2,060 research outputs found

    Scanning Tunneling Microscope-Induced Luminescence Spectroscopy on Semiconductor Heterostructures

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    Scanning tunneling microscope (STM)-induced luminescence is explored as a technique for the characterization of semiconductor quantum wells and quantum wire heterostructures. By injecting minority carriers into the cleaved cross section of these structures, luminescence excitation on a nanometer scale is demonstrated. Using spectrally resolved STM-induced luminescence for the tip placed at various positions across the cleaved heterostructure, it is possible to obtain local spectroscopic information on closely spaced quantum structures

    Lean buildings: energy efficient commercial buildings in Germany

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    The paper presents the description and initial evaluation of a number of commercial large scale buildings (>1000m2) situated across Germany. The study has been carried out within the framework of the evaluation program, SolarBau, which has been initiated and funded by the German Ministry of Economy and Technology. The program funds up to 25 demonstration buildings and their collective evaluation. Funding is only provided at the design stage of the buildings for additional investigations and simulations of variants, which feature elements of passive cooling, and after construction for a thorough monitoring of the finished buildings. The absence of investment subsidies ensured that all design solutions were realized under representative economic conditions. The technical requirements for admittance of a building to the program were an anticipated total primary energy use (heating, cooling and lighting) below 100 kWh/(m2a) [31,700 Btu/(ft2a)] combined with excellent vis ual and thermal comfort conditions. These ambitious goals can only be reached by a lean building featuring increased thermal insulation, intensive use of daylight and a strategy for passive cooling. The reduced HVAC-system relies heavily on a building whose design carefully considers the given climatic boundary conditions. In the moderate German climate, the focus usually lies on the avoidance of unwanted solar gains in the summer. The remaining internal loads can often be counterbalanced by controlled ventilation, additional nocturnal ventilation or by earth-to-air heat exchangers

    Political institutions and debt crises

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    This paper shows that political institutions matter in explaining defaults on external and domestic debt obligations. We explore a large number of political and macroeconomic variables using a non-parametric technique to predict safety from default. The advantage of this technique is that it is able to identify patterns in the data that are not captured in standard probit analysis. We find that political factors matter, and do so in different ways for democratic and non-democratic regimes, and for domestic and external debt. In democracies, a parliamentary system or sufficient checks and balances almost guarantee the absence of default on external debt when economic fundamentals or liquidity are sufficiently strong. In dictatorships, high stability and tenure play a similar role for default on domestic debt

    Modified differentials and basic cohomology for Riemannian foliations

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    We define a new version of the exterior derivative on the basic forms of a Riemannian foliation to obtain a new form of basic cohomology that satisfies Poincar\'e duality in the transversally orientable case. We use this twisted basic cohomology to show relationships between curvature, tautness, and vanishing of the basic Euler characteristic and basic signature.Comment: 20 pages, references added, minor corrections mad

    SCAILET: An intelligent assistant for satellite ground terminal operations

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    NASA Lewis Research Center has applied artificial intelligence to an advanced ground terminal. This software application is being deployed as an experimenter interface to the link evaluation terminal (LET) and was named Space Communication Artificial Intelligence for the Link Evaluation Terminal (SCAILET). The high-burst-rate (HBR) LET provides 30-GHz-transmitting and 20-GHz-receiving, 220-Mbps capability for wide band communications technology experiments with the Advanced Communication Technology Satellite (ACTS). The HBR-LET terminal consists of seven major subsystems. A minicomputer controls and monitors these subsystems through an IEEE-488 or RS-232 protocol interface. Programming scripts (test procedures defined by design engineers) configure the HBR-LET and permit data acquisition. However, the scripts are difficult to use, require a steep learning curve, are cryptic, and are hard to maintain. This discourages experimenters from utilizing the full capabilities of the HBR-LET system. An intelligent assistant module was developed as part of the SCAILET software. The intelligent assistant addresses critical experimenter needs by solving and resolving problems that are encountered during the configuring of the HBR-LET system. The intelligent assistant is a graphical user interface with an expert system running in the background. In order to further assist and familiarize an experimenter, an on-line hypertext documentation module was developed and included in the SCAILET software
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