9,624 research outputs found

    Two phase detonation studies

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    An experimental study of the passage of a shock wave over a burning fuel drop is described. This includes high speed framing photographs of the interaction taken at 500,000 frames per second. A theoretical prediction of the ignition of a fuel drop by a shock wave is presented and the results compared with earlier experimental work. Experimental attempts to generate a detonation in a liquid fuel drop (kerosene)-liquid oxidizer drop (hydrogen peroxide)-inert gas-environment are described. An appendix is included which gives the analytical prediction of power requirements for the drop generator to produce certain size drops at a certain mass rate. A bibliography is also included which lists all of the publications resulting from this research grant

    The influence of composition, annealing treatment, and texture on the fracture toughness of Ti-5Al-2.5Sn plate at cryogenic temperatures

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    The plane strain fracture toughness K sub Ic and conventional tensile properties of two commercially produced one-inch thick Ti-5Al-2.5Sn plates were determined at cryogenic temperatures. One plate was extra-low interstitial (ELI) grade, the other normal interstitial. Portions of each plate were mill annealed at 1088 K (1500 F) followed by either air cooling or furnace cooling. The tensile properties, flow curves, and K sub Ic of these plates were determined at 295 K (room temperature), 77 K (liquid nitrogen temperature), and 20 K (liquid hydrogen temperature)

    Preliminary evaluation of radar imagery of Yellowstone Park, Wyoming

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    Evaluation of radar imagery of Yellowstone Park, Wyomin

    Urinary incontinence, work, and intention to leave current job: A cross sectional survey of the Australian nursing and midwifery workforce

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    © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Aims: To determine the prevalence and severity of urinary incontinence (UI) in a group of female nurses and midwives, and to examine the relationship between UI, work and intention to leave current job. Methods: An electronic survey “Fit for the future” was distributed to nurses and midwives in NSW, Australia between May 2014 and February 2015. UI was investigated using the International Consultation on Incontinence UI—Short Form. Examined work characteristics included: work role, location, setting, contract, shift, job satisfaction, and plans to leave current job. Logistic regression modelling was performed to determine whether the severity of UI had an independent effect on intention to leave. Results: Of 5041 survey responses, 68.5% answered the question on urine leakage. Of the included female sample (n = 2,907) the prevalence of UI was 32.0% (95% CI: 30-34%): of these 40.5% experienced moderate and 4.4% “severe or very severe” symptoms. UI was more likely to be reported in nurses or midwives working part-time or days only (not shifts). Those with “severe or very severe UI” were more likely to indicate an intention to leave at 12 months (OR: 2.68; 95% CI: 1.18-6.06) than those with slight or moderate symptoms, after accounting for age, body mass index, parity, pelvic organ prolapse, anxiety, depression, work contract, shift, and job satisfaction. Conclusions: UI is a condition of high prevalence and significant severity in female nurses and midwives. In this workforce, severe UI was associated with intentions related to future employment

    Barriers and facilitators to healthy eating for nurses in the workplace: an integrative review

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    © 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Aim: The aim was to conduct an integrative systematic review to identify barriers and facilitators to healthy eating for working nurses. Background: There is growing recognition of the influence of the workplace environment on the eating habits of the workforce, which in turn may contribute to increased overweight and obesity. Overweight and obesity exact enormous costs in terms of reduced well-being, worker productivity and increased risk of non-communicable diseases. The workplace is an ideal place to intervene and support healthy behaviours. This review aimed to identify barriers and facilitators to nurses’ healthy eating in the workplace. Design: Integrative mixed method review. Data sources: Five electronic databases were searched: CINAHL, MEDLINE, PROQUEST Health and Medicine, ScienceDirect and PsycINFO. Reference lists were searched. Included papers were published in English between 2000–2016. Of 26 included papers, 21 were qualitative and five quantitative. Review methods: An integrative literature review was undertaken. Quality appraisal of included studies used standardized checklists. A social-ecological framework was used to examine workplace facilitators and constraints to healthy eating, derived from the literature. Emergent themes were identified by thematic analysis. Results: Review participants were Registered, Enrolled and/or Nurse Assistants primarily working in hospitals in middle or high income countries. The majority of studies reported barriers to healthy eating related to adverse work schedules, individual barriers, aspects of the physical workplace environment and social eating practices at work. Few facilitators were reported. Overall, studies found the workplace exerts a considerable negative influence on nurses’ dietary intake. Conclusion: Reorientation of the workplace to promote healthy eating among nurses is required

    Introduction to Categories and Categorical Logic

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    The aim of these notes is to provide a succinct, accessible introduction to some of the basic ideas of category theory and categorical logic. The notes are based on a lecture course given at Oxford over the past few years. They contain numerous exercises, and hopefully will prove useful for self-study by those seeking a first introduction to the subject, with fairly minimal prerequisites. The coverage is by no means comprehensive, but should provide a good basis for further study; a guide to further reading is included. The main prerequisite is a basic familiarity with the elements of discrete mathematics: sets, relations and functions. An Appendix contains a summary of what we will need, and it may be useful to review this first. In addition, some prior exposure to abstract algebra - vector spaces and linear maps, or groups and group homomorphisms - would be helpful.Comment: 96 page

    Multi-transmission-line-beam interactive system

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    We construct here a Lagrangian field formulation for a system consisting of an electron beam interacting with a slow-wave structure modeled by a possibly non-uniform multiple transmission line (MTL). In the case of a single line we recover the linear model of a traveling wave tube (TWT) due to J.R. Pierce. Since a properly chosen MTL can approximate a real waveguide structure with any desired accuracy, the proposed model can be used in particular for design optimization. Furthermore, the Lagrangian formulation provides for: (i) a clear identification of the mathematical source of amplification, (ii) exact expressions for the conserved energy and its flux distributions obtained from the Noether theorem. In the case of uniform MTLs we carry out an exhaustive analysis of eigenmodes and find sharp conditions on the parameters of the system to provide for amplifying regimes

    Probing Minimal Supergravity at the CERN LHC for Large tanβ\tan\beta

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    For large values of the minimal supergravity model parameter tanβ\tan\beta, the tau lepton and the bottom quark Yukawa couplings become large, leading to reduced masses of τ\tau-sleptons and bb-squarks relative to their first and second generation counterparts, and to enhanced decays of charginos and neutralinos to τ\tau-leptons and bb-quarks. We evaluate the reach of the CERN LHC pppp collider for supersymmetry in the mSUGRA model parameter space. We find that values of mtg15002000m_{\tg}\sim 1500-2000 GeV can be probed with just 10 fb1^{-1} of integrated luminosity for tanβ\tan\beta values as high as 45, so that mSUGRA cannot escape the scrutiny of LHC experiments by virtue of having a large value of tanβ\tan\beta. We also perform a case study of an mSUGRA model at tanβ=45\tan\beta =45 where \tz_2\to \tau\ttau_1 and \tw_1\to \ttau_1\nu_\tau with 100\sim 100% branching fraction. In this case, at least within our simplistic study, we show that a di-tau mass edge, which determines the value of m_{\tz_2}-m_{\tz_1}, can still be reconstructed. This information can be used as a starting point for reconstructing SUSY cascade decays on an event-by-event basis, and can provide a strong constraint in determining the underlying model parameters. Finally, we show that for large tanβ\tan\beta there can be an observable excess of τ\tau leptons, and argue that τ\tau signals might serve to provide new information about the underlying model framework.Comment: 22 page REVTEX file including 8 figure

    Radiative corrections to the Higgs boson decay rate Γ(HZZ)\Gamma(H\rightarrow ZZ) in the minimal supersymmetric model

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    We consider radiative corrections to the decay rate Γ(HZZ)\Gamma(H\rightarrow ZZ) of the heavy {\it CP}-even Higgs boson of the minimal supersymmetric model to two ZZ bosons. We perform a one loop Feynman diagram calculation in the on-mass-shell renormalization scheme, and include the third generation of quarks and squarks. The tree level rate is suppressed by a mixing angle factor and decreases as 1/MH1/M_H for large MHM_H. The corrected rate overcomes this suppression and increases with MHM_H for MH>500M_H > 500~GeV. The corrections can be very large and depend in detail on the top squark masses and AA-term, as well as the supersymmetric Higgs mass parameter μ\mu.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures available from authors, UCB-PTH-92/23 and LBL-3249
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