3,738 research outputs found
Debris and micrometeorite impact measurements in the laboratory
A method was developed to simulate space debris in the laboratory. This method, which is an outgrowth of research in inertial confinement fusion (ICF), uses laser ablation to accelerate material. Using this method, single 60 micron aluminum spheres were accelerated to 15 km/sec and larger 500 micron aluminum spheres were accelerated to 2 km/sec. Also, many small (less than 10 micron diameter) irregularly shaped particles were accelerated to speeds of 100 km/sec
Derivation of the Planck Spectrum for Relativistic Classical Scalar Radiation from Thermal Equilibrium in an Accelerating Frame
The Planck spectrum of thermal scalar radiation is derived suggestively
within classical physics by the use of an accelerating coordinate frame. The
derivation has an analogue in Boltzmann's derivation of the Maxwell velocity
distribution for thermal particle velocities by considering the thermal
equilibrium of noninteracting particles in a uniform gravitational field. For
the case of radiation, the gravitational field is provided by the acceleration
of a Rindler frame through Minkowski spacetime. Classical zero-point radiation
and relativistic physics enter in an essential way in the derivation which is
based upon the behavior of free radiation fields and the assumption that the
field correlation functions contain but a single correlation time in thermal
equilibrium. The work has connections with the thermal effects of acceleration
found in relativistic quantum field theory.Comment: 23 page
Bayesian Networks for Max-linear Models
We study Bayesian networks based on max-linear structural equations as
introduced in Gissibl and Kl\"uppelberg [16] and provide a summary of their
independence properties. In particular we emphasize that distributions for such
networks are generally not faithful to the independence model determined by
their associated directed acyclic graph. In addition, we consider some of the
basic issues of estimation and discuss generalized maximum likelihood
estimation of the coefficients, using the concept of a generalized likelihood
ratio for non-dominated families as introduced by Kiefer and Wolfowitz [21].
Finally we argue that the structure of a minimal network asymptotically can be
identified completely from observational data.Comment: 18 page
Method for fabricating a low stress x-ray mask using annealable amorphous refractory compounds
X‐ray masks have been fabricated by depositing a compressively stressed refractory material on a wafer, annealing to a zero stress state, and then forming the membrane. Amorphous TaSiN and TaSi alloys deposited with a magnetron sputter tool have been extensively characterized in terms of resistivity, composition, defectivity, surface roughness, and crystalline state. Optimization in terms of these parameters has resulted in base line selection of absorber films of the following compositions: Ta_(61)Si_(17)N_(21) and Ta_(75)Si_(23). The process is shown to be extendable to an entire class of amorphous annealable refractory materials. Careful studies of deposition and annealing conditions have resulted in a 4× reduction of image placement to the 30 nm maximum vector level. Finally, the importance of stress gradients is experimentally verified
Corrections to the Central Limit Theorem for Heavy-Tailed Probability Densities
Classical Edgeworth expansions provide asymptotic correction terms to the
Central Limit Theorem (CLT) up to an order that depends on the number of
moments available. In this paper, we provide subsequent correction terms beyond
those given by a standard Edgeworth expansion in the general case of regularly
varying distributions with diverging moments (beyond the second). The
subsequent terms can be expressed in a simple closed form in terms of certain
special functions (Dawson's integral and parabolic cylinder functions), and
there are qualitative differences depending on whether the number of moments
available is even, odd or not an integer, and whether the distributions are
symmetric or not. If the increments have an even number of moments, then
additional logarithmic corrections must also be incorporated in the expansion
parameter. An interesting feature of our correction terms for the CLT is that
they become dominant outside the central region and blend naturally with known
large-deviation asymptotics when these are applied formally to the spatial
scales of the CLT
Renewal stochastic processes with correlated events. Phase transitions along time evolution
We consider renewal stochastic processes generated by non-independent events
from the perspective that their basic distribution and associated generating
functions obey the statistical-mechanical structure of systems with interacting
degrees of freedom. Based on this fact we look briefly into the less known case
of processes that display phase transitions along time. When the density
distribution \psi_{n}(t) for the occurrence of the n-th event at time t is
considered to be a partition function, of a 'microcanonical' type for n
'degrees of freedom' at fixed 'energy' t, one obtains a set of four partition
functions of which that for the generating function variable z and Laplace
transform variable \epsilon, conjugate to n and t, respectively, plays a
central role. These partition functions relate to each other in the customary
way and in accordance to the precepts of large deviations theory, while the
entropy, or Massieu potential, derived from \psi_{n}(t) satisfies an Euler
relation. We illustrate this scheme first for an ordinary renewal process of
events generated by a simple exponential waiting time distribution \psi (t).
