783 research outputs found

    Social Disorganization and Rural/Urban Crime Rates: A County Level Comparison of Contributing Factors

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    Social disorganization theory (Shaw & McKay, 1929) is a common explanation for crime. However, few studies have examined its significance for the explanation of crime in rural areas. The current study utilizes county level data from the United States Department of Health and Human Services to examine common characteristics of social disorganization for both rural and urban areas and which of these factors greater contribute to crime rates. The findings are consistent with previous research that finds significant differences between urban and rural areas regarding causes of crime. Overall, this study found that common measures of social disorganization such as income, racial heterogeneity, and migration do play a significant role in predicting the crime rate for both urban and rural areas. However, births and international migration play a significant role only in rural areas

    Sketch-To-Solution: An Exploration of Viscous CFD with Automatic Grids

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    Numerical simulation of the Reynolds-averaged NavierStokes (RANS) equations has become a critical tool for the design of aerospace vehicles. However, the issues that affect the grid convergence of three dimensional RANS solutions are not completely understood, as documented in the AIAA Drag Prediction Workshop series. Grid adaption methods have the potential for increasing the automation and discretization error control of RANS solutions to impact the aerospace design and certification process. The realization of the CFD Vision 2030 Study includes automated management of errors and uncertainties of physics-based, predictive modeling that can set the stage for ensuring a vehicle is in compliance with a regulation or specification by using analysis without demonstration in flight test (i.e., certification or qualification by analysis). For example, the Cart3D inviscid analysis package has automated Cartesian cut-cell gridding with output-based error control. Fueled by recent advances in the fields of anisotropic grid adaptation, error estimation, and geometry modeling, a similar work flow is explored for viscous CFD simulations; where a CFD application engineer provides geometry, boundary conditions, and flow parameters, and the sketch-to-solution process yields a CFD simulation through automatic, error-based, grid adaptation

    Improved Flexible Coaxial Ribbon Cable for High-Density Superconducting Arrays

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    Superconducting arrays often require specialized, high-density cryogenic cabling capable of transporting electrical signals across temperature stages with minimal loss, crosstalk, and thermal conductivity. We report improvements to the design and fabrication of previously published superconducting 53 wt% Nb-47 wt% Ti (Nb47Ti) FLexible coAXial ribbon cables (FLAX). We used 3D electromagnetic simulations to inform design changes to improve the characteristic impedance of the cable and the connector transition. We increased the center conductor diameter from 0.003 inches to 0.005 inches which lowered the cable characteristic impedance from \sim60 Ω\Omega to \sim53 Ω\Omega. This change had a negligible impact on the computed heat load which we estimate to be 5 nW per trace from 1 K to 100 mK with a 1-ft cable. This is approximately half the heat load calculated for the smallest commercially available superconducting coax. We also modified the transition board to include a capacitive coupling between the upper ground plane and signal traces that mitigates the inductive transition. We tested these changes in a 5-trace, 1-ft long cable at 4 K and found the microwave transmission improved from 6 dB to 1.5 dB of attenuation at 8 GHz. This loss is comparable to commercial superconducting coax and 3×\times lower than commercial NbTi-on-polyimide flex cables at 8 GHz. The nearest-neighbor forward crosstalk remained less than -40 dB at 8 GHz. We compare key performance metrics with commercially available superconducting coax and NbTi-on-polyimide flex cables and we share initial progress on commercialization of this technology by Maybell Quantum Industries

    Direct observation of light-driven, concerted electron–proton transfer

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    Concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (EPT) reactions in which both electrons and protons transfer in tandem are at the heart of many chemical and biological conversions including photosystem II. We report here the direct observation of absorption bands arising from photoEPT transitions, in this case, in H-bonded complexes between N-methyl-4,4′-bipyridinium cation and biologically relevant donors including tyrosine. The importance of these observations follows from the earlier experimental observations by Taube and coworkers on intervalence transfer in mixed-valence complexes. The observation of these photoEPT transitions and the appearance of reactive radical products also points to a possible, if inefficient, role in DNA photodamage and, possibly, in the formation of reactive oxygen intermediates

    T-infinity: The Dependency Inversion Principle for Rapid and Sustainable Multidisciplinary Software Development

