35,841 research outputs found
The 1980-90 shuttle star catalog for onboard and ground programs
The 1980-90 shuttle star catalog for onboard and ground programs is presented. The data used in this catalog are explained according to derivation, input, format for the catalog, and preparation. The tables include the computer program listing, input star position, and the computed star positions for the years 1980-90
The integration of on-line monitoring and reconfiguration functions using IEEE1149.4 into a safety critical automotive electronic control unit.
This paper presents an innovative application of IEEE 1149.4 and the integrated diagnostic reconfiguration (IDR) as tools for the implementation of an embedded test solution for an automotive electronic control unit, implemented as a fully integrated mixed signal system. The paper describes how the test architecture can be used for fault avoidance with results from a hardware prototype presented. The paper concludes that fault avoidance can be integrated into mixed signal electronic systems to handle key failure modes
What Do JNC Youth Workers Conceive of as âProfessional Maturityâ in Youth Work Practice
This research set out to take a snapshot of what JNC practitioners in youth and community work defined as âProfessional Maturityâ and to explore if this notion impacted on practice. To achieve this, the researchers worked with the Institute for youth work, to garner responses from practitioners in the youth work sector via an online questionnaire and an online semi-structured interview. In the inductive phenomenological approach taken to data analysis, some surprising patterns emerged that will require further exploration. The result of these findings has generated an âin the momentâ snapshot of âProfessional Maturityâ for youth work in the shape of a model for practice that will still require critical examination. The data generated and the subsequent analysis highlights six themes: Qualification, Professional Transference, Attributes, Values, Beyond Self, and Chameleon. The key finding of this research has shown that Professional Maturity is an ever-evolving aspect of a youth workers journey rather than a final destination. However, research respondents did appear to have different expectations on what Professional Maturity should look like and how it affects individuals practice across the field
The multilevel pairing Hamiltonian versus the degenerate case
We study the pairing Hamiltonian in a set of non degenerate levels. First, we
review in the path integral framework the spontaneous breaking of the U(1)
symmetry occurring in such a system for the degenerate situation. Then the
behaviors with the coupling constant of the ground state energy in the
multilevel and in the degenerate case are compared. Next we discuss, in the
multilevel case, an exact strong coupling expansion for the ground state energy
which introduces the moments of the single particle level distribution. The
domain of validity of the expansion, which is known in the macroscopic limit,
is explored for finite systems and its implications for the energy of the
latter is discussed. Finally the seniority and Gaudin excitations of the
pairing Hamiltonian are addressed and shown to display the same gap in leading
order.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure
Highly nonlinear dynamics in a slowly sedimenting colloidal gel
We use a combination of original light scattering techniques and particles
with unique optical properties to investigate the behavior of suspensions of
attractive colloids under gravitational stress, following over time the
concentration profile, the velocity profile, and the microscopic dynamics.
During the compression regime, the sedimentation velocity grows nearly linearly
with height, implying that the gel settling may be fully described by a
(time-dependent) strain rate. We find that the microscopic dynamics exhibit
remarkable scaling properties when time is normalized by strain rate, showing
that the gel microscopic restructuring is dominated by its macroscopic
deformation.Comment: Physical Review Letters (2011) xxx
Green cities and health: a question of scale?
<p><b>Background:</b> Cities are expanding and accommodating an increasing proportion of the world's population. It is important to identify features of urban form that promote the health of city dwellers. Access to green space has been associated with health benefits at both individual and neighbourhood level. We investigated whether a relationship between green space coverage and selected mortality rates exists at the city level in the USA.</p>
<p><b>Methods:</b> An ecological cross-sectional study. A detailed land use data set was used to quantify green space for the largest US cities (n=49, combined population of 43 million). Linear regression models were used to examine the association between city-level âgreennessâ and city-level standardised rates of mortality from heart disease, diabetes, lung cancer, motor vehicle fatalities and all causes, after adjustment for confounders.</p>
<p><b>Results:</b> There was no association between greenness and mortality from heart disease, diabetes, lung cancer or automobile accidents. Mortality from all causes was significantly higher in greener cities.</p>
<p><b>Conclusions:</b> While considerable evidence suggests that access to green space yields health benefits, we found no such evidence at the scale of the American city. In the USA, greener cities tend also to be more sprawling and have higher levels of car dependency. Any benefits that the green space might offer seem easily eclipsed by these other conditions and the lifestyles that accompany them. The result merits further investigation as it has important implications for how we increase green space access in our cities.</p>
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