11,393 research outputs found

    Utilizing Community Resources to Reduce the Presence of Type 2 Diabetes in Rural Youth

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    The purpose of this study was to implement a program designed to promote diabetes prevention activities among preadolescents in a rural southern setting using a day camp intervention. Participants in the study were eleven youth from a rural Alabama county who participated in a week-long half-day camp administered by local and community volunteers. Change scores were used to compare pre- to post- to follow-up measures for camp participant responses. Program results consistently demonstrated that the day camp was theoretically sound and that program activities positively impacted behavioral antecedents. This study demonstrated the feasibility of conducting a diabetes prevention day camp in a rural environment. Insights from this intervention can assist planners in rural environments to tailor similar initiatives in rural settings. Given the complicated nature of behavior change, a day camp approach of this length does not modify the behaviors of participants. Behavior changes may take considerably longer to initiate

    Locality and topology in the molecular Aharonov-Bohm effect

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    It is shown that the molecular Aharonov-Bohm effect is neither nonlocal nor topological in the sense of the standard magnetic Aharonov-Bohm effect. It is further argued that there is a close relationship between the molecular Aharonov-Bohm effect and the Aharonov-Casher effect for an electrically neutral spin1/2-{1/2} particle encircling a line of charge.Comment: 3 pages, no figure

    Push clocks: a new approach to charge-coupled devices clocking

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    A new approach to charge-coupled device clocking has been developed—dynamic push clocks. With dynamic push clocks, the charge is transferred by pushing it from one storage site to another. The push clock approach results in a larger signal dynamic range, larger signal-to-noise ratio, and better performance at both high and low frequencies

    Rabbit hemorrhagic disease.

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    Advanced technology applications for second and third general coal gasification systems

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    The historical background of coal conversion is reviewed and the programmatic status (operational, construction, design, proposed) of coal gasification processes is tabulated for both commercial and demonstration projects as well as for large and small pilot plants. Both second and third generation processes typically operate at higher temperatures and pressures than first generation methods. Much of the equipment that has been tested has failed. The most difficult problems are in process control. The mechanics of three-phase flow are not fully understood. Companies participating in coal conversion projects are ordering duplicates of failure prone units. No real solutions to any of the significant problems in technology development have been developed in recent years

    Schottky Barrier Gate Field Effect Transistor

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    An obvious addition to the ever-growing family of field-effect devices is a field-effect transistor with a Schottky barrier gate. It is the purpose of this correspondence 1) to demonstrate that indeed such a device does function as expected and 2) to point out several advantages of such a structure under certain circumstances. A schematic cross section of the device is shown in Fig. 1. The gate consists of a metal in intimate contact with the clean semiconductor surface. Clearly the ohmic contacts can be placed either on top of or under the semiconductor layer

    The Tunnel-Emission Amplifier

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    Physics of Interfaces

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    It has long been known that when a metal is placed in contact with a semiconductor a rectifying contact often results. This rectification is a result of an energy barrier between the metal and the semiconductor. In order to form a nonrectifying or ohmic contact, two general approaches can be applied: either (1) the barrier energy can be reduced to a low enough value that the thermally excited current over the barrier is large enough for the application involved or (2) the semiconductor can be doped to a high carrier density to allow quantum mechanical tunneling to take place. The physical principles of these processes are discussed in this article

    Some Properties of Exponentially Damped Wave Functions

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