
Mechanism problems
It is pointed out that too frequently during the design and development of mechanisms, problems occur that could have been avoided if the right question had been asked before, rather than after, the fact. Several typical problems, drawn from actual experience, are discussed and analyzed. The lessons learned are used to generate various suggestions for minimizing mistakes in mechanism design
Social rank overrides environmental and community fluctuations in determining meat access by female chimpanzees in the Taï National Park, Côte d’Ivoire
Meat, long hypothesized as an important food source in human evolution, is still a substantial component of the modern human diet, with some humans relying entirely on meat during certain times of the year. Understanding the socio-ecological context leading to the successful acquisition and consumption of meat by chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), our closest living relative, can provide insight into the emergence of this trait because humans and chimpanzees are unusual among primates in that they both (i) hunt mammalian prey, (ii) share meat with community members, and (iii) form long-term relationships and complex social hierarchies within their communities. However, females in both human hunter-gatherer societies as well as chimpanzee groups rarely hunt, instead typically accessing meat via males that share meat with group members. In general, female chimpanzee dominance rank affects feeding competition, but so far, the effect of female dominance rank on meat access found different results within and across studied chimpanzee groups. Here we contribute to the debate on how female rank influences meat access while controlling for several socio-ecological variables. Multivariate analyses of 773 separate meat-eating events collected over more than 25 years from two chimpanzee communities located in the Taï National Park, Côte d’Ivoire, were used to test the importance of female dominance rank for being present at, and for acquiring meat, during meat-eating events. We found that high-ranking females were more likely to be present during a meat-eating event and, in addition, were more likely to eat meat compared to the subordinates. These findings were robust to both large demographic changes (decrease of community size) and seasonal ecological changes (fruit abundance dynamics). In addition to social rank, we found that other female properties had a positive influence on presence to meat-eating events and access to meat given presence, including oestrus status, nursing of a small infant, and age. Similar to findings in other chimpanzee populations, our results suggest that females reliably acquire meat over their lifetime despite rarely being active hunters. The implication of this study supports the hypothesis that dominance rank is an important female chimpanzee property conferring benefits for the high-ranking females
Fabrication of mirror templates in silica with micron-sized radii of curvature
We present the fabrication of exceptionally small-radius concave microoptics
on fused silica substrates using CO2 laser ablation and subsequent reactive ion
etching. The protocol yields on-axis near-Gaussian depressions with radius of
curvature microns at shallow depth and low surface roughness of 2
angstroms. This geometry is appealing for cavity quantum electrodynamics where
small mode volumes and low scattering losses are desired. We study the optical
performance of the structure within a tunable Fabry-Perot type microcavity,
demonstrate near-coating-limited loss rates (F = 25,000) and small focal
lengths consistent with their geometrical dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Administrators\u27 Experiences Implementing Veterans Housing Units in U.S. Correctional Institutions
There is a higher rate of recidivism for U.S. veterans compared to the general population of offenders. To address the unique needs of veterans, separate housing units for veterans (VSUs) are now operating within correctional facilities in 29 U.S. states. Despite reports that VSUs are having a positive impact on recidivism, little is known of the experiences of correctional administrators who have implemented a VSU. The purpose of this qualitative phenomenological study was to explore the lived experiences of several individuals who have implemented a VSU in their correctional facility. Guided by the quality implementation framework (QIF), data collected through semistructured interviews conducted with 7 U.S. correctional administrators were analyzed by reducing the information to significant statements, when combined into themes provided a descriptive analysis. Results from this study affirm that implementing a VSU is a feasible option for many correctional administrators with the desire to address the needs of veteran offenders. Key findings indicate most steps taken to implement a VSU align with quality implementation. Additional results indicate that presently there may be less consideration for VSU implementation processes associated with quality in the areas of ensuring staff training to work with the veterans, and in conducting process evaluations including outcomes tracking. VSUs have a profound and nearly immediate, effect on veteran inmate behaviors and reducing recidivism. This examination of the phenomenon of VSU implementation may offer implementers with evidenced-based practices to advance understanding of VSU implementation in the future, ultimately to benefit veteran offenders and the communities in which they reintegrate
London Creative and Digital Fusion
date-added: 2015-03-24 04:16:59 +0000 date-modified: 2015-03-24 04:16:59 +0000date-added: 2015-03-24 04:16:59 +0000 date-modified: 2015-03-24 04:16:59 +0000The London Creative and Digital Fusion programme of interactive, tailored and in-depth support was designed to support the UK capital’s creative and digital companies to collaborate, innovate and grow. London is a globally recognised hub for technology, design and creative genius. While many cities around the world can claim to be hubs for technology entrepreneurship, London’s distinctive potential lies in the successful fusion of world-leading technology with world-leading design and creativity. As innovation thrives at the edge, where better to innovate than across the boundaries of these two clusters and cultures? This booklet tells the story of Fusion’s innovation journey, its partners and its unique business support. Most importantly of all it tells stories of companies that, having worked with London Fusion, have innovated and grown. We hope that it will inspire others to follow and build on our beginnings.European Regional Development Fund 2007-13
Deterministic enhancement of coherent photon generation from a nitrogen-vacancy center in ultrapure diamond
The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has an optically addressable,
highly coherent spin. However, an NV center even in high quality
single-crystalline material is a very poor source of single photons: extraction
out of the high-index diamond is inefficient, the emission of coherent photons
represents just a few per cent of the total emission, and the decay time is
large. In principle, all three problems can be addressed with a resonant
microcavity. In practice, it has proved difficult to implement this concept:
photonic engineering hinges on nano-fabrication yet it is notoriously difficult
to process diamond without degrading the NV centers. We present here a
microcavity scheme which uses minimally processed diamond, thereby preserving
the high quality of the starting material, and a tunable microcavity platform.
We demonstrate a clear change in the lifetime for multiple individual NV
centers on tuning both the cavity frequency and anti-node position, a Purcell
effect. The overall Purcell factor translates to a Purcell
factor for the zero phonon line (ZPL) of and an
increase in the ZPL emission probability from to . By
making a step-change in the NV's optical properties in a deterministic way,
these results pave the way for much enhanced spin-photon and spin-spin
entanglement rates.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Distance Dependent Offsets between Parallaxes for Nearby Stars and Gaia DR1 Parallaxes
We use 612 single stars with previously published trigonometric parallaxes
placing them within 25 pc to evaluate parallaxes released in Gaia's first data
release (DR1). We find that the Gaia parallaxes are, on average, mas smaller than the weighted mean trigonometric parallax values for
these stars in the solar neighborhood. We also find that the offset changes
with distance out to 100 pc, in the sense that the closer the star, the larger
the offset. We find no systematic trends in the parallax offsets with stellar
magnitude, color, or proper motion. We do find that the offset is
roughly twice as large for stars south of the ecliptic compared to those that
are north.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter. The table 1 is available in its entirety in a machine-readable form
in the online journa
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