3,315 research outputs found
Solid state television camera system Patent
Solid state television camera system consisting of monolithic semiconductor mosaic sensor and molecular digital readout system
Cyclicality and the Labor Market for Economists
Using a unique sample of new Ph.D. economists in 1987 and 1997, we examine how job
seekers and their employers alter their search strategies in strong versus weak markets. The
1987 academic market was strong while the 1997 market was much weaker. A multimarket
theory of optimal search suggests that job seekers will respond to a weakening market by
lowering their reservation utility. This in turn affects their search strategies at the extensive
margin (which markets to enter) and the intensive margin (how many applications to submit
per market). Meanwhile, employers respond to the weakening market by raising their hiring
standards. The combination of strategies on the supply and demand sides suggest that high
quality applicants will obtain an increased share of academic interviews in weak markets
while applicants from weaker schools will increasingly secure interviews outside of the
academic market. Empirical results show that in the bust market, graduates of elite schools
shifted their search strategies to include weaker academic institutions, while graduates of
lower ranked schools shifted their applications away from academia and toward the business
sector. In bust conditions, academic institutions increasingly concentrate their interviews on
elite school graduates, women and U.S. residents
Design of Pre-Dumping Ring Spin Rotator with a Possibility of Helicity Switching for Polarized Positrons at the ILC
The use of polarized beams enhance the possibility of the precision
measurements at the International Linear Collider (ILC). In order to preserve
the degree of polarization during beam transport spin rotators are included in
the current TDR ILC Lattice. In this report some advantages of using a combined
spin rotator/spin flipper are discussed. A few possible lattice designs of spin
flipper developed at DESY in 2012 are presented.Comment: Talk presented at the International Workshop on Future Linear
Colliders (LCWS15), Whistler, Canada, 2-6 November 201
On narrowing coated conductor film: emergence of granularity-induced field hysteresis of transport critical current
Critical current density Jc in polycrystalline or granular superconducting
material is known to be hysteretic with applied field H due to the focusing of
field within the boundary between adjacent grains. This is of concern in the
so-called coated conductors wherein superconducting film is grown on a
granular, but textured surface of a metal substrate. While previous work has
mainly been on Jc determined using induced or magnetization currents, the
present work utilizes transport current via an applied potential in strip
geometry. It is observed that the effect is not as pronounced using transport
current, probably due to a large difference in criterion voltage between the
two types of measurements. However, when the films are narrowed by patterning
into 200-, 100-, or 80-micron, the hysteresis is clearly seen, because of the
forcing of percolation across higher-angle grain boundaries. This effect is
compared for films grown on ion-beam-assisted-deposited (IBAD) YSZ substrate
and those grown on rolling-assisted-biaxially-textures substrates (RABiTS)
which have grains that are about ten times larger. The hysteresis is more
pronounced for the latter, which is more likely to have a weak grain boundary
spanning the width of the microbridge. This is also of concern to applications
in which coated conductors will be striated in order to reduce of AC losses.Comment: text-only: 10 pages, plus 5 figures on 5 page
Phases and geometry of the N=1 A_2 quiver gauge theory and matrix models
We study the phases and geometry of the N=1 A_2 quiver gauge theory using
matrix models and a generalized Konishi anomaly. We consider the theory both in
the Coulomb and Higgs phases. Solving the anomaly equations, we find that a
meromorphic one-form sigma(z)dz is naturally defined on the curve Sigma
associated to the theory. Using the Dijkgraaf-Vafa conjecture, we evaluate the
effective low-energy superpotential and demonstrate that its equations of
motion can be translated into a geometric property of Sigma: sigma(z)dz has
integer periods around all compact cycles. This ensures that there exists on
Sigma a meromorphic function whose logarithm sigma(z)dz is the differential. We
argue that the surface determined by this function is the N=2 Seiberg-Witten
curve of the theory.Comment: 41 pages, 2 figures, JHEP style. v2: references adde
Numerical Investigation on the Fixed-Stress Splitting Scheme for Biot’s Equations: Optimality of the Tuning Parameter
We study the numerical solution of the quasi-static linear Biot equations solved iteratively by the fixed-stress splitting scheme. In each iteration the mechanical and flow problems are decoupled, where the flow problem is solved by keeping an artificial mean stress fixed. This introduces a numerical tuning parameter which can be optimized. We investigate numerically the optimality of the parameter and compare our results with physically and mathematically motivated values from the literature, which commonly only depend on mechanical material parameters. We demonstrate, that the optimal value of the tuning parameter is also affected by the boundary conditions and material parameters associated to the fluid flow problem suggesting the need for the integration of those in further mathematical analyses optimizing the tuning parameter.acceptedVersio
Rebate Rules in Threshold Public Good Provision
This paper considers how six alternative rebate rules affect voluntary contributions in a threshold public-good experiment. The rules differ by (1) whether an individual can receive a proportional rebate of excess contributions, a winner-takes-all of any excess contributions, or a full rebate of one's contribution in the event the public good is provided and excess contributions exist, and (2) whether the probability of receiving a rebate is proportional to an individual's contribution relative to total contributions or is a simple uniform probability distribution set by the number of contributors. The paper adds to the existing experimental economics literature on threshold public goods by investigating both aggregate and individual demand revelation under the winner-take-all and random full-rebate rules. Half of the rules (proportional rebate, winner-take-all with uniform probability among all group members, and random full-rebate with uniform probability) provide total contributions that nearly equal total benefits, while the rest (winner-take-all with proportional probability, winner-take-all with uniform probability among contributors only, and random full-rebate with proportional probability) exceed benefits by over 30 percent. Only the proportional rebate rule is found to achieve both aggregate and individual demand revelation. Our experimental results have implications for both fundraisers and valuation practitioners.
Influence of MAX-Phase Deformability on Coating Formation by Cold Spraying
As solid-state deposition technique avoiding oxidation, cold gas spraying is capable of retaining feedstock material properties in the coatings, but typically fails to build up coatings of brittle materials. Ceramic MAX phases show partial deformability in particular lattice directions and may thus successfully deposit in cold spraying. However, deformation mechanisms under high strain rate, as necessary for cohesion and adhesion, are not fully clear yet. A MAX-phase deposit only builds up, if the specific mechanical properties of the MAX phase allow for, and if suitable spray parameter sets get realized. To investigate the influence of material properties and deposition conditions on coating microstructure and quality, three MAX phases, Ti3SiC2, Ti2AlC and Cr2AlC, were selected. Up to ten passes under different spray parameters yielded Ti2AlC and Cr2AlC coatings with thicknesses of about 200-500 \ub5m. In contrast, Ti3SiC2 only forms a monolayer, exhibiting brittle laminar failure of the impacting particles. In all cases, the crystallographic structure of the MAX-phase powders was retained in the coatings. Thicker coatings show rather low porosities (< 2%), but some laminar cracks. The deposition behavior is correlated with individual mechanical properties of the different MAX-phase compositions and is discussed regarding the particular, highly anisotropic deformation mechanisms
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