34,316 research outputs found
Heat-sterilizable power source study for advanced Mariner missions
Heat sterilizable power sources for Mariner Mars landing capsul
Knowledge Flows through Informal Contacts in Industrial Clusters Myths or Realities?
The role of informal networks in the development of regional clusters has received a lot of attention in the literature recently. Informal contact between employees in different firms is argued to be one of the main carriers of knowledge between firms in a cluster. This paper empirically examines the role of informal contacts in a specific cluster. In a recent questionnaire, we ask a sample of engineers in a regional cluster of wireless communication firms in Northern Denmark, a series of questions on informal networks. We analyze whether the engineers actually acquire valuable knowledge through these networks. We find that the engineers do share even valuable knowledge with informal contacts. This shows that informal contacts are important channels of knowledge diffusion.Informal contacts, regional clusters, communication technology
On the nonlinear statistics of range image patches
In [A. B. Lee, K. S. Pedersen, and D. Mumford, Int. J. Comput. Vis., 54 (2003), pp. 83â103], the authors study the distributions of 3 Ă 3 patches from optical images and from range images. In [G. Carlsson, T. Ishkanov, V. de Silva, and A. Zomorodian, Int. J. Comput. Vis., 76 (2008), pp.
1â12], the authors apply computational topological tools to the data set of optical patches studied by Lee, Pedersen, and Mumford and find geometric structures for high density subsets. One high density subset is called the primary circle and essentially consists of patches with a line separating a light and a dark region. In this paper, we apply the techniques of Carlsson et al. to range patches.
By enlarging to 5Ă5 and 7Ă7 patches, we find core subsets that have the topology of the primary circle, suggesting a stronger connection between optical patches and range patches than was found by Lee, Pedersen, and Mumford
Ballerina - Pirouettes in Search of Gamma Bursts
The cosmological origin of gamma ray bursts has now been established with
reasonable certainty. Many more bursts will need to be studied to establish the
typical distance scale, and to map out the large diversity in properties which
have been indicated by the first handful of events. We are proposing Ballerina,
a small satellite to provide accurate positions and new data on the gamma-ray
bursts. We anticipate a detection rate an order of magnitude larger than
obtained from Beppo-SAX.Comment: A&AS in press, proceedings of the Workshop "Gamma Ray Bursts in the
Afterglow Era" in Rome, November 199
Flexible friends? Flexible working time arrangements, blurred work-life boundaries and friendship
The changing nature and demands of work raise concerns about how workers can find time for activities such as friendship and leisure, which are important for well-being. This article brings friendship into the work-life debate by exploring how individuals do friendship in a period characterised by time dilemmas, blurred work-life boundaries and increased employer- and employee-led flexible working. Interviews with employees selected according to their working time structures were supplemented by time use diaries. Findings indicate that despite various constraints, participants found strategies for making time for friendship by blurring boundaries between friends and family and between friends and work. However, the impacts of flexible working time structures were complex and double-edged
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