22,718 research outputs found
A critical analysis of the hydrino model
Recently, spectroscopic and calorimetric observations of hydrogen plasmas and
chemical reactions with them have been interpreted as evidence for the
existence of electronic states of the hydrogen atom with a binding energy of
more than 13.6 eV. The theoretical basis for such states, that have been dubbed
hydrinos, is investigated. We discuss both, the novel deterministic model of
the hydrogen atom, in which the existence of hydrinos was predicted, and
standard quantum mechanics. Severe inconsistencies in the deterministic model
are pointed out and the incompatibility of hydrino states with quantum
mechanics is reviewed.Comment: 9 page
Landau Collision Integral Solver with Adaptive Mesh Refinement on Emerging Architectures
The Landau collision integral is an accurate model for the small-angle
dominated Coulomb collisions in fusion plasmas. We investigate a high order
accurate, fully conservative, finite element discretization of the nonlinear
multi-species Landau integral with adaptive mesh refinement using the PETSc
library (www.mcs.anl.gov/petsc). We develop algorithms and techniques to
efficiently utilize emerging architectures with an approach that minimizes
memory usage and movement and is suitable for vector processing. The Landau
collision integral is vectorized with Intel AVX-512 intrinsics and the solver
sustains as much as 22% of the theoretical peak flop rate of the Second
Generation Intel Xeon Phi, Knights Landing, processor
An experimental/analytical program to assess the utility of lidar for pollution monitoring
The development and demonstration of lidar techniques for the remote measurement of atmospheric constituents and transport processes in the lower troposphere was carried out. Particular emphasis was given to techniques for monitoring SO2 and particulates, the principal pollutants in power plant and industrial plumes. Data from a plume dispersion study conducted in Maryland during September and October 1976 were reduced, and a data base was assembled which is available to the scientific community for plume model verification. A UV Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL) was built, and preliminary testing was done
Rat mammary carcinogenesis following neutron- or X-radiation
Female 61 to 63 - day - old Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed once to a single dose of either 0.43 - MeV
neutrons or 250 - kVX - rays . For neutrons 23 rats were exposed in plastic tubes rotated around and 31 c m from
a water-cooled tritium impregnated target bombarded with 2.45 - MeV protons from a V a n de Graaff generator.
The mean kerma was measured at the rat location by integrating the response of a rat - sized homogeneous
tissue equivalent ionization chamber of minimum mass. The ratio between absorbed dose and kerma is under
investigation and is anticipated to be approximately 0.7. A compensated GM gamma-ray dosimeter indicated
that the gamma - ray doses were 3.5% of the total dose. All rats were examined weekly for the presence
of breast tumours and these were removed, fixed, stained and verified histologically as mammary neoplasms.
At 10 months after exposure 98<7ο of the rats were a live . The neutron kerma, the per cent of rats with
mammary neoplasia, and the number of rats were, respectively: 0.125 rads, 8.2°}o, 182; 0.5 rads, 9.0^0,
89; 2 rads, 20. 6,68; and 8 rads, 31.1%, 45. The X - ray results were: 30 R, 1.4% 95; 60 R, 27. l°Io, 48;
and 90 R, 35.4%, 48. A 3. O^o incidence was found in 167 control rats. At 10 months after exposure the
mammary neoplastic response after 8 rads of neutrons corresponds approximately to that after 60 - 90 R of
X - rays . Similarly, the response after 2 rads of neutrons was intermediate between 30 and 60 R of X - rays and
the response after 0 . 125 and 0.5 rads of neutrons was similar to that after 30 R of X - rays . This demonstrates
that the RBE for 0.43 - MeV neutrons is much lower at high doses than at low doses. Determination of the
confidence limits for the dose-RBE dependence and dose-incidence relationship will be determined as additional
data are collected
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Notations and conventions in molecular spectroscopy: part 2. Symmetry notation
The field of Molecular Spectroscopy was surveyed in order to determine a set of
conventions and symbols which are in common use in the spectroscopic literature. This
document, which is Part 2 in a series, establishes the notations and conventions used for the
description of symmetry in rigid molecules, using the Schoenflies notation. It deals firstly
with the symmetry operators of the molecular point groups (also drawing attention to the
difference between symmetry operators and elements). The conventions and notations of the
molecular point groups are then established, followed by those of the representations of these
groups as used in molecular spectroscopy. Further parts will follow, dealing inter alia with
permutation and permutation-inversion symmetry notation, vibration-rotation spectroscopy
and electronic spectroscopy
Screening and diagnostic assessment of neurodevelopmental disorders in a male prison
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to identify neurodevelopmental disorders and difficulties (NDD) in a male prison. The study used standardised tools to carry out screening and diagnostic assessment of the attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability (ID).
Design/methodology/approach
The ADHD self-report scale, 20-item autism quotient and the Learning Disability Screening Questionnaire were used to screen 240 male prisoners. Prisoners who screened positive on one or more of these scales or self-reported a diagnosis of ADHD, ASD or ID were further assessed using the diagnostic interview for ADHD in adults, adapted Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule and the Quick Test.
Findings
Of the 87 prisoners who screened positive for NDD and were further assessed, 70 met the study’s diagnostic criteria for ADHD, ASD or ID. Most of those with NDD (51 per cent) had previously gone unrecognised and a high proportion (51 per cent) were identified through staff- or self-referral to the study.
Originality/value
The study demonstrated that improving awareness and providing access to skilled, standardised assessment within a male prison can result in increased recognition and identification of NDD
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Notations and conventions in molecular spectroscopy: part 1. General spectroscopic notation
The field of Molecular Spectroscopy was surveyed in order to determine a set of
conventions and symbols which are in common use in the spectroscopic literature. This
document, which is Part I in a series, establishes the notations and conventions used for
general spectroscopic notations and deals with quantum mechanics, quantum numbers
(vibrational states, angular momentum and energy levels), spectroscopic transitions, and
miscellaneous notations (e.g. spectroscopic terms). Further parts will follow, dealing inter
alia with symmetry notation, permutation and permutation-inversion symmetry notation,
vibration-rotation spectroscopy and electronic spectroscopy
The Politics of Service Delivery Reform
This article identifies the leaders, the supporters and the resisters of public service reform. It adopts a principal–agent framework, comparing reality with an ‘ideal’ situation in which citizens are the principals over political policy-makers as their agents, and policy-makers are the principals over public service officials as their agents. Reform in most developing countries is complicated by an additional set of external actors — international financial institutions and donors. In practice, international agencies and core government officials usually act as the ‘principals’ in the determination of reforms. The analysis identifies the interests involved in reform, indicating how the balance between them is affected by institutional and sectoral factors. Organizational reforms, particularly in the social sectors, present greater difficulties than first generation economic policy reforms
Abundant Methanol Masers but no New Evidence for Star Formation in GCM0.253+0.016
We present new observations of the quiescent giant molecular cloud
GCM0.253+0.016 in the Galactic center, using the upgraded Karl G. Jansky Very
Large Array. Observations were made at wavelengths near 1 cm, at K (24 to 26
GHz) and Ka (27 and 36 GHz) bands, with velocity resolutions of 1-3 km/s and
spatial resolutions of ~0.1 pc, at the assumed 8.4 kpc distance of this cloud.
The continuum observations of this cloud are the most sensitive yet made, and
reveal previously undetected emission which we attribute primarily to free-free
emission from external ionization of the cloud. In addition to the sensitive
continuum map, we produce maps of 12 molecular lines: 8 transitions of NH3 --
(1,1),(2,2),(3,3),(4,4),(5,5),(6,6),(7,7) and (9,9), as well as the HC3N (3-2)
and (4-3) lines, and CH3OH 4(-1) - 3(0) the latter of which is known to be a
collisionally-excited maser. We identify 148 CH3OH 4(-1) - 3(0) (36.2 GHz)
sources, of which 68 have brightness temperatures in excess of the highest
temperature measured for this cloud (400 K) and can be confirmed to be masers.
The majority of these masers are concentrated in the southernmost part of the
cloud. We find that neither these masers nor the continuum emission in this
cloud provide strong evidence for ongoing star formation in excess of that
previously inferred by the presence of an H2O maser.Comment: 33 pages, 4 tables, 9 figures; ApJ Accepte
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