9,888 research outputs found
Cruel Britannia: a personal critique of nursing in the United Kingdom
The United Kingdom (UK) once led the world in nursing but because of the exigencies of the funding mechanisms of the National Health Service (NHS), it has fallen a long way behind other countries. We aim to raise awareness inside and outside the UK about the decline in nursing as a profession there. We are purposely contentious, in an attempt to raise questions, both for the UK and for countries which are recruiting British nurses who are leaving because of job losses caused by the funding crisis in the NHS. This paper discusses where the problems that have led to the decline have come from, where nursing is going and poses questions for the future. We hope that the UK government and those who influence the development of nursing will bring it back to the standard it once bad
Man-systems requirements for the control of teleoperators in space
The microgravity of the space environment has profound effects on humans and, consequently, on the design requirements for subsystems and components with which humans interact. There are changes in the anthropometry, vision, the perception of orientation, posture, and the ways in which we exert energy. The design requirements for proper human engineering must reflect each of the changes that results, and this is especially true in the exercise of control over remote and teleoperated systems where the operator is removed from any direct sense of control. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has recently completed the first NASA-wide human factors standard for microgravity. The Man-Systems Integration Standard, NASA-STD-3000, contains considerable information on the appropriate design criteria for microgravity, and there is information that is useful in the design for teleoperated systems. There is not, however, a dedicated collection of data which pertains directly to the special cases of remote and robotic operations. The design considerations for human-system interaction in the control of remote systems in space are discussed, with brief details on the information to be found in the NASA-STD-3000, and arguments for a dedicated section within the Standard which deals with robotic, teleoperated and remote systems and the design requirements for effective human control of these systems in the space environment, and from the space environment
Comment on 'Secure Communication using mesoscopic coherent states', Barbosa et al, Phys Rev Lett 90, 227901 (2003)
In a recent letter, Barbosa et al [PRL 90, 227901(2003)] claim that secure
communication is possible with bright coherent pulses, by using quantum noise
to hide the data from an eavesdropper. We show here that the secrecy in the
scheme of Barbosa et al is unrelated to quantum noise, but rather derives from
the secret key that sender and receiver share beforehand
Hydrohalite Salt-albedo Feedback Could Cool M-dwarf Planets
A possible surface type that may form in the environments of M-dwarf planets
is sodium chloride dihydrate, or "hydrohalite" (NaCl 2HO), which
can precipitate in bare sea ice at low temperatures. Unlike salt-free water
ice, hydrohalite is highly reflective in the near-infrared, where M-dwarf stars
emit strongly, making the effect of the interaction between hydrohalite and the
M-dwarf SED necessary to quantify. We carried out the first exploration of the
climatic effect of hydrohalite-induced salt-albedo feedback on extrasolar
planets, using a three-dimensional global climate model. Under fixed CO
conditions, rapidly-rotating habitable-zone M-dwarf planets receiving 65% or
less of the modern solar constant from their host stars exhibit cooler
temperatures when an albedo parameterization for hydrohalite is included in
climate simulations, compared to simulations without such a parameterization.
Differences in global mean surface temperature with and without this
parameterization increase as the instellation is lowered, which may increase
CO build-up requirements for habitable conditions on planets with active
carbon cycles. Synchronously-rotating habitable-zone M-dwarf planets appear
susceptible to salt-albedo feedback at higher levels of instellation (90% or
less of the modern solar constant) than planets with Earth-like rotation
periods, due to their cooler minimum day-side temperatures. These instellation
levels where hydrohalite seems most relevant correspond to several
recently-discovered potentially habitable M-dwarf planets, including Proxima
Centauri b, TRAPPIST-1e, and LHS 1140b, making an albedo parameterization for
hydrohalite of immediate importance in future climate simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Revising the Body Esteem Scale with a U.S. College Student Sample: Evaluation, Validation, and Uses for the BES-R
The Body Esteem Scale (BES; Franzoi and Shields 1984) has been a primary research tool for over 30 years, yet its factor structure has not been fully assessed since its creation, so a two-study design examined whether the BES needed revision. In Study 1, a series of principal components analyses (PCAs) was conducted using the BES responses of 798 undergraduate students, with results indicating that changes were necessary to improve the scale’s accuracy. In Study 2, 1237 undergraduate students evaluated each BES item, along with a select set of new body items, while also rating each item’s importance to their own body esteem. Body items meeting minimum importance criteria were then utilized in a series of PCAs to develop a revised scale that has strong internal consistency and good convergent and discriminant validity. As with the original BES, the revised BES (BES-R) conceives of body esteem as both gender-specific and multidimensional. Given that the accurate assessment of body esteem is essential in better understanding the link between this construct and mental health, the BES-R can now be used in research to illuminate this link, as well as in prevention and treatment programs for body-image issues. Further implications are discussed
Unconditionally secure one-way quantum key distribution using decoy pulses
We report here a complete experimental realization of one-way decoy-pulse
quantum key distribution, demonstrating an unconditionally secure key rate of
5.51 kbps for a 25.3 km fibre length. This is two orders of magnitudes higher
than the value that can be obtained with a non-decoy system. We introduce also
a simple test for detecting the photon number splitting attack and highlight
that it is essential for the security of the technique to fully characterize
the source and detectors used.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Reply to "Comment on `Resilience of gated avalanche photodiodes against bright illumination attacks in quantum cryptography'"
This is a Reply to the Comment by Lydersen et al. [arXiv: 1106.3756v1]
Development of user guidelines for ECAS display design, volume 1
Experiment computer application software (ECAS) display design and command usage guidelines were developed, which if followed by spacelab experiments, would standardize methods and techniques for data presentation and commanding via ECAS. These guidelines would provide some commonality among experiments which would enhance crew training and flight operations. The guidelines are applicable to all onboard experiment displays, whether allocated by ECAS or a dedicated experiment processor. A brief description of the spacelab data display system characteristics and of the services provided by the experiment computer operating system is included. Guidelines concerning data presentation and layout of alphanumeric and graphic information are presented along with guidelines concerning keyboard commanding and command feedback
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