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    The CFD Vision 2030 Study recommends that, NASA should develop and maintain an integrated simulation and software development infrastructure to enable rapid CFD technology maturation.... [S]oftware standards and interfaces must be emphasized and supported whenever possible, and open source models for noncritical technology components should be adopted. The current paper presents an approach to an open source development architecture, named T-infinity, for accelerated research in CFD leveraging the Dependency Inversion Principle to realize plugins that communicate through collections of functions without exposing internal data structures. Steady state flow visualization, mesh adaptation, fluid-structure interaction, and overset domain capabilities are demonstrated through compositions of plugins via standardized abstract interfaces without the need for source code dependencies between disciplines. Plugins interact through abstract interfaces thereby avoiding N 2 direct code-to-code data structure coupling where N is the number of codes. This plugin architecture enhances sustainable development by controlling the interaction between components to limit software complexity growth. The use of T-infinity abstract interfaces enables multidisciplinary application developers to leverage legacy applications alongside newly-developed capabilities. While rein, a description of interface details is deferred until the are more thoroughly tested and can be closed to modification

    Kepler eclipsing binary stars. VII. the catalogue of eclipsing binaries found in the entire Kepler data set

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    The primary Kepler Mission provided nearly continuous monitoring of ~200,000 objects with unprecedented photometric precision. We present the final catalog of eclipsing binary systems within the 105 deg2 Kepler field of view. This release incorporates the full extent of the data from the primary mission (Q0-Q17 Data Release). As a result, new systems have been added, additional false positives have been removed, ephemerides and principal parameters have been recomputed, classifications have been revised to rely on analytical models, and eclipse timing variations have been computed for each system. We identify several classes of systems including those that exhibit tertiary eclipse events, systems that show clear evidence of additional bodies, heartbeat systems, systems with changing eclipse depths, and systems exhibiting only one eclipse event over the duration of the mission. We have updated the period and galactic latitude distribution diagrams and included a catalog completeness evaluation. The total number of identified eclipsing and ellipsoidal binary systems in the Kepler field of view has increased to 2878, 1.3% of all observed Kepler targets

    Measurement of the Light Antiquark Flavor Asymmetry in the Nucleon Sea

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    A precise measurement of the ratio of Drell-Yan yields from an 800 GeV/c proton beam incident on hydrogen and deuterium targets is reported. Over 140,000 Drell-Yan muon pairs with dimuon mass M_{mu+ mu-} >= 4.5 GeV/c^2 were recorded. From these data, the ratio of anti-down (dbar) to anti-up (ubar) quark distributions in the proton sea is determined over a wide range in Bjorken-x. A strong x dependence is observed in the ratio dbar/ubar, showing substantial enhancement of dbar with respect to ubar for x<0.2. This result is in fair agreement with recent parton distribution parameterizations of the sea. For x>0.2, the observed dbar/ubar ratio is much nearer unity than given by the parameterizations.Comment: REVTeX, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let

    City Know-How

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    Human health and planetary health are influenced by city lifestyles, city leadership, and city development. For both, worrying trends are leading to increasing concern and it is imperative that human health and environmental impacts become core foci in urban policy. Changing trajectory will require concerted action; the journal Cities & Health is dedicated to supporting the flow of knowledge, in all directions, to help make this happen. We wish to foster communication between researchers, practitioners, policy-makers, communities, and decision-makers in cities. This is the purpose of the City Know-how section of the journal. ‘Research for city practice’ disseminates lessons from research by explaining key messages for city leaders, communities, and the professions involved in city policy and practice. ‘City shorts’ provide glimpses of what is being attempted or achieved ‘on the ground’ and ’case studies’ are where you will find evaluations of interventions. Last, ‘Commentary and debate’ extends conversations we are having to develop and mobilize much needed new thinking. Join in these conversations. In order to strengthen the community of interest, we would like to include many and varied voices, including those from younger practitioners and researchers who are supporting health and health equity in everyday urban lives

    dbar/ubar Asymmetry and the Origin of the Nucleon Sea

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    The Drell-Yan cross section ratios, σ(p+d)/σ(p+p)\sigma(p+d)/\sigma(p+p), measured in Fermilab E866, have led to the first determination of dˉ(x)/uˉ(x)\bar d(x) / \bar u(x), dˉ(x)uˉ(x)\bar d(x) - \bar u(x), and the integral of dˉ(x)uˉ(x)\bar d(x) - \bar u(x) for the proton over the range 0.02x0.3450.02 \le x \le 0.345. The E866 results are compared with predictions based on parton distribution functions and various theoretical models. The relationship between the E866 results and the NMC measurement of the Gottfried integral is discussed. The agreement between the E866 results and models employing virtual mesons indicates these non-perturbative processes play an important role in the origin of the dˉ\bar d, uˉ\bar u asymmetry in the nucleon sea.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, ReVTe
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