3,487 research outputs found
Causality-based criteria for a negative refractive index must be used with care
Using the principle of causality as expressed in the Kramers-Kronig
relations, we derive a generalized criterion for a negative refractive index
that admits imperfect transparency at an observation frequency . It
also allows us to relate the global properties of the loss (i.e. its frequency
response) to its local behaviour at . However, causality-based criteria
rely the on the group velocity, not the Poynting vector. Since the two are not
equivalent, we provide some simple examples to compare the two criteria.Comment: slightly longer version of published PR
The Effects of Interrupted Enrollment on Graduation from College: Racial, Income, and Ability Differences
We present a multiple spells-competing risks model of stopout, dropout, reenrollment, and graduation behavior. We find that students who experience an initial stopout are more likely to experience subsequent stopouts (occurrence dependence) and be less likely to graduate. We also find evidence of the impact of the length of an initial spell on the probability of subsequent events (lagged duration dependence). We simulate the impacts of race, family income, and high school performance on student behavior and show that there are often very large differences between unadjusted rates of student outcomes and adjusted rates. Differences in student performance often ascribed to race are shown to be the result of income, age at entry, and high school performance.
Some Components of Sediment Oxygen Demand in Lake Erie Sediments
Research on which this report is based was financed in part by the U. S,
Department of Interior as authorized by the Water Resources and Development Act of 1978, (P. L. 95-467).(print) 40 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm.Item lacks publicaton date. Date supplied from WorldCat bibliographic recordWe have examined SOD of Lake Erie sediments with and without macrobenthic infauna, and with high and low macrobial activity, and have modeled the penetration of oxygen into sediments, since the depth of oxygen penetration is not easily measured. SOD of western and central basin sediments (95% silt clay, 3% organic carbon, 70-80% water content) ranges from 1.25-2.5 um 02/hr
in laboratory microcosms. When tubificid oligochaetes are added to laboratory
microcosms (30,000 m^-2 ), SOD rises to 1.5-3.5 um 02/hr. SOD is greater than
the simple sum of organism respiration plus sediment SOD. The extra enhanced demand is due to enhanced microbial activity, the transport of 02 to greater depths in the sediment, and to the transport by feeding of FeS to the sediment-water interface. Enhanced demand over sediment plus respiration values appear to be proportional to the number of oligochaetes present, which would implicate FeS transport as a major factor in enhanced demand. Thus, tubificids enhance the rate of organic decay not only through aiding the transport of dissolved
oxygen, but also by transporting reduced sulphur to be oxidized to SO4^2- at the sediment-water interface. Sediment sterilization techniques were not successful; these techniques probably result in the release of additional oxygen demanding substances as a result of sterilization. There is a pattern of decreasing SOD for a period of about 10-14 days after the start of an experiment
until an equilibrium SOD is reached. This is due to the liberation of bacterial nutrients when sediments are added to microcosms and mixed. Thus experiments done soon after introduction of sediments into an SOD apparatus are likely to be in error by as much as a factor of two.Disclaimer -- Contents -- Abstract -- Figures -- Tables -- Background -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Introduction -- Review of Related Research -- Geochemical Considerations -- Methods -- Results -- Bibliograph
Room-Temperature Continuous-Wave Vertical-Cavity Single-Quantum-Well Microlaser Diodes
Room-temperature continuous and pulsed lasing of vertical-cavity, single-quantum-well, surface-emitting microlasers is achieved at ~983nm. The active Ga[sub][0-8]In[sub][0-2]As single quantum well is 100 [angstroms] thick. These microlasers have the smallest gain medium volumes among lasers ever built. The entire laser structure is grown by molecular beam epitaxy and the microlasers are formed by chemically assisted ion-beam etching. The microlasers are 3-50-Îźm across. The minimum threshold currents are 1.1 mA (pulsed) and 1.5 mA (CW)
Stress relaxation in F-actin solutions by severing
Networks of filamentous actin (F-actin) are important for the mechanics of
most animal cells. These cytoskeletal networks are highly dynamic, with a
variety of actin-associated proteins that control cross-linking, polymerization
and force generation in the cytoskeleton. Inspired by recent rheological
experiments on reconstituted solutions of dynamic actin filaments, we report a
theoretical model that describes stress relaxation behavior of these solutions
in the presence of severing proteins. We show that depending on the kinetic
rates of assembly, disassembly, and severing, one can observe both
length-dependent and length-independent relaxation behavior
Massive creation of entangled exciton states in semiconductor quantum dots
An intense laser pulse propagating in a medium of inhomogeneously broadened
quantum dots massively creates entangled exciton states. After passage of the
pulse all single-exciton states remain unpopulated (self-induced transparency)
whereas biexciton coherence (exciton entanglement) is generated through
two-photon transitions. We propose several experimental techniques for the
observation of such unexpected behavior
Low-Threshold Electrically Pumps Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Microlasers
Vertical-cavity electrically driven lasers with three GaInAs
quantum wells and diameters of several Îźm exhibit room-temperature pulsed current thresholds as low as 1.3mA with 958 nm output wavelength
Decomposing the Sources of Earnings Inequality: Assessing the Role of Reallocation
This paper exploits longitudinal employer-employee matched data from the U.S. Census Bureau to investigate the contribution of worker and firm reallocation to changes in earnings inequality within and across industries between 1992 and 2003. We find that factors that cannot be measured using standard cross-sectional data, including the entry and exit of firms and the sorting of workers across firms, are important sources of changes in earnings distributions over time. Our results also suggest that the dynamics driving changes in earnings inequality are heterogeneous across industries.inequality, linked employer-employee data, sorting
Decomposing the Sources of Earnings Inequality Assessing the Role of Reallocation
This paper uses matched employer-employee data from the Longitudinal Employer Household Dynamics database to investigate the contribution of worker and firm reallocation to within industry changes in wage inequality between 1992 and 2003. We find that the entry and exit of firms and the sorting of workers and firms based on underlying worker "skills" are important determinants of changes in industry earnings distributions over time. Our results suggest that the underlying dynamics of earnings inequality are complex and are due to factors that cannot be measured in standard crosssectional data.
Studies of Diffuse Interstellar Bands. V. Pairwise Correlations of Eight Strong DIBs and Neutral Hydrogen, Molecular Hydrogen, and Color Excess
We establish correlations between equivalent widths of eight diffuse
interstellar bands (DIBs), and examine their correlations with atomic hydrogen,
molecular hydrogen, and EB-V . The DIBs are centered at \lambda\lambda 5780.5,
6204.5, 6283.8, 6196.0, 6613.6, 5705.1, 5797.1, and 5487.7, in decreasing order
of Pearson\^as correlation coefficient with N(H) (here defined as the column
density of neutral hydrogen), ranging from 0.96 to 0.82. We find the equivalent
width of \lambda 5780.5 is better correlated with column densities of H than
with E(B-V) or H2, confirming earlier results based on smaller datasets. We
show the same is true for six of the seven other DIBs presented here. Despite
this similarity, the eight strong DIBs chosen are not well enough correlated
with each other to suggest they come from the same carrier. We further conclude
that these eight DIBs are more likely to be associated with H than with H2, and
hence are not preferentially located in the densest, most UV shielded parts of
interstellar clouds. We suggest they arise from different molecules found in
diffuse H regions with very little H (molecular fraction f<0.01). Of the 133
stars with available data in our study, there are three with significantly
weaker \lambda 5780.5 than our mean H-5780.5 relationship, all of which are in
regions of high radiation fields, as previously noted by Herbig. The
correlations will be useful in deriving interstellar parameters when direct
methods are not available. For instance, with care, the value of N(H) can be
derived from W{\lambda}(5780.5).Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal; 37 pages, 11
figures, 6 table
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