17,562 research outputs found
Application of moderate resolution band models to the prediction of heat transfer from rocket exhaust plumes
Computer program for resolution band model prediction of heat transfer from rocket exhaust plume
Human Resource Practices, Knowledge-Creation Capability And Performance In High Technology Firms
This study examines the relationship among key HR practices (i.e., effective acquisition, employee-development, commitment-building, and networking practices), three dimensions of knowledge-creation capability (human capital, employee motivation, and information combination and exchange), and firm performance. Results from a sample of 78 high technology firms showed that the three dimensions of knowledge creation interact to positively affect sales growth. Further, the HR practices were found to affect sales growth through their affect on the dimensions of knowledge-creation capability
The influence of acute variable resistance loading on subsequent free-weight maximal squat performance
Elastic bands attached to a loaded barbell during a squat exercise create a variable resistance (VR), thus changing the mechanical loading and stress placed through the musculoskeletal system. Preconditioning the neuromuscular system using near-maximal or maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) can induce a phenomenon known as post-activation potentiation (PAP) to enhance performance to ‘supramaximal’ levels. However, the potentiating effects of VR on subsequent free-weight resistance (FWR) squat performance have not been examined. Thus, the aim of the present study was to examine the influence of VR exercise using elastic bands on subsequent FWR squat performance. Sixteen recreationally active men (age = 26.0 ± 7.8 yr, height = 1.7 ± 0.2 m, mass 82.6 ± 12.7 kg) experienced in squatting (>3yr) volunteered for the study after giving written informed consent; ethical approval was granted from the University of Northampton. Subjects’ 1-RM were determined then on two subsequent days either a 3-RM FWR (control) or a 3-RM VR (experimental) squat exercise was performed at 85% 1-RM (35% of the load generated from band tension in the VR condition). Five minutes later, motion analysis recorded knee joint kinematics during a subsequent FWR 1-RM squat, with vastus medialis, vastus lateralis, rectus femoris and semitendinosus electromyograms (EMG) simultaneously recorded. Paired t-tests were used to determine significance, accepted at p0.05) or EMG amplitude (5.9%; p>0.05) occurred. No subjects increased 1-RM in the FWR condition, however 13 of 16 (81%) increased 1-RM by ~10% following VR. Preconditioning the neuromuscular system using VR significantly increased 1-RM without changes in knee extensor muscle activity or knee flexion angle, however eccentric and concentric velocities were reduced. Thus, VR can potentiate the neuromuscular system to enhance subsequent maximal lifting performance. The lack of change in EMG suggests that changes in muscle activity were small or non-existent, which may be explained by force-velocity effects (slower movement = larger forces). Alternatively a greater activation of hip musculature (not measured in the present study) may allow a greater total lower limb force to be developed. Regardless, as 1-RM increased greater lower-limb loading occurred, thus VR potentiated the neuromuscular system and could enhance training stimuli
Semiclassical initial value calculations of collinear helium atom
Semiclassical calculations using the Herman-Kluk initial value treatment are
performed to determine energy eigenvalues of bound and resonance states of the
collinear helium atom. Both the configuration (where the classical motion
is fully chaotic) and the configuration (where the classical dynamics is
nearly integrable) are treated. The classical motion is regularized to remove
singularities that occur when the electrons collide with the nucleus. Very good
agreement is obtained with quantum energies for bound and resonance states
calculated by the complex rotation method.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to J. Phys.
Monocyte chemotaxis in bronchial carcinoma and cigarette smokers.
