4,890 research outputs found
Measurement of the LCG2 and glite file catalogue's performance
When the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) begins operation at CERN in 2007 it will produce data in volumes never before seen. Physicists around the world will manage, distribute and analyse petabytes of this data using the middleware provided by the LHC Computing Grid. One of the critical factors in the smooth running of this system is the performance of the file catalogues which allow users to access their files with a logical filename without knowing their physical location. This paper presents a detailed study comparing the performance and respective merits and shortcomings of two of the main catalogues: the LCG File Catalogue and the gLite FiReMan catalogue
Van der Waals Frictional Drag induced by Liquid Flow in Low- Dimensional Systems
We study the van der Waals frictional drag force induced by liquid flow in
low-dimensional systems (2D and 1D electron systems, and 2D and 1D channels
with liquid). We find that for both 1D and 2D systems, the frictional drag
force induced by liquid flow may be several orders of magnitude larger than the
frictional drag induced by electronic current.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Finding the Median (Obliviously) with Bounded Space
We prove that any oblivious algorithm using space to find the median of a
list of integers from requires time . This bound also applies to the problem of determining whether the median
is odd or even. It is nearly optimal since Chan, following Munro and Raman, has
shown that there is a (randomized) selection algorithm using only
registers, each of which can store an input value or -bit counter,
that makes only passes over the input. The bound also implies
a size lower bound for read-once branching programs computing the low order bit
of the median and implies the analog of for length oblivious branching programs
Sediment resuspension and erosion by vortex rings
Particle resuspension and erosion induced by a vortex ringinteracting with a sediment layer was investigated experimentally using flow visualization (particle image velocimetry), high-speed video, and a recently developed light attenuation method for measuring displacements in bed level. Near-spherical sediment particles were used throughout with relative densities of 1.2–7 and diameters (d)(d) ranging between 90 and 1600 μm1600 μm. Attention was focused on initially smooth, horizontal bedforms with the vortex ring aligned to approach the bed vertically. Interaction characteristics were investigated in terms of the dimensionless Shields parameter, defined using the vortex-ring propagation speed. The critical conditions for resuspension (whereby particles are only just resuspended) were determined as a function of particle Reynolds number (based on the particle settling velocity and dd). The effects of viscous damping were found to be significant for d/δ<15d/δ<15, where δδ denotes the viscous sublayer thickness. Measurements of bed deformation were obtained during the interaction period, for a range of impact conditions. The (azimuthal) mean crater profile is shown to be generally self-similar during the interaction period, except for the most energetic impacts and larger sediment types. Loss of similarity occurs when the local bed slope approaches the repose limit, leading to collapse. Erosion, deposition, and resuspension volumes are analyzed as a function interaction time, impact condition, and sediment size
Integration of highly probabilistic sources into optical quantum architectures: perpetual quantum computation
In this paper we introduce a design for an optical topological cluster state
computer constructed exclusively from a single quantum component. Unlike
previous efforts we eliminate the need for on demand, high fidelity photon
sources and detectors and replace them with the same device utilised to create
photon/photon entanglement. This introduces highly probabilistic elements into
the optical architecture while maintaining complete specificity of the
structure and operation for a large scale computer. Photons in this system are
continually recycled back into the preparation network, allowing for a
arbitrarily deep 3D cluster to be prepared using a comparatively small number
of photonic qubits and consequently the elimination of high frequency,
deterministic photon sources.Comment: 19 pages, 13 Figs (2 Appendices with additional Figs.). Comments
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Coordination of di- and triimine ligands at ruthenium(II) and ruthenium(III) centers: structural, electrochemical and radical scavenging studies
Herein, we explore the coordination of di- and triimine chelators at
ruthenium(II) and ruthenium(III) centers. The reactions of 2,6-bis-((4-
tetrahydropyranimino)methyl)pyridine (thppy), N1,N2-bis((3-chromone)
methylene)benzene-1,2-diamine (chb), and tris-((1H-pyrrol-2-ylmethylene)
ethane)amine (H3pym) with trans-[RuIICl2(PPh3)3] afforded the diamagnetic
ruthenium(II) complex cis-[RuCl2(thppy)(PPh3)] (1) and the paramagnetic
complexes [mer-Ru2(μ-chb)Cl6(PPh3)2] (2), and [Ru(pym)] (3), respectively.
The complexes were characterized by IR, NMR, and UV–vis spectroscopy
and molar conductivity measurements. The structures were confirmed by
single crystal X-ray diffraction studies. The redox properties of the metal
complexes were probed via cyclic- and squarewave voltammetry. Finally, the
radical scavenging capabilities of the metal complexes towards the NO and
2,2-di(4-tert-octylphenyl)-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radicals were investigate
An evaluation of the appropriateness of advice and healthcare contacts made following calls to NHS Direct Wales
Background: An evaluation of NHS Direct Wales (NHSDW), a national telephone-based healthcare advice and information service, was undertaken. A key objective was to describe the actions of callers and assess the appropriateness of advice and healthcare contacts made following calls, results of which are reported here. Methods: Postal questionnaires were sent to consecutive callers to NHSDW in May 2002 and February 2004 to determine 1) callers' actions following calls and 2) their views about the appropriateness of: advice given; and when to seek further care. An independent clinical panel agreed and applied a set of rules about healthcare sites where examinations, investigations, treatments and referrals could be obtained. The rules were then applied to the subsequent contacts to healthcare services reported by respondents and actions were classified in terms of whether they had been necessary and sufficient for the care received. Results: Response rates were similar in each survey: 1033/1897 (54.5%); 606/1204 (50.3%), with 75% reporting contacting NHSDW. In both surveys, nearly half of all callers reported making no further healthcare contact after their call to NHSDW. The most frequent subsequent contacts made were with GPs. More than four fifths of callers rated the advice given - concerning any further care needed and when to seek it - as appropriate (further care needed: survey 1: 673/729, 82.3%; survey 2: 389/421, 92.4%; when to seek further care - survey 1: 462/555, 83.2%; survey 2: n = 295/346, 85.3%). A similar proportion of cases was also rated through the rule set and backed up by the clinical panel as having taken necessary and sufficient actions following their calls to NHSDW (survey 1: 624/729, 80.6%; survey 2: 362/421, 84.4%), with more unnecessary than insufficient actions identified at each survey (survey 1: unnecessary 132/729, 17.1% versus insufficient 11/729, 1.4%; survey 2: unnecessary 47/421, 11.0% versus insufficient 14/421, 3.3%). Conclusion: Based on NHSDW caller surveys responses and applying a transparent rule set to caller actions a large majority of subsequent actions were assessed as appropriate, with insufficient contacts particularly infrequent. The challenge for NHSDW is to reduce the number of unnecessary contacts made following calls to the service, whilst maintaining safety.</p
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