23,998 research outputs found
Dietary factors affecting exogenous and endogenous sources of fat and carbohydrate for energy production and synthesis Annual progress report, 1 Oct. 1967 - 30 Jun. 1968
Dietary effects on total fatty acid content in rats, and changes in liver, adipose tissue, and carbohydrate metabolis
The Pierre Auger Observatory: Results on Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays
The focus of this article is on recent results on ultra-high energy cosmic
rays obtained with the Pierre Auger Observatory. The world's largest instrument
of this type and its performance are described. The observations presented here
include the energy spectrum, the primary particle composition, limits on the
fluxes of photons and neutrinos and a discussion of the anisotropic
distribution of the arrival directions of the most energetic particles.
Finally, plans for the construction of a Northern Auger Observatory in
Colorado, USA, are discussed.Comment: Proceedings of the International Workshop on Advances in Cosmic Ray
Science, Waseda University, Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan, March 2008; to be
published in the Journal of the Physical Society of Japan (JPSJ) supplemen
Janis-Newman-Winicour and Wyman solutions are the same
We show that the well-known most general static and spherically symmetric
exact solution to the Einstein-massless scalar equations given by Wyman is the
same as one found by Janis, Newman and Winicour several years ago. We obtain
the energy associated with this spacetime and find that the total energy for
the case of the purely scalar field is zero.Comment: 9 pages, LaTex, no figures, misprints corrected, to appear in Int. J.
Mod. Phys.
Feasibility study for a secondary Na/S battery
The feasibility of a moderate