7,522 research outputs found
The development of an instrument to predict the potential ice hockey abilities of secondary school boys,
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit
Ni(111)|Graphene|h-BN Junctions as Ideal Spin Injectors
Deposition of graphene on top of hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) was very
recently demonstrated while graphene is now routinely grown on Ni. Because the
in-plane lattice constants of graphite, h-BN, graphite-like BC2N and of the
close-packed surfaces of Co, Ni and Cu match almost perfectly, it should be
possible to prepare ideal interfaces between these materials which are
respectively, a semimetal, insulator, semiconductor, ferromagnetic and
nonmagnetic metals. Using parameter-free energy minimization and electronic
transport calculations, we show how h-BN can be combined with the perfect spin
filtering property of Ni|graphite and Co|graphite interfaces to make perfect
tunnel junctions or ideal spin injectors (SI) with any desired resistance-area
product.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
GOVERNMENT PATENTING AND TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
Intellectual property rights such as patents protect new inventions from imitation and competition. Patents' major objective is to provide incentives for invention, sacrificing short-term market efficiency for long-term economic gains. Although patents are primarily granted to private firms, policy changes over the last 25 years have resulted in greater use of patenting by the public sector. This study examines government patenting behavior by analyzing case studies of patenting and licensing by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. ARS uses patenting and licensing as a means of technology transfer in cases in which a technology requires additional development by a private sector partner to yield a marketable product. Licensing revenue is not a major motivation for ARS patenting. More widespread use of patenting and licensing by ARS has not reduced the use of traditional instruments of technology transfer such as scientific publication. Once the decision has been made to patent and license a technology, the structure of the licensing agreement affects technology transfer outcomes. As commercial partners gain experience with the technology and learn more about the market, mutually advantageous revisions to license terms can maintain the incentives through which private companies distribute the benefits of public research.patents, licenses, intellectual property rights, technology transfer, Agricultural Research Service, agricultural research and development, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
Substrate-induced bandgap in graphene on hexagonal boron nitride
We determine the electronic structure of a graphene sheet on top of a
lattice-matched hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) substrate using ab initio
density functional calculations. The most stable configuration has one carbon
atom on top of a boron atom, the other centered above a BN ring. The resulting
inequivalence of the two carbon sites leads to the opening of a gap of 53 meV
at the Dirac points of graphene and to finite masses for the Dirac fermions.
Alternative orientations of the graphene sheet on the BN substrate generate
similar band gaps and masses. The band gap induced by the BN surface can
greatly improve room temperature pinch-off characteristics of graphene-based
field effect transistors.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Phys. Rev. B, in pres
Diet-induced obesity impairs mammary development and lactogenesis in murine mammary gland
We have developed a mouse model of diet-induced obesity that shows numerous abnormalities relating to mammary gland function. Animals ate 40% more calories when offered a high-fat diet and gained weight at three times the rate of controls. They exhibited reduced conception rates, increased peripartum pup mortality, and impaired lactogenesis. The impairment of lactogenesis involved lipid accumulation in the secretory epithelial cells indicative of an absence of copius milk secretion. Expression of mRNAs for -casein, whey acid protein, and -lactalbumin were all decreased immediately postpartum but recovered as lactation was established over 2–3 days. Expression of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC)- mRNA was also decreased at parturition as was the total enzyme activity, although there was a compensatory increase in the proportion in the active state. By day 10 of lactation, the proportion of ACC in the active state was also decreased in obese animals, indicative of suppression of de novo fatty acid synthesis resulting from the supply of preformed fatty acids in the diet. Although obese animals consumed more calories in the nonpregnant and early pregnant states, they showed a marked depression in fat intake around day 9 of pregnancy before food intake recovered in later pregnancy. Food intake increased dramatically in both lean and obese animals during lactation although total calories consumed were identical in both groups. Thus, despite access to high-energy diets, the obese animals mobilized even more adipose tissue during lactation than their lean counterparts. Obese animals also exhibited marked abnormalities in alveolar development of the mammary gland, which may partially explain the delay in differentiation evident during lactogenesis
Interface enhancement of Gilbert damping from first-principles
The enhancement of Gilbert damping observed for Ni80Fe20 (Py) films in
contact with the non-magnetic metals Cu, Pd, Ta and Pt, is quantitatively
reproduced using first-principles scattering theory. The "spin-pumping" theory
that qualitatively explains its dependence on the Py thickness is generalized
to include a number of factors known to be important for spin transport through
interfaces. Determining the parameters in this theory from first-principles
shows that interface spin-flipping makes an essential contribution to the
damping enhancement. Without it, a much shorter spin-flip diffusion length for
Pt would be needed than the value we calculate independently
Assessing the Benefits of Public Research Within an Economic Framework: The Case of USDA's Agricultural Research Service
Evaluation of publicly funded research can help provide accountability and prioritize programs. In addition, Federal intramural research planning generally involves an institutional assessment of the appropriate Federal role, if any, and whether the research should be left to others, such as universities or the private sector. Many methods of evaluation are available, peer review—used primarily for establishing scientific merit—being the most common. Economic analysis focuses on quantifying ultimate research outcomes, whether measured in goods with market prices or in nonmarket goods such as environmental quality or human health. However, standard economic techniques may not be amenable for evaluating some important public research priorities or for institutional assessments. This report reviews quantitative methods and applies qualitative economic reasoning and stakeholder interviewing methods to the evaluation of economic benefits of Federal intramural research using three case studies of research conducted by USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS). Differences among the case studies highlight the need to select suitable assessment techniques from available methodologies, the limited scope for comparing assessment results across programs, and the inherent difficulty in quantifying benefits in some research areas. When measurement and attribution issues make it difficult to quantify these benefits, the report discusses how qualitative insights based on economic concepts can help research prioritization.Agricultural Research Service, Federal intramural research, publicly funded research, Environmental Economics and Policy, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Livestock Production/Industries, Productivity Analysis,
COMPETITIVE GRANTS AND THE FUNDING OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH IN THE U.S.
To increase the efficiency of the public agricultural R&D system, expanded use of competitive grants to fund state institutions has been advocated. This paper characterizes different funding instruments and empirically assesses the effects of changes in mechanism use. Factors associated with greater levels of competitive grants are modeled.Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
Gilbert damping in noncollinear ferromagnets
The precession and damping of a collinear magnetization displaced from its
equilibrium are described by the Landau-Lifshitz-Gilbert equation. For a
noncollinear magnetization, it is not known how the damping should be
described. We use first-principles scattering theory to investigate the damping
in one-dimensional transverse domain walls (DWs) of the important ferromagnetic
alloy NiFe and interpret the results in terms of phenomenological
models. The damping is found to depend not only on the magnetization texture
but also on the specific dynamic modes of Bloch and N\'eel DWs. Even in the
highly disordered NiFe alloy, the damping is found to be
remarkably nonlocal.Comment: Final version accepted by Physical Review Letter
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