257 research outputs found

    Heutagogy and Adults as Problem Solvers: Rethinking the Interdisciplinary Graduate Degree

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    This presentation proposes a refocus of the graduate educational experience for those adult students who are interested in solving complex social problems. We suggest the need to invest in and develop flexible interdisciplinary degrees that allow the heutagogical learner to address specific social needs through their educational experiences

    Developing an holistic understanding of interface friction using sand with direct shear apparatus.

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    Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN038844 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    Latent Resilience in Ponderosa Pine Forest: Effects of Resumed Frequent Fire

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    Ecological systems often exhibit resilient states that are maintained through negative feedbacks. In ponderosa pine forests, fire historically represented the negative feedback mechanism that maintained ecosystem resilience; fire exclusion reduced that resilience, predisposing the transition to an alternative ecosystem state upon reintroduction of fire. We evaluated the effects of reintroduced frequent wildfire in unlogged, fire-excluded, ponderosa pine forest in the Bob Marshall Wilderness, Montana, USA. Initial reintroduction of fire in 2003 reduced tree density and consumed surface fuels, but also stimulated establishment of a dense cohort of lodgepole pine, maintaining a trajectory toward an alternative state. Resumption of a frequent fire regime by a second fire in 2011 restored a low-density forest dominated by large-diameter ponderosa pine by eliminating many regenerating lodgepole pines and by continuing to remove surface fuels and small-diameter lodgepole pine and Douglas-fir that established during the fire suppression era. Our data demonstrate that some unlogged, fire-excluded, ponderosa pine forests possess latent resilience to reintroduced fire. A passive model of simply allowing lightning-ignited fires to burn appears to be a viable approach to restoration of such forests

    Mammal species composition reveals new insights into Earth’s remaining wilderness

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/8/fee2192-sup-0004-FigS4.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/7/fee2192-sup-0005-FigS5.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/6/fee2192-sup-0006-FigS6.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/5/fee2192.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/4/fee2192-sup-0003-FigS3.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/3/fee2192-sup-0002-FigS2.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/2/fee2192-sup-0001-FigS1.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156493/1/fee2192_am.pd

    Measure Twice: Promise of Liquid Biopsy in Pediatric High-Grade Gliomas

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    Purpose To review and critique the current state of liquid biopsy in pHGG. Materials and Methods Published literature was reviewed for articles related to liquid biopsy in pediatric glioma and adult glioma with a focus on high-grade gliomas. Results This review discusses the current state of liquid biomarkers of pHGG and their potential applications for liquid biopsy development. Conclusions While nascent, the progress toward identifying circulating analytes of pHGG primes the field of neuro-oncoogy for liquid biopsy development

    Quantum state preparation and macroscopic entanglement in gravitational-wave detectors

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    Long-baseline laser-interferometer gravitational-wave detectors are operating at a factor of 10 (in amplitude) above the standard quantum limit (SQL) within a broad frequency band. Such a low classical noise budget has already allowed the creation of a controlled 2.7 kg macroscopic oscillator with an effective eigenfrequency of 150 Hz and an occupation number of 200. This result, along with the prospect for further improvements, heralds the new possibility of experimentally probing macroscopic quantum mechanics (MQM) - quantum mechanical behavior of objects in the realm of everyday experience - using gravitational-wave detectors. In this paper, we provide the mathematical foundation for the first step of a MQM experiment: the preparation of a macroscopic test mass into a nearly minimum-Heisenberg-limited Gaussian quantum state, which is possible if the interferometer's classical noise beats the SQL in a broad frequency band. Our formalism, based on Wiener filtering, allows a straightforward conversion from the classical noise budget of a laser interferometer, in terms of noise spectra, into the strategy for quantum state preparation, and the quality of the prepared state. Using this formalism, we consider how Gaussian entanglement can be built among two macroscopic test masses, and the performance of the planned Advanced LIGO interferometers in quantum-state preparation

    Searching for a Stochastic Background of Gravitational Waves with LIGO

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    The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) has performed the fourth science run, S4, with significantly improved interferometer sensitivities with respect to previous runs. Using data acquired during this science run, we place a limit on the amplitude of a stochastic background of gravitational waves. For a frequency independent spectrum, the new limit is ΩGW<6.5×105\Omega_{\rm GW} < 6.5 \times 10^{-5}. This is currently the most sensitive result in the frequency range 51-150 Hz, with a factor of 13 improvement over the previous LIGO result. We discuss complementarity of the new result with other constraints on a stochastic background of gravitational waves, and we investigate implications of the new result for different models of this background.Comment: 37 pages, 16 figure
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