22,054 research outputs found
Policies and Programs Affecting the Employment of People with Disabilities - Policy Brief
The purpose of this brief is to summarize the wide range of federal programs and government policies that influence the employment and program participation decisions of people with disabilities and current research initiatives related to these programs and policies. The brief is organized by the following types of programs, policies, and initiatives: • federal programs that provide cash assistance, in-kind transfers (e.g., health insurance) and education, training, and rehabilitation support based on disability status and/or other characteristics (e.g., family structure); • federal tax policies that provide credits either directly to individuals with disabilities or to employers as an incentive to hire a person with a disability; • other employment-related programs and public policies that provide accommodation support and work incentives for people with disabilities; • recent policy changes that affect people with disabilities; and • some of the current research initiatives related to federal programs, tax policies, other employment programs and policies, and recent policy changes. We conclude with a summary of our program, policy, and research scan. This publication is based on The Economics of Policies and Programs Affecting the Employment of People with Disabilities, which provides a more comprehensive review of the policies and programs discussed here (as well as others) and analyzes the employment effects of these policies and programs within an economic framework
Evolutionary games in the multiverse
Evolutionary game dynamics of two players with two strategies has been
studied in great detail. These games have been used to model many biologically
relevant scenarios, ranging from social dilemmas in mammals to microbial
diversity. Some of these games may in fact take place between a number of
individuals and not just between two. Here, we address one-shot games with
multiple players. As long as we have only two strategies, many results from two
player games can be generalized to multiple players. For games with multiple
players and more than two strategies, we show that statements derived for
pairwise interactions do no longer hold. For two player games with any number
of strategies there can be at most one isolated internal equilibrium. For any
number of players with any number of strategies n, there can
be at most (d-1)^(n-1) isolated internal equilibria. Multiplayer games show a
great dynamical complexity that cannot be captured based on pairwise
interactions. Our results hold for any game and can easily be applied for
specific cases, e.g. public goods games or multiplayer stag hunts
Laser induced magnetization switching in films with perpendicular anisotropy: a comparison between measurements and a multi-macrospin model
Thermally-assisted ultra-fast magnetization reversal in a DC magnetic field
for magnetic multilayer thin films with perpendicular anisotropy has been
investigated in the time domain using femtosecond laser heating. The experiment
is set-up as an optically pumped stroboscopic Time Resolved Magneto-Optical
Kerr Effect magnetometer. It is observed that a modest laser fluence of about
0.3 mJ/square-cm induces switching of the magnetization in an applied field
much less than the DC coercivity (0.8 T) on the sub-nanosecond time-scale. This
switching was thermally-assisted by the energy from the femtosecond pump-pulse.
The experimental results are compared with a model based on the Landau
Lifschitz Bloch equation. The comparison supports a description of the reversal
process as an ultra-fast demagnetization and partial recovery followed by
slower thermally activated switching due to the spin system remaining at an
elevated temperature after the heating pulse.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, to be submitted to PR
Aggregates of rod-coil diblock copolymers adsorbed at a surface
The behaviour of rod-coil diblock copolymers close to a surface is discussed
by using extended scaling methods. The copolymers are immersed in selective
solvent such that the rods are likely to aggregate to gain energy. The rods are
assumed to align only parallel to each other, such that they gain a maximum
energy by forming liquid crystalline structures. If an aggregate of these
copolymers adsorbs with the rods parallel to the surface the rods shift with
respect to each other to allow for the chains to gain entropy. It is shown that
this shift decays with increasing distance from the surface. The profile of
this decay away from the surface is calculated by minimisation of the total
free energy of the system. The stability of such an adsorbed aggregate and
other possible configurations are discussed as well.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
X-ray and Radio Monitoring of GX 339-4 and Cyg X-1
Previous work by Motch et al. (1985) suggested that in the low/hard state of
GX339-4, the soft X-ray power-law extrapolated backward in energy agrees with
the IR flux level. Corbel and Fender (2002) later showed that the typical hard
state radio power-law extrapolated forward in energy meets the backward
extrapolated X-ray power-law at an IR spectral break, which was explicitly
observed twice in GX339-4. This has been cited as further evidence that jet
synchrotron radiation might make a significant contribution to the observed
X-rays in the hard state. We explore this hypothesis with a series of
simultaneous radio/X-ray hard state observations of GX339-4. We fit these
spectra with a simple, but remarkably successful, doubly broken power-law model
that indeed requires a spectral break in the IR. For most of these
observations, the break position as a function of X-ray flux agrees with the
jet model predictions. We then examine the radio flux/X-ray flux correlation in
Cyg X-1 through the use of 15 GHz radio data, obtained with the Ryle radio
telescope, and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer data, from the All Sky Monitor and
pointed observations. We find evidence of `parallel tracks' in the radio/X-ray
correlation which are associated with `failed transitions' to, or the beginning
of a transition to, the soft state. We also find that for Cyg X-1 the radio
flux is more fundamentally correlated with the hard, rather than the soft,
X-ray flux.Comment: To Appear in the Proceedings of "From X-ray Binaries to Quasars:
Black Hole Accretion on All Mass Scales" (Amsterdam, July 2004). Eds. T
Maccarone, R. Fender, L. H
Flightweight radiantly and actively cooled panel: Thermal and structural performance
A 2- by 4-ft flightweight panel was subjected to thermal/structural tests representative of design flight conditions for a Mach 6.7 transport and to off-design conditions simulating flight maneuvers and cooling system failures. The panel utilized Rene 41 heat shields backed by a thin layer of insulation to radiate away most of the 12 Btu/ft2-sec incident heating. A solution of ethylene glycol in water circulating through tubes in an aluminum-honeycomb-sandwich panel absorbed the remainder of the incident heating (0.8 Btu/sq ft-sec). The panel successfully withstood (1) 46.7 hr of radiant heating which included 53 thermal cycles and 5000 cycles of uniaxial inplane loading of + or - 1200 lfb/in; (2) simulated 2g-maneuver heating conditions and simulated cooling system failures without excessive temperatures on the structural panel; and (3) the extensive thermal/structural tests and the aerothermal tests reported in NASA TP-1595 without significant damage to the structural panel, coolant leaks, or hot-gas ingress to the structural panel
Scalar Top Quark Studies with Various Visible Energies
The precision determination of scalar top quark properties will play an
important role at a future International Linear Collider (ILC). Recent and
ongoing studies are discussed for different experimental topologies in the
detector. First results are presented for small mass differences between the
scalar top and neutralino masses. This corresponds to a small expected visible
energy in the detector. An ILC will be a unique accelerator to explore this
scenario. In addition to finding the existence of light stop quarks, the
precise measurement of their properties is crucial for testing their impact on
the dark matter relic abundance and the mechanism of electroweak baryogenesis.
Significant sensitivity for mass differences down to 5 GeV are obtained. The
simulation is based on a fast and realistic detector simulation. A vertex
detector concept of the Linear Collider Flavor Identification
(LCFI)collaboration, which studies pixel detectors for heavy quark flavour
identification, is implemented in the simulations for c-quark tagging. The
study extends simulations for large mass differences (large visible energy) for
which aspects of different detector simulations, the vertex detector design,
and different methods for the determination of the scalar top mass are
discussed. Based on the detailed simulations we study the uncertainties for the
dark matter density predictions and their estimated uncertainties from various
sources. In the region of parameters where stop-neutralino co-annihilation
leads to a value of the relic density consistent with experimental results, as
precisely determined by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), the
stop-neutralino mass difference is small and the ILC will be able to explore
this region efficiently.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, presented at SUSY'0
Models of dynamic extraction of lipid tethers from cell membranes
When a ligand that is bound to an integral membrane receptor is pulled, the
membrane and the underlying cytoskeleton can deform before either the membrane
delaminates from the cytoskeleton or the ligand detaches from the receptor. If
the membrane delaminates from the cytoskeleton, it may be further extruded and
form a membrane tether. We develop a phenomenological model for this processes
by assuming that deformations obey Hooke's law up to a critical force at which
the cell membrane locally detaches from the cytoskeleton and a membrane tether
forms. We compute the probability of tether formation and show that they can be
extruded only within an intermediate range of force loading rates and pulling
velocities. The mean tether length that arises at the moment of ligand
detachment is computed as are the force loading rates and pulling velocities
that yield the longest tethers.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
- …