Chemotaxis of blood monocytes was measured in 31 patients with bronchial carcinoma and 19 cigarette smokers. Thirteen patients with metastatic bronchial carcinoma had significantly less (P less than 0.005) chemotactic response than matched controls. Those with disease confined to the chest, or with recurrent or operable bronchial carcinoma, had no significant depression of monocyte chemotaxis. There was also no significant difference in monocyte chemotaxis between cigarette smokers and matched controls. These results support the concept that in human cancer there is a defect in monocyte chemotaxis, but in bronchial carcinoma significant depression was only apparent in those with advanced disease
Quantum Control Theory for State Transformations: Dark States and their Enlightenment
For many quantum information protocols such as state transfer, entanglement
transfer and entanglement generation, standard notions of controllability for
quantum systems are too strong. We introduce the weaker notion of accessible
pairs, and prove an upper bound on the achievable fidelity of a transformation
between a pair of states based on the symmetries of the system. A large class
of spin networks is presented for which this bound can be saturated. In this
context, we show how the inaccessible dark states for a given
excitation-preserving evolution can be calculated, and illustrate how some of
these can be accessed using extra catalytic excitations. This emphasises that
it is not sufficient for analyses of state transfer in spin networks to
restrict to the single excitation subspace. One class of symmetries in these
spin networks is exactly characterised in terms of the underlying graph
properties.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures v3: rewritten for increased clarit
A Note on Hartle-Hawking Vacua
The purpose of this note is to establish the basic properties--- regularity
at the horizon, time independence, and thermality--- of the generalized
Hartle-Hawking vacua defined in static spacetimes with bifurcate Killing
horizon admitting a regular Euclidean section. These states, for free or
interacting fields, are defined by a path integral on half the Euclidean
section. The emphasis is on generality and the arguments are simple but formal.Comment: 5 pages, LaTe
Dietary dairy product intake and incident type 2 diabetes: a prospective study using dietary data from a 7-day food diary
The consumption of specific dairy types may be beneficial for the prevention of diabetes.
Abstract: The aim of this study was to investigate the association between total and types of dairy product intake and risk of developing incident type 2 diabetes, using a food diary.
Methods: A nested case-cohort within the EPIC-Norfolk Study was examined, including a random subcohort
(n=4,000) and cases of incident diabetes (n=892, including 143 cases in the subcohort) followed-up for 11 years. Diet was assessed using a prospective 7-day food diary. Total dairy intake (g/day) was estimated and categorised into high-fat
(≥3.9%) and low-fat (<3.9% fat) dairy, and by subtype into yoghurt, cheese and milk. Combined fermented dairy product
intake (yoghurt, cheese, sour cream) was estimated and categorised into high- and low-fat. Prentice-weighted Cox
regression HRs were calculated.
Results: Total dairy, high-fat dairy, milk, cheese and high-fat fermented dairy product intakes were not associated with the
development of incident diabetes. Low-fat dairy intake was inversely associated with diabetes in age- and sex-adjusted
analyses (tertile [T] 3 vs T1, HR 0.81 [95% CI 0.66, 0.98]), but further adjustment for anthropometric, dietary and diabetes
risk factors attenuated this association. In addition, an inverse association was found between diabetes and low-fat
fermented dairy product intake (T3 vs T1, HR 0.76 [95% CI 0.60, 0.99]; ptrend=0.049) and specifically with yoghurt intake
(HR 0.72 [95% CI 0.55, 0.95]; ptrend=0.017) in multivariable adjusted analyses.
Conclusions/interpretation: Greater low-fat fermented dairy product intake, largely driven by yoghurt intake, was associated with a decreased risk of type 2 diabetes development in prospective analyses. These findings suggest that the consumption of specific dairy types may be beneficial for the prevention of diabetes, highlighting the importance of food
group subtypes for public health messages
Quantum state transfer in spin chains with q-deformed interaction terms
We study the time evolution of a single spin excitation state in certain
linear spin chains, as a model for quantum communication. Some years ago it was
discovered that when the spin chain data (the nearest neighbour interaction
strengths and the magnetic field strengths) are related to the Jacobi matrix
entries of Krawtchouk polynomials or dual Hahn polynomials, so-called perfect
state transfer takes place. The extension of these ideas to other types of
discrete orthogonal polynomials did not lead to new models with perfect state
transfer, but did allow more insight in the general computation of the
correlation function. In the present paper, we extend the study to discrete
orthogonal polynomials of q-hypergeometric type. A remarkable result is a new
analytic model where perfect state transfer is achieved: this is when the spin
chain data are related to the Jacobi matrix of q-Krawtchouk polynomials. The
other cases studied here (affine q-Krawtchouk polynomials, quantum q-Krawtchouk
polynomials, dual q-Krawtchouk polynomials, q-Hahn polynomials, dual q-Hahn
polynomials and q-Racah polynomials) do not give rise to models with perfect
state transfer. However, the computation of the correlation function itself is
quite interesting, leading to advanced q-series manipulations
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