3,461 research outputs found
A two-way interactive broadband satellite architecture to break the digital divide barrier
September 24-26, 2007, Turin, Ital
TV-Centric technologies to provide remote areas with two-way satellite broadband access
October 1-2, 2007, Rome, Italy TV-Centric Technologies To Provide Remote Areas With Two-Way Satellite Broadband Acces
Ce-L3-XAS study of the temperature dependence of the 4f occupancy in the Kondo system Ce2Rh3Al9
We have used temperature dependent x-ray absorption at the Ce-L3 edge to
investigate the recently discovered Kondo compound Ce2Rh3Al9. The systematic
changes of the spectral lineshape with decreasing temperature are analyzed and
found to be related to a change in the occupation number, n_f, as the
system undergoes a transition into a Kondo state. The temperature dependence of
indicates a characteristic temperature of 150K, which is clearly related
with the high temperature anomaly observed in the magnetic susceptibility of
the same system. The further anomaly observed in the resistivity of this system
at low temperature (ca. 20K) has no effect on n_f and is thus not of Kondo
origin.Comment: 7 pages, three figures, submitted to PR
Elementary structural building blocks encountered in silicon surface reconstructions
Driven by the reduction of dangling bonds and the minimization of surface
stress, reconstruction of silicon surfaces leads to a striking diversity of
outcomes. Despite this variety even very elaborate structures are generally
comprised of a small number of structural building blocks. We here identify
important elementary building blocks and discuss their integration into the
structural models as well as their impact on the electronic structure of the
surface
A knowledge-based view of the extending enterprise for enhancing a collaborative innovation advantage
In animal societies as well as in human crowds, many observed collective
behaviours result from self-organized processes based on local interactions
among individuals. However, models of crowd dynamics are still lacking a
systematic individual-level experimental verification, and the local mechanisms
underlying the formation of collective patterns are not yet known in detail. We
have conducted a set of well-controlled experiments with pedestrians performing
simple avoidance tasks in order to determine the laws ruling their behaviour
during interactions. The analysis of the large trajectory dataset was used to
compute a behavioural map that describes the average change of the direction
and speed of a pedestrian for various interaction distances and angles. The
experimental results reveal features of the decision process when pedestrians
choose the side on which they evade, and show a side preference that is
amplified by mutual interactions. The predictions of a binary interaction model
based on the above findings were then compared to bidirectional flows of people
recorded in a crowded street. Simulations generate two asymmetric lanes with
opposite directions of motion, in quantitative agreement with our empirical
observations. The knowledge of pedestrian behavioural laws is an important step
ahead in the understanding of the underlying dynamics of crowd behaviour and
allows for reliable predictions of collective pedestrian movements under
natural conditions
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