50,665 research outputs found
Chip level simulation of fault tolerant computers
Chip level modeling techniques, functional fault simulation, simulation software development, a more efficient, high level version of GSP, and a parallel architecture for functional simulation are discussed
Traveling wave oscillations in the optical region: a theoretical examination
The interaction of an electron beam with the optical field of a periodically perturbed dielectric thin-film waveguide is considered. When the electron velocity is nearly equal to that of one of the spatial harmonics of the field, a coherent exchange of energy can take place. This interaction, which can lead in principle to a voltage-tunable optical oscillation, is examined in the light of presently available thin-film techniques. An estimate of the oscillation threshold is made
Is FIRST J102347.6+003841 Really a Cataclysmic Binary?
The radio source FIRST J102347.6+003841 was presented as the first
radio-selected cataclysmic. In the discovery paper, Bond et al. (2002) show a
spectrum consistent with a magnetic AM Her-type system and a light curve with
rapid, irregular flickering. In contrast, Woudt, Warner, and Pretorius (2004)
found a smoothly-varying light curve with a period near 4.75 h and one minimum
per orbit, indicating a dramatic change. We present time-resolved spectra
showing a superficially normal, mid-G type photosphere, with no detectable
emission lines. The absorption-line radial velocity varies sinusoidally, with
semi-amplitude 268 +- 4 km/s, on the orbital period, which is refined to
0.198094(2) d. At this orbital period the secondary's spectral type is
atypically early, suggesting an unusual evolutionary history. We also obtained
BVI photometry around the orbit. The light curve resembles that given by Woudt
et al., and the color modulation is consistent with a heating effect. A simple
illumination model matches the observations strikingly well with a Roche-lobe
filling secondary near 5650 kelvin being illuminated by a primary giving out
around 2 solar luminosities. The modest amplitude of the observed modulation
constrains the orbital inclination to be less than about 55 deg, unless the
gravity darkening is artificially reduced. The resulting primary star mass is
above the Chandrasekhar limit (assuming conventional gravity darkening). We
examine the possibility that the compact object in this system is not a white
dwarf, in which case this is not actually a cataclysmic variable. On close
examination, FIRST J102347.6+003841 defies easy classification.Comment: 24 pages, 5 postscript and two JPG figures; Astronomical Journal,
  accepte
Forecasting for Marketing
Research on forecasting is extensive and includes many studies that have tested alternative methods in order to determine which ones are most effective. We review this evidence in order to provide guidelines for forecasting for marketing. The coverage includes intentions, Delphi, role playing, conjoint analysis, judgmental bootstrapping, analogies, extrapolation, rule-based forecasting, expert systems, and econometric methods. We discuss research about which methods are most appropriate to forecast market size, actions of decision makers, market share, sales, and financial outcomes. In general, there is a need for statistical methods that incorporate the manager's domain knowledge. This includes rule-based forecasting, expert systems, and econometric methods. We describe how to choose a forecasting method and provide guidelines for the effective use of forecasts including such procedures as scenarios.forecasting, marketing
Fast, high current, high repetition rate pulse generator for injection lasers
The circuit described is capable of generating high‐current (2–50 A), fast‐rise‐time (10 nsec), square‐wave pulses into a 50‐Ω load. This circuit may be used for driving injection lasers at high repetition rates (up to 1.5 kHz) when connected to coaxial cables
JointZone: users' view of an adaptive online learning resource for rheumatology
This paper describes an online learning resource for rheumatology that was designed for a wide constituency of users including primarily undergraduate medical students and health professionals. Although the online resources afford an informal learning environment, the site was pedagogically designed to comply with the general recommendations of the Standing Committee on Training and Education of EULAR (European League Against Rheumatism) for a rheumatology core curriculum. Any Internet user may freely browse the site content with optional registration providing access to adaptive features that personalize the user’s view, for example, providing a reading history and targeted support based on scores from completed case studies. The site has now been available since early 2003, and an online survey of site registrants indicates that well structured pedagogical materials that reflect a learners’ dominant ‘community of practice’ appear to be a successful aid to informal learning
New Results on Bs Mixing from LEP
The phenomenology of B_s^0 oscillations is reviewed along with the
experimental strategy for observing them. Results of studies from ALEPH,
DELPHI, and OPAL experiments are summarized with an emphasis on recent new
results from ALEPH.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Proceedings of Flavour Physics and
  CP Violation 200
Exomoon Habitability and Tidal Evolution in Low-Mass Star Systems
Discoveries of extrasolar planets in the habitable zone (HZ) of their parent
star lead to questions about the habitability of massive moons orbiting planets
in the HZ. Around low-mass stars, the HZ is much closer to the star than for
Sun-like stars. For a planet-moon binary in such a HZ, the proximity of the
star forces a close orbit for the moon to remain gravitationally bound to the
planet. Under these conditions the effects of tidal heating, distortion
torques, and stellar perturbations become important considerations for exomoon
habitability.
  Utilizing a model that considers both dynamical and tidal interactions
simultaneously, we performed a computational investigation into exomoon
evolution for systems in the HZ of low-mass stars ().
We show that dwarf stars with masses  cannot host
habitable exomoons within the stellar HZ due to extreme tidal heating in the
moon. Perturbations from a central star may continue to have deleterious
effects in the HZ up to , depending on the host
planet's mass and its location in the HZ, amongst others. In addition to
heating concerns, torques due to tidal and spin distortion can lead to the
relatively rapid inward spiraling of a moon. Therefore, moons of giant planets
in HZs around the most abundant type of star are unlikely to have habitable
surfaces. In cases with lower intensity tidal heating the stellar perturbations
may have a positive influence on exomoon habitability by promoting long-term
heating and possibly extending the HZ for exomoons.Comment: accepted by MNRAS, 20 pages, 8 figures in main text (7 col, 1 b/w
Detailed studies of aviation fuel flowability
Six Jet A fuels, with varying compositions, were tested for low temperature flowability in a 190-liter simulator tank that modeled a section of a wing tank of a wide-body commercial airplane. The insulated tank was chilled by circulating coolant through the upper and lower surfaces. Flow-ability was determined as a function of fuel temperature by holdup, the fraction of unflowable fuel remaining in the tank after otherwise complete withdrawal. In static tests with subfreezing tank conditions, hold up varied with temperature and fuel composition. However, a general correlation of two or three classes of fuel type was obtained by plotting holdup as a function of the difference between freezing point and boundary-layer temperature, measured 0.6 cm above the bottom tank surface. Dynamic conditions of vibrations and slosh or rate of fuel withdrawal had very minor effects on holdup. Tests with cooling schedules to represent extreme, cold-day flights showed, at most, slight holdup for any combination of fuel type or dynamic conditions. Tests that superimposed external fuel heating and recirculation during the cooldown period indicates reduced hold up by modification of the low-temperature boundary layer. Fuel heating was just as effective when initiated during the later times of the tests as when applied continuously
Development and collapse of an Oscillatoria bloom in Loch Leven during July 1994
During 1994, weekly spot-sampling of open water sites on Loch Leven took place from 16th March onwards. Very little difference between spot-sampling sites was observed from 16th March to 5th July. Throughout April and May there was a slow increase in levels of chlorophyll-a, followed by a rapid increase through June, reaching a maximum of 230 micrograms per litre. On 8th July there was a very rapid rise in water temperature, with a corresponding increase in dissolved oxygen and pH. At 0915 hours on 9th July there was a drop in all three variables. These changes were coincident with a marked reduction in chlorophyll-a values falling to 70 micrograms per litre on 12th July. On 16th July evidence of a resurgence of photosynthesis was observed
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