20,524 research outputs found
Analysis of wake vortex flight test data behind a T-33 aircraft
Measurements of the vortex system behind a T-33 aircraft were obtained by a Learjet equipped with a boom carrying a three-wire, hot-wire anemometry probe and other instrumentation. Analysis of the measurements using a computerized geometric method indicated the vortices had a core radius of approximately 0.11 meter with a maximum velocity of 25 meters per second. The hot-wire anemometer was found to be a practical and sensitive instrument for determining in-flight vortex velocities. No longitudinal instabilities, buoyant effects or vortex breakdowns were evident in the data which included vortex wake cross sections from 0.24 to 5.22 kilometers behind the T-33
Understanding the truth about subjectivity
Results of two experiments show children’s understanding of diversity in personal preference is incomplete. Despite acknowledging diversity, in Experiment 1(N=108), 6-
and 8-year-old children were less likely than adults to see preference as a legitimate basis for personal tastes and more likely to say a single truth could be found about a matter of taste. In Experiment 2 (N=96), 7- and 9-year-olds were less likely than 11- and 13-yearolds to say a dispute about a matter of preference might not be resolved. These data suggest that acceptance of the possibility of diversity does not indicate an adult-like understanding of subjectivity. An understanding of the relative emphasis placed on objective and subjective factors in different contexts continues to develop into adolescence
Unifying metastasis--Integrating intravasation, circulation and end organ colonization
Recent technological advances that have enabled the measurement of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in patients have spurred interest in the circulatory phase of metastasis. Techniques that do not solely rely on a blood sample allow substantial biological interrogation beyond simply counting CTCs
Radiative Decay of Vector Quarkonium: Constraints on Glueballs and Light Gluinos
Given a resonance of known mass, width, and J^{PC}, we can determine its
gluonic branching fraction, b(R->gg), from data on its production in radiative
vector quarkonium decay, V -> gamma+R. For most resonances b(R->gg) is found to
be O(10%), consistent with being q-qbar states, but we find that both
pseudoscalars observed in the 1440 MeV region have b(R->gg) ~ 1/2 - 1, and
b(f_0^{++}->gg) ~ 1/2. As data improves, b(R->gg) should be a useful
discriminator between q-qbar and gluonic states and may permit quantitative
determination of the extent to which a particular resonance is a mixture of
glueball and q-qbar. We also examine the regime of validity of pQCD for
predicting the rate of V -> gamma+eta_gluino, the ``extra'' pseudoscalar bound
state which would exist if there were light gluinos. From the CUSB limit on
peaks in Upsilon -> gamma X, the mass range 3 GeV < m(eta_gluino) < 7 GeV can
be excluded. An experiment must be significantly more sensitive to exclude an
eta_gluino lighter than this.Comment: 36pp (inc figs),RU-94-04. (Replaces original which didn't latex
correctly and didn't have figures.
Produção de mudas de videira por enxertia de garfagem de inverno.
bitstream/CNPUV/8132/1/cir054.pd
Opinion dynamics with emergent collective memory: A society shaped by its own past
In order to understand the development of common orientation of opinions in the modern world we propose a model of a society described as a large collection of agents that exchange their expressed opinions under the influence of their mutual interactions and external events. In particular we introduce an interaction bias which results in the emergence of a collective memory such that the society is able to store and recall information coming from several external signals. Our model shows how the inner structure of the society and its future reactions are shaped by its own history. We provide an analytical explanation of such mechanism and we study the features of external influences with higher impact on the society. We show the emergent similarity between the reaction of a society modelled in this way and the Hopfield-like mechanism of information retrieval in Neural Networks
Electroweak Sudakov Logarithms and Real Gauge-Boson Radiation in the TeV Region
Electroweak radiative corrections give rise to large negative,
double-logarithmically enhanced corrections in the TeV region. These are partly
compensated by real radiation and, moreover, affected by selecting
isospin-noninvariant external states. We investigate the impact of real gauge
boson radiation more quantitatively by considering different restricted final
state configurations. We consider successively a massive abelian gauge theory,
a spontaneously broken SU(2) theory and the electroweak Standard Model. We find
that details of the choice of the phase space cuts, in particular whether a
fraction of collinear and soft radiation is included, have a strong impact on
the relative amount of real and virtual corrections.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
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