434 research outputs found

    Carillo v. Liberty Northwest Insurance: An Expansion of Workers\u27 Compensation Benefits

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    Carillo v. Liberty Northwest Insurance: An Expansion of Workers\u27 Compensation Benefit

    Efficiency of TTAC's ORTEC IDM

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    ORNL's Technical Testing and Analysis Center (TTAC) acquired a High Purity Germanium Detector (HPGe) from ORTEC - a variant called an Interchangeable Detection Module (IDM). This detector has excellent energy resolution as well as high intrinsic efficiency. The purpose of this report is to detail the determination of the efficiency curve of the IDM, so future measurements can quantify the (otherwise unknown) activity of sources. Without such a curve, the activity cannot be directly reported by use of the IDM alone - a separate device such as an ion chamber would be required. This builds upon the capability of TTAC. The method for determining the energy-dependent intrinsic efficiency is laid-out in this report. It's noteworthy that this basic technique can be applied to any spectroscopic radiation detector, independent of the specific type (e.g. NaI, CzT, ClYC)

    The electronic structure of La1−x_{1-x}Srx_{x}MnO3_{3} thin films and its TcT_c dependence as studied by angle-resolved photoemission

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    We present angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy results for thin films of the three-dimensional manganese perovskite La1−x_{1-x}Srx_{x}MnO3_{3}. We show that the transition temperature (TcT_c) from the paramagnetic insulating to ferromagnetic metallic state is closely related to details of the electronic structure, particularly to the spectral weight at the k{\bf k}-point, where the sharpest step at the Fermi level was observed. We found that this k{\bf k}-point is the same for all the samples, despite their different TcT_c. The change of TcT_c is discussed in terms of kinetic energy optimization. Our ARPES results suggest that the change of the electronic structure for the samples having different transition temperatures is different from the rigid band shift.Comment: Accepted by Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte

    Redistribution of Flexibility in Stabilizing Antibody Fragment Mutants Follows Le Chatelier's Principle

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    Le Châtelier's principle is the cornerstone of our understanding of chemical equilibria. When a system at equilibrium undergoes a change in concentration or thermodynamic state (i.e., temperature, pressure, etc.), La Châtelier's principle states that an equilibrium shift will occur to offset the perturbation and a new equilibrium is established. We demonstrate that the effects of stabilizing mutations on the rigidity ⇔ flexibility equilibrium within the native state ensemble manifest themselves through enthalpy-entropy compensation as the protein structure adjusts to restore the global balance between the two. Specifically, we characterize the effects of mutation to single chain fragments of the anti-lymphotoxin-β receptor antibody using a computational Distance Constraint Model. Statistically significant changes in the distribution of both rigidity and flexibility within the molecular structure is typically observed, where the local perturbations often lead to distal shifts in flexibility and rigidity profiles. Nevertheless, the net gain or loss in flexibility of individual mutants can be skewed. Despite all mutants being exclusively stabilizing in this dataset, increased flexibility is slightly more common than increased rigidity. Mechanistically the redistribution of flexibility is largely controlled by changes in the H-bond network. For example, a stabilizing mutation can induce an increase in rigidity locally due to the formation of new H-bonds, and simultaneously break H-bonds elsewhere leading to increased flexibility distant from the mutation site via Le Châtelier. Increased flexibility within the VH β4/β5 loop is a noteworthy illustration of this long-range effect

    Orbit spaces of free involutions on the product of two projective spaces

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    Let XX be a finitistic space having the mod 2 cohomology algebra of the product of two projective spaces. We study free involutions on XX and determine the possible mod 2 cohomology algebra of orbit space of any free involution, using the Leray spectral sequence associated to the Borel fibration X↪XZ2⟶BZ2X \hookrightarrow X_{\mathbb{Z}_2} \longrightarrow B_{\mathbb{Z}_2}. We also give an application of our result to show that if XX has the mod 2 cohomology algebra of the product of two real projective spaces (respectively complex projective spaces), then there does not exist any Z2\mathbb{Z}_2-equivariant map from Sk→X\mathbb{S}^k \to X for k≥2k \geq 2 (respectively k≥3k \geq 3), where Sk\mathbb{S}^k is equipped with the antipodal involution.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in Results in Mathematic

    The Single-Particle Structure of Neutron-Rich Nuclei of Astrophysical Interest at the Ornl Hribf

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    The rapid nuetron-capture process (r process) produces roughly half of the elements heavier than iron. The path and abundances produced are uncertain, however, because of the lack of nuclear strucure information on important neutron-rich nuclei. We are studying nuclei on or near the r-process path via single-nucleon transfer reactions on neutron-rich radioactive beams at ORNL's Holifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility (HRIBF). Owing to the difficulties in studying these reactions in inverse kinematics, a variety of experimental approaches are being developed. We present the experimental methods and initial results.Comment: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Fission and Properties of Neutron-Rich Nucle
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