15,128 research outputs found
Baryon Number Transport in a Cosmic QCD-Phase Transition
We investigate the transport of baryon number across phase boundaries in a
putative first order QCD-phase transition. Two independent phenomenological
models are employed to estimate the baryon penetrability at the phase boundary:
chromoelectric flux tube models; and an analogy to baryon-baryon coalescence in
nuclear physics. Our analysis indicates that baryon transport across phase
boundaries may be order of magnitude more efficient than other work has
suggested. We discuss the substantial uncertainties involved in estimating
baryon penetrability at phase boundaries.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures (available upon request by mail or fax), plain
tex, UCRL-JC-00000
An evaluation of the utilization of remote sensing in resource and environmental management of the Chesapeake Bay region
A nine-month study was conducted to assess the effectiveness of the NASA Wallops Chesapeake Bay Ecological Program in remote sensing. The study consisted of a follow-up investigation and information analysis of actual cases in which remote sensing was utilized by management and research personnel in the Chesapeake Bay region. The study concludes that the NASA Wallops Chesapeake Bay Ecological Program is effective, both in terms of costs and performance
Librarians as Members of Integrated Institutional Information Programs: Management and Organizational Issues
published or submitted for publicatio
The art of being human : a project for general philosophy of science
Throughout the medieval and modern periods, in various sacred and secular guises, the unification of all forms of knowledge under the rubric of âscienceâ has been taken as the prerogative of humanity as a species. However, as our sense of species privilege has been called increasingly into question, so too has the very salience of âhumanityâ and âscienceâ as general categories, let alone ones that might bear some essential relationship to each other. After showing how the ascendant Stanford School in the philosophy of science has contributed to this joint demystification of âhumanityâ and âscienceâ, I proceed on a more positive note to a conceptual framework for making sense of science as the art of being human. My understanding of âscienceâ is indebted to the red thread that runs from Christian theology through the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment to the Humboldtian revival of the university as the site for the synthesis of knowledge as the culmination of self-development. Especially salient to this idea is scienceâs epistemic capacity to manage modality (i.e. to determine the conditions under which possibilities can be actualised) and its political capacity to organize humanity into projects of universal concern. However, the challenge facing such an ideal in the twentyfirst century is that the predicate âhumanâ may be projected in three quite distinct ways, governed by what I call âecologicalâ, âbiomedicalâ and âcyberneticâ interests. Which one of these future humanities would claim todayâs humans as proper ancestors and could these futures co-habit the same world thus become two important questions that general philosophy of science will need to address in the coming years
Sterile Neutrino Hot, Warm, and Cold Dark Matter
We calculate the incoherent resonant and non-resonant scattering production
of sterile neutrinos in the early universe. We find ranges of sterile neutrino
masses, vacuum mixing angles, and initial lepton numbers which allow these
species to constitute viable hot, warm, and cold dark matter (HDM, WDM, CDM)
candidates which meet observational constraints. The constraints considered
here include energy loss in core collapse supernovae, energy density limits at
big bang nucleosynthesis, and those stemming from sterile neutrino decay:
limits from observed cosmic microwave background anisotropies, diffuse
extragalactic background radiation, and Li-6/D overproduction. Our calculations
explicitly include matter effects, both effective mixing angle suppression and
enhancement (MSW resonance), as well as quantum damping. We for the first time
properly include all finite temperature effects, dilution resulting from the
annihilation or disappearance of relativistic degrees of freedom, and the
scattering-rate-enhancing effects of particle-antiparticle pairs (muons,
tauons, quarks) at high temperature in the early universe.Comment: 24 pages, including 8 figures. v3: to match version in PRD, added
references and numerous minor changes. High resolution color figures
available at http://superbeast.ucsd.edu/~kev/nucd
Bearing detection in the presence of two sources of varying coherence using the complex cepstrum
The effect of the presence of two acoustic sources (one, the primary, whose location is to be detected) of varying coherence on a cepstral bearing finding procedure is experimentally studied. The coherence between the acoustic sources was altered by adding random noise of various SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) to the input signal of the primary source; the same base signal being fed to both sources. The results demonstrate that, when block liftering is used, the primary source bearing is reliably estimated for coherences as low as gamma sup 2 greater than or approx equal to 0.5. The results also imply that background noise (unreflected) of SNR greater than or approx equal to 10 dB will not markedly affect the accuracy of the bearing estimation algorithm
User's manual for PRESTO: A computer code for the performance of regenerative steam turbine cycles
Standard turbine cycles for baseload power plants and cycles with such additional features as process steam extraction and induction and feedwater heating by external heat sources may be modeled. Peaking and high back pressure cycles are also included. The code's methodology is to use the expansion line efficiencies, exhaust loss, leakages, mechanical losses, and generator losses to calculate the heat rate and generator output. A general description of the code is given as well as the instructions for input data preparation. Appended are two complete example cases
Absence of a Lower Limit on Omega_b in Inhomogeneous Primordial Nucleosynthesis
We show that a class of inhomogeneous big bang nucleosynthesis models exist
which yield light-element abundances in agreement with observational
constraints for baryon-to-photon ratios significantly smaller than those
inferred from standard homogeneous big bang nucleosynthesis (HBBN). These
inhomogeneous nucleosynthesis models are characterized by a bimodal
distribution of baryons in which some regions have a local baryon-to-photon
ratio eta=3*10e-10, while the remaining regions are baryon-depleted. HBBN
scenarios with primordial (2H+3He)/H<9*10e-5 necessarily require that most
baryons be in a dark or non-luminous form, although new observations of a
possible high deuterium abundance in Lyman-alpha clouds may relax this
requirement somewhat. The models described here present another way to relax
this requirement and can even eliminate any lower bound on the baryon-to-photon
ratio.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures (available upon request by email), plain te
Description of a landing site indicator (LASI) for light aircraft operation
An experimental cockpit mounted head-up type display system was developed and evaluated by LaRC pilots during the landing phase of light aircraft operations. The Landing Site Indicator (LASI) system display consists of angle of attack, angle of sideslip, and indicated airspeed images superimposed on the pilot's view through the windshield. The information is made visible to the pilot by means of a partially reflective viewing screen which is suspended directly in frot of the pilot's eyes. Synchro transmitters are operated by vanes, located at the left wing tip, which sense angle of attack and sideslip angle. Information is presented near the center of the display in the form of a moving index on a fixed grid. The airspeed is sensed by a pitot-static pressure transducer and is presented in numerical form at the top center of the display
Presupernova collapse models with improved weak-interaction rates
Improved values for stellar weak interaction rates have been recently
calculated based upon a large shell model diagonalization. Using these new
rates (for both beta decay and electron capture), we have examined the
presupernova evolution of massive stars in the range 15-40 Msun. Comparing our
new models with a standard set of presupernova models by Woosley and Weaver, we
find significantly larger values for the electron-to-baryon ratio Ye at the
onset of collapse and iron core masses reduced by approximately 0.1 Msun. The
inclusion of beta-decay accounts for roughly half of the revisions, while the
other half is a consequence of the improved nuclear physics. These changes will
have important consequences for nucleosynthesis and the supernova explosion
mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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