1,485,124 research outputs found
What Was He Thinking
A law enforcement negotiator tries to make sense of the aftermath of a failed negotiation.
Articles, stories, and other compositions in this archive were written by participants in the Mighty Pen Project. The program, developed by author David L. Robbins, and in partnership with Virginia Commonwealth University and the Virginia War Memorial in Richmond, Virginia, offers veterans and their family members a customized twelve-week writing class, free of charge. The program encourages, supports, and assists participants in sharing their stories and experiences of military experience so both writer and audience may benefit
Plasmaspheric H+, He+, He++, O+, and O++ Densities and Temperatures
Thermal plasmaspheric densities and temperatures for five ion species have recently become available, even though these quantities were derived some time ago from the Retarding Ion Mass Spectrometer onboard the Dynamics Explorer 1 satellite over the years 1981-1984. The quantitative properties will be presented. Densities are found to have one behavior with lessor statistical variation below about L=2 and another with much greater variability above that Lshell. Temperatures also have a behavior difference between low and higher L-values. The density ratio He++/H+ is the best behaved with values of about 0.2% that slightly increase with increasing L. Unlike the He+/H+ density ratio that on average decreases with increasing Lvalue, the O+/H+ and O++/H+ density ratios have decreasing values below about L=2 and increasing average ratios at higher L-values. Hydrogen ion temperatures range from about 0.2 eV to several 10s of eV for a few measurements, although the bulk of the observations are of temperatures below 3 eV, again increasing with L-value. The temperature ratios of He+/H+ are tightly ordered around 1.0 except for the middle plasmasphere between L=3.5 and 4.5 where He+ temperatures can be significantly higher. The temperatures of He++, O+, and O++ are consistently higher than H+
Thermal neutron captures on and He
We report on a study of the and n\,^3He radiative captures at thermal
neutron energies, using wave functions obtained from either chiral or
conventional two- and three-nucleon realistic potentials with the
hyperspherical harmonics method, and electromagnetic currents derived in chiral
effective field theory up to one loop. The predicted and n\,^3He cross
sections are in good agreement with data, but exhibit a significant dependence
on the input Hamiltonian. A comparison is also made between these and new
results for the and n\,^3He cross sections obtained in the conventional
framework for both potentials and currents.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures; references added; corrections to text and
abstract as suggested by referee adde
- …