Then we examine a process modelled after the so-called Hamiltonian Mean Field
(HMF) model that is representative of agents that perform a repeated task with
an associated outcome, such as an opinion poll. When a sequence of (many)
events takes place in a sufficiently short time the process exhibits clustering
of the outcome, but for larger times the process resembles that of independent
events. The two regimes are separated by a sharp transition, technically of the
second order. Finally we point out the existence of a similar scheme for random
walk processes.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
Representing addition and subtraction : learning the formal conventions
The study was designed to test the effects of a structured intervention in teaching children to represent addition and subtraction. In a post-test only control group design, 90 five-year-olds experienced the intervention entitled Bi-directional Translation whilst 90 control subjects experienced typical teaching. Post-intervention testing showed some significant differences between the two groups both in terms of being able to effect the addition and subtraction operations and in being able to determine which operation was appropriate. The results suggest that, contrary to historical practices, children's exploration of real world situations should precede practice in arithmetical symbol manipulation
Older adults' attitudes about continuing cancer screening later in life: a pilot study interviewing residents of two continuing care communities
BACKGROUND: Individualized decision making has been recommended for cancer screening decisions in older adults. Because older adults' preferences are central to individualized decisions, we assessed older adults' perspectives about continuing cancer screening later in life. METHODS: Face to face interviews with 116 residents age 70 or over from two long-term care retirement communities. Interview content included questions about whether participants had discussed cancer screening with their physicians since turning age 70, their attitudes about information important for individualized decisions, and their attitudes about continuing cancer screening later in life. RESULTS: Forty-nine percent of participants reported that they had an opportunity to discuss cancer screening with their physician since turning age 70; 89% would have preferred to have had these discussions. Sixty-two percent believed their own life expectancy was not important for decision making, and 48% preferred not to discuss life expectancy. Attitudes about continuing cancer screening were favorable. Most participants reported that they would continue screening throughout their lives and 43% would consider getting screened even if their doctors recommended against it. Only 13% thought that they would not live long enough to benefit from cancer screening tests. Factors important to consider stopping include: age, deteriorating or poor health, concerns about the effectiveness of the tests, and doctors recommendations. CONCLUSION: This select group of older adults held positive attitudes about continuing cancer screening later in life, and many may have had unrealistic expectations. Individualized decision making could help clarify how life expectancy affects the potential survival benefits of cancer screening. Future research is needed to determine whether educating older adults about the importance of longevity in screening decisions would be acceptable, affect older adults' attitudes about screening, or change their screening behavior
Trust and reputation policy-based mechanisms for self-protection in autonomic communications
Currently, there is an increasing tendency to migrate the management of communications and information systems onto the Web. This is making many traditional service support models obsolete. In addition, current security mechanisms are not sufficiently robust to protect each management system and/or subsystem from web-based intrusions, malware, and hacking attacks. This paper presents research challenges in autonomic management to provide self-protection mechanisms and tools by using trust and reputation concepts based on policy-based management to decentralize management decisions. This work also uses user-based reputation mechanisms to help enforce trust management in pervasive and communications services. The scope of this research is founded in social models, where the application of trust and reputation applied in communication systems helps detect potential users as well as hackers attempting to corrupt management operations and services. These so-called “cheating services” act as “attacks”, altering the performance and the security in communication systems by consumption of computing or network resources unnecessarily
The Relationship of Reduced Peripheral Nerve Function and Diabetes With Physical Performance in Older White and Black Adults: The Health, Aging, and Body Composition (Health ABC) Study
OBJECTIVE—Poor peripheral nerve function is prevalent in diabetes and older populations, and it has great potential to contribute to poor physical performance
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