8,116 research outputs found
Measurement of dimensional stability
A technique was developed for measuring, with a precision of one part 10 to the 9th power, changes in physical dimensions delta L/L. Measurements have commenced on five materials: Heraeus-Schott Homosil (vitreous silica), Corning 7940 (vitreous silica), Corning ULE 7971 (titanium silicate), Schott Zero-Dur, and Owens-Illinois Cer-Vit C-101. The study was extended to include Universal Cyclops Invar LR-35 and Simonds-Saw Superinvar
Controllable optical phase shift over one radian from a single isolated atom
Fundamental optics such as lenses and prisms work by applying phase shifts to
incoming light via the refractive index. In these macroscopic devices, many
particles each contribute a miniscule phase shift, working together to impose a
total phase shift of many radians. In principle, even a single isolated
particle can apply a radian-level phase shift, but observing this phenomenon
has proven challenging. We have used a single trapped atomic ion to induce and
measure a large optical phase shift of radians in light scattered
by the atom. Spatial interferometry between the scattered light and unscattered
illumination light enables us to isolate the phase shift in the scattered
component. The phase shift achieves the maximum value allowed by atomic theory
over the accessible range of laser frequencies, validating the microscopic
model that underpins the macroscopic phenomenon of the refractive index.
Single-atom phase shifts of this magnitude open up new quantum information
protocols, including long-range quantum phase-shift-keying cryptography [1,2]
and quantum nondemolition measurement [3,4].Comment: submitte
Theme Schools: From Manifesto to Paradigm for Undergraduate Students
In sciences, when anomalies or discrepant observations generate a crisis, so that the old way of looking at things no longer suffices to explain or predict observable events, scientists construct a new paradigm (Kuhn, 1996). Despite vast differences in our backgrounds and in the attributes of our widely separated home institutions, we have arrived at strikingly similar perceptions of the need to fashion a new paradigm within undergraduate education. By aligning the anomalies and assembling experiences from several correlative efforts within the old paradigm, we have begun to distill some tenets of a coherent rationale for student-centred learning, built around the concepts inherent in a "theme school." These tenets are especially relevant to small, widely dispersed northern communities. Much of the following discussion originates in our shared disappointments with the effectiveness of education by the traditional Euro-American undergraduate paradigm when applied to northern environments and rural communities. Nevertheless, we are not institution-bashing: we owe much, after all, to the institutions that provided us with a point of departure for exploring alternatives and supplements
Fly-by-light flight control system technology development plan
The results of a four-month, phased effort to develop a Fly-by-Light Technology Development Plan are documented. The technical shortfalls for each phase were identified and a development plan to bridge the technical gap was developed. The production configuration was defined for a 757-type airplane, but it is suggested that the demonstration flight be conducted on the NASA Transport Systems Research Vehicle. The modifications required and verification and validation issues are delineated in this report. A detailed schedule for the phased introduction of fly-by-light system components has been generated. It is concluded that a fiber-optics program would contribute significantly toward developing the required state of readiness that will make a fly-by-light control system not only cost effective but reliable without mitigating the weight and high-energy radio frequency related benefits
Contributions to the Science of Environmental Impact Assessment: Three Papers on the Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) of Northern Alaska
Editor's Introduction -- D. W. Norton; An Assessment of the Colville River Delta Stock of Arctic Cisco--Migrants from Canada? -- B. J. Gallaway, W. B. Griffiths, P. C. Craig, W. J. Gazey, and J. W. Helmericks; Temperature Preference of Juvenile Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) From the Alaskan Beaufort Sea -- R. G. Fechhelm, W. H. Neill, and B. J. Gallaway; Modeling Movements and Distribution of Arctic Cisco (Coregonus autumnalis) Relative to Temperature-Salinity Regimes of the Beaufort Sea Near the Waterflood Causeway, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. -- W. H. Neill, R. G. Fechhelm, B. J. Gallaway, J. D. Bryan, and S. W. Anderson; Notice to Author
'These Discussions Aren't Happening': Experiences of People Living with Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Talking About Sexual Well-being with Health Care Professionals.
Background
Inflammatory bowel disease [IBD] affects all aspects of life, yet little is known about the impact of the condition on intimacy and sexuality and if such concerns should be discussed with health care professionals. This hermeneutical phenomenological study aimed to explore the experiences of people living with inflammatory bowel disease and discussing their sexuality concerns with health care professionals.
Methods
Participants [n = 43] aged 17–64 years were recruited. Data were collected via in depth interviews and anonymous narrative accounts [Google Forms]. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.
Results
An overarching theme ‘These discussions aren’t happening’ with four main themes were generated. The main themes were: ‘I can’t image talking about sex’; ‘I am a person, not my IBD’; ‘We need to talk about sex’; and ‘Those who talked about sex, talked badly’. Participants described the lack of conversations with their health care professionals on sexual well-being issues, in spite of the importance they gave to the topic, and identified barriers to having such conversations. They made suggestions for future clinical practice that would better meet their needs. The few who had discussed sexual well-being issues with health care professionals reported negative experiences.
Conclusions
Patients’ needs and preferences, about addressing during clinical appointments concerns related to their sexual well-being, should be addressed routinely and competently by health care professionals. Understanding the implications of inflammatory bowel disease for intimate aspects of the lives of those living with the condition could improve the quality of the care provided
Short-Distance Structure of Nuclei
One of Jefferson Lab's original missions was to further our understanding of
the short-distance structure of nuclei. In particular, to understand what
happens when two or more nucleons within a nucleus have strongly overlapping
wave-functions; a phenomena commonly referred to as short-range correlations.
Herein, we review the results of the (e,e'), (e,e'p) and (e,e'pN) reactions
that have been used at Jefferson Lab to probe this short-distance structure as
well as provide an outlook for future experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, for publication in Journal of Physics
Magnetic interactions in transition metal doped ZnO : An abinitio study
We calculate the nature of magnetic interactions in transition-metal doped
ZnO using the local spin density approximation and LSDA+\textit{U} method of
density functional theory. We investigate the following four cases: (i) single
transition metal ion types (Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni and Cu) substituted at Zn sites,
(ii) substitutional magnetic transition metal ions combined with additional Cu
and Li dopants, (iii) substitutional magnetic transition metal ions combined
with oxygen vacancies and (iv) pairs of magnetic ion types (Co and Fe, Co and
Mn, etc.). Extensive convergence tests indicate that the calculated magnetic
ground state is unusually sensitive to the k-point mesh and energy cut-off, the
details of the geometry optimizations and the choice of the
exchange-correlation functional. We find that ferromagnetic coupling is
sometimes favorable for single type substitutional transition metal ions within
the local spin density approximation. However, the nature of magnetic
interactions changes when correlations on the transition-metal ion are treated
within the more realistic LSDA + \textit{U} method, often disfavoring the
ferromagnetic state. The magnetic configuration is sensitive to the detailed
arrangement of the ions and the amount of lattice relaxation, except in the
case of oxygen vacancies when an antiferromagnetic state is always favored.Comment: 11 pages, 17 figure
Heat Transfer Operators Associated with Quantum Operations
Any quantum operation applied on a physical system is performed as a unitary
transformation on a larger extended system. If the extension used is a heat
bath in thermal equilibrium, the concomitant change in the state of the bath
necessarily implies a heat exchange with it. The dependence of the average heat
transferred to the bath on the initial state of the system can then be found
from the expectation value of a hermitian operator, which is named as the heat
transfer operator (HTO). The purpose of this article is the investigation of
the relation between the HTOs and the associated quantum operations. Since, any
given quantum operation on a system can be realized by different baths and
unitaries, many different HTOs are possible for each quantum operation. On the
other hand, there are also strong restrictions on the HTOs which arise from the
unitarity of the transformations. The most important of these is the Landauer
erasure principle. This article is concerned with the question of finding a
complete set of restrictions on the HTOs that are associated with a given
quantum operation. An answer to this question has been found only for a subset
of quantum operations. For erasure operations, these characterizations are
equivalent to the generalized Landauer erasure principle. For the case of
generic quantum operations however, it appears that the HTOs obey further
restrictions which cannot be obtained from the entropic restrictions of the
generalized Landauer erasure principle.Comment: A significant revision is made; 33 pages with 2 figure
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