15,752 research outputs found
College Students\u27 Attitudes on Neighborhood Integration: From the Classroom to the Community and Back Again
I grew up in an all white suburb, well, almost all white. There were two black families that literally lived on the wrong side of the tracks. Two large run-down old houses sat within five feet of the rumbling trains. Sometimes my family drove past those houses in our old station wagon. On days that our drive was interrupted by a crossing train, I would watch the barefoot black children playing by the street. I never thought of our suburb as being segregated, at least not until I was in high school
Faint star counts in the near-infrared
We discuss near-infrared star counts at the Galactic pole with a view to
guiding the NGST and ground-based NIR cameras. Star counts from deep K-band
images from the CFHT are presented, and compared with results from the 2MASS
survey and some Galaxy models. With appropriate corrections for detector
artifacts and galaxies, the data agree with the models down to K~18, but
indicate a larger population of fainter red stars. There is also a significant
population of compact galaxies that extend to the observational faint limit of
K=20.5. Recent Galaxy models agree well down to K19, but diverge at
fainter magnitudes.Comment: 14 pages and 4 diagrams; to appear in PAS
Chaining of welding and finish turning simulations for austenitic stainless steel components
The chaining of manufacturing processes is a major issue for industrials who want to understand and control the quality of their products in order to ensure their in-service integrity (surface integrity, residual stresses, microstructure, metallurgical changes, distortions,…). Historically, welding and machining are among the most studied processes and dedicated approaches of simulation have been developed to provide reliable and relevant results in an industrial context with safety requirements. As the simulation of these two processes seems to be at an operationnal level, the virtual chaining of both must now be applied with a lifetime prediction prospect. This paper will first present a robust method to simulate multipass welding processes that has been validated through an international round robin. Then the dedicated “hybrid method”, specifically set up to simulate finish turning, will be subsequently applied to the welding simulation so as to reproduce the final state of the pipe manufacturing and its interaction with previous operations. Final residual stress fields will be presented and compared to intermediary results obtained after welding. The influence of each step on the final results will be highlighted regarding surface integrity and finally ongoing validation works and numerical modeling enhancements will be discussed
Projection operator approach to spin diffusion in the anisotropic Heisenberg chain at high temperatures
We investigate spin transport in the anisotropic Heisenberg chain in the
limit of high temperatures ({\beta} \to 0). We particularly focus on diffusion
and the quantitative evaluation of diffusion constants from current
autocorrelations as a function of the anisotropy parameter {\Delta} and the
spin quantum number s. Our approach is essentially based on an application of
the time-convolutionless (TCL) projection operator technique. Within this
perturbative approach the projection onto the current yields the decay of
autocorrelations to lowest order of {\Delta}. The resulting diffusion constants
scale as 1/{\Delta}^2 in the Markovian regime {\Delta}<<1 (s=1/2) and as
1/{\Delta} in the highly non-Markovian regime above {\Delta} \sim 1 (arbitrary
s). In the latter regime the dependence on s appears approximately as an
overall scaling factor \sqrt{s(s+1)} only. These results are in remarkably good
agreement with diffusion constants for {\Delta}>1 which are obtained directly
from the exact diagonalization of autocorrelations or have been obtained from
non-equilibrium bath scenarios.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
First-passage dynamics of obstructed tracer particle diffusion in one-dimensional systems
The standard setup for single-file diffusion is diffusing particles in one
dimension which cannot overtake each other, where the dynamics of a tracer
(tagged) particle is of main interest. In this article we generalise this
system and investigate first-passage properties of a tracer particle when
flanked by crowder particles which may, besides diffuse, unbind (rebind) from
(to) the one-dimensional lattice with rates (). The
tracer particle is restricted to diffuse with rate on the lattice. Such a
model is relevant for the understanding of gene regulation where regulatory
proteins are searching for specific binding sites ona crowded DNA. We quantify
the first-passage time distribution, ( is time), numerically using
the Gillespie algorithm, and estimate it analytically. In terms of our key
parameter, the unbinding rate , we study the bridging of two known
regimes: (i) when unbinding is frequent the particles may effectively pass each
other and we recover the standard single particle result
with a renormalized diffusion constant, (ii) when unbinding is rare we recover
well-known single-file diffusion result . The intermediate
cases display rich dynamics, with the characteristic -peak and the
long-time power-law slope both being sensitive to
Regular Expression Matching and Operational Semantics
Many programming languages and tools, ranging from grep to the Java String
library, contain regular expression matchers. Rather than first translating a
regular expression into a deterministic finite automaton, such implementations
typically match the regular expression on the fly. Thus they can be seen as
virtual machines interpreting the regular expression much as if it were a
program with some non-deterministic constructs such as the Kleene star. We
formalize this implementation technique for regular expression matching using
operational semantics. Specifically, we derive a series of abstract machines,
moving from the abstract definition of matching to increasingly realistic
machines. First a continuation is added to the operational semantics to
describe what remains to be matched after the current expression. Next, we
represent the expression as a data structure using pointers, which enables
redundant searches to be eliminated via testing for pointer equality. From
there, we arrive both at Thompson's lockstep construction and a machine that
performs some operations in parallel, suitable for implementation on a large
number of cores, such as a GPU. We formalize the parallel machine using process
algebra and report some preliminary experiments with an implementation on a
graphics processor using CUDA.Comment: In Proceedings SOS 2011, arXiv:1108.279
Squid stock fluctuations and water temperature: temporal analysis of English Channel Loliginidae
1. Monthly series of abundance indexes for the English Channel squid stock, based on fishery statistics of the United Kingdom (1980–93) and France (1986–96), were compared with water temperature data. The two objectives of the study were to test empirical predictive models and to analyse the stock–environment relationship at various time scales; both correlation and time-series statistical techniques were applied. Sea surface temperature (SST) showed inter-annual fluctuations and month-to-month auto-correlation in addition to the annual cycle.
2. Trends in squid landings and temperature at the annual scale were found to be related, whatever the statistical method used (moving averages, cumulative functions or regression using averaged data).
3. Variable selection applied in a ‘multi-month’ model suggested that fishing season indexes could be predicted from temperatures observed in the previous winter. The link between mild winter conditions and cohort success in winter/spring spawning species suggested that early life survival (and/or growth) was involved. This empirical model is a first step in the development of environment-predicted recruitment indexes useful for management advice.
4. Seasonal decomposition was performed on both the squid resource data and SST data in search of short-term relationships. In spite of the flexibility of the loliginid life-cycle, no significant relationship was found between squid seasonally adjusted indexes and temperature anomalies in the previous months. This underlined the conclusion that temperature effect on cohort success was not constant throughout the year
Excitation Spectrum of the Holstein Model
In this paper the polaron problem for the Holstein model is studied in the
weak coupling limit. We use second order perturbation theory to construct
renormalized electron and phonons. Eigenstates of the Hamiltonian are labelled
and the excitation spectrum is constructed.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 1 figures, more stuff at
http://www.mpipks-dresden.mpg.de/~robin/robin.htm
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