3,541 research outputs found

    Milton Keynes - preliminary estimates of regional traffic flows in 1981

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    The Milton Keynes Development Corporation and their planning consultants have asked the College Transport Group to investigate the scale of likely regional traffic flows into and out of Milton Keynes. At this stage the emphasis is on providing information for the preparation of a Master Plan for the city itself, rather than detailed traffic estimates for planning transport systems in the surrounding region. Population estimates for 1981 have been obtained from County Councils for areas within a 20 mile radius of the new city, and the proportions attracted to Milton Keynes for work and shopping assessed using gravity model techniques. Separate estimates have been made of work journeys from the city to regional employment and to London. Possible upper and lower limits to these forecasts are included to account for many uncertainties in the absolute and relative growth of population, employment and shopping opportunities in the city itself and in the surrounding region. The results are presented as traffic flews into and out of octant sectors around the city. Flows to the east are greater than to the west with work trip flows of the order of 2,500 person trips each way in the most heavily loaded sectors. A 1981 city population of 150,000 is likely to produce at least 1,500 daily commuters to London using the fast rail service, with an additional 200 commuters from the region using Milton Keynes railway station

    Sending multiple RTP streams in a single RTP session

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    This memo expands and clarifies the behavior of Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) endpoints that use multiple synchronization sources (SSRCs). This occurs, for example, when an endpoint sends multiple RTP streams in a single RTP session. This memo updates RFC 3550 with regard to handling multiple SSRCs per endpoint in RTP sessions, with a particular focus on RTP Control Protocol (RTCP) behavior. It also updates RFC 4585 to change and clarify the calculation of the timeout of SSRCs and the inclusion of feedback messages

    Star Formation History since z = 1.5 as Inferred from Rest-Frame Ultaviolet Luminosity Density Evolution

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    We investigate the evolution of the universal rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity density from z = 1.5 to the present. We analyze an extensive sample of multicolor data (U', B, V = 24.5) plus spectroscopic redshifts from the Hawaii Survey Fields and the Hubble Deep Field. Our multicolor data allow us to select our sample in the rest-frame ultraviolet (2500 angstrom) over the entire redshift range to z = 1.5. We conclude that the evolution in the luminosity density is a function of the form (1+z)^{1.7\pm1.0} for a flat lambda cosmology and (1+z)^{2.4\pm1.0} for an Einstein-de Sitter cosmology.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figs, 5 tables, submitted to A

    Status of This Memo

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    This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards " (STD 1) for the standardization state and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006). This document specifies how to establish secure connection-oriented media transport sessions over the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol using the Session Description Protocol (SDP). It defines a new SDP protocol identifier, ’TCP/TLS’. It also defines the syntax and semantics for an SDP ’fingerprint ’ attribute that identifies the certificate that will be presented for the TLS session. This mechanism allows media transport over TLS connections to b

    Impromptune: Symbolic Music Generation with Relative Attention Mechanisms

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    By combining attention-based mechanisms that have proved beneficial in the field of natural language processing with domain-specific knowledge about the structure of music, better predictions about piece continuations can be made. The goal of this work is to adapt current natural language processing techniques to a musical domain, and to generate new music by predicting continuations on a sequence of notes. An adaptation of traditional attention mechanisms to create a single prediction from sequential input is used to extend musical pieces by appending new elements repeatedly

    Evidence for a Gradual Decline in the Universal Rest-Frame UV Luminosity Density for z < 1

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    We have utilized various magnitude-limited samples drawn from an extremely deep and highly complete spectroscopic redshift survey of galaxies observed in seven colors in the Hawaii Survey Fields and the Hubble Deep Field to investigate the evolution of the universal rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity density from z = 1 to the present. The multi-color data (U', B, V, R, I, J, HK') enable the sample selection to be made in the rest-frame ultraviolet for the entire redshift range. Due to the large sample size and depth (U_{AB} = 24.75, B_{AB} = 24.75, I_{AB} = 23.5), we are able to accurately determine the luminosity density to z = 1. We do not confirm the very steep evolution reported by Lilly et al. (1996) but instead find a shallower slope, approximately (1+z)^{1.5} for q0 = 0.5, which would imply that galaxy formation is continuing smoothly to the present time rather than peaking at z = 1. Much of the present formation is taking place in smaller galaxies. Detailed comparisons with other recent determinations of the evolution are presented.Comment: 37 pages including 18 figures. Also available at http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~acowie/uvlum.html To be published in the August, 1999 Astronomical Journal (accepted April 22, 1999

    Promoting Resources Through Physical Library Displays

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    Physical Library resource displays offer an effective, low-cost means of publicising relevant resources to user groups and enhancing library spaces. This paper discusses the experience of using displays in academic libraries to prominently highlight a wider range of resources, which might not otherwise be used by students and the potential this offers to improve the level of work they produce. The formation of teams to create, plan, maintain and document resource displays at Leeds Beckett University Library has provided an opportunity for members of staff across the Library to work together using knowledge and creativity to enhance the overall student experience. Displays have provided opportunities for the Library to create closer links within the university and work with external organisations. Gathering detailed usage statistics and providing opportunities for users to interact with displays and offer feedback, has contributed to a better understanding of the study areas and themes which students respond to. Future directions are explored to further develop the Library display as a tool for connecting with users, including closer linking of physical displays with online resources and personalising display experiences to specific student groups and reading lists

    Understanding the kinetic and thermodynamic origins of xylene separation in UiO-66(Zr) via molecular simulation

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    Xylene isomers are precursors in many important chemical processes, yet their separation via crystallization or distillation is energy intensive. Adsorption presents an attractive, lower-energy alternative and the discovery of adsorbents which outperform the current state-of-the-art zeolitic materials represents one of the key challenges in materials design, with metal-organic frameworks receiving particular attention. One of the most well-studied systems in this context is UiO-66(Zr), which selectively adsorbs ortho-xylene over the other C8 alkylaromatics. The mechanism behind this separation has remained unclear, however. In this work, we employ a wide range of computational techniques to explore both the equilibrium and dynamic behavior of the xylene isomers in UiO-66(Zr). In addition to correctly predicting the experimentally-observed ortho-selectivity, we demonstrate that the equilibrium selectivity is based upon the complete encapsulation of ortho-xylene within the pores of the framework. Furthermore the flexible nature of the adsorbent is crucial in facilitating xylene diffusion and our simulations reveal for the first time significant differences between the intracrystalline diffusion mechanisms of the three isomers resulting in a kinetic contribution to the selectivity. Consequently it is important to include both equilibrium and kinetic effects when screening MOFs for xylene separations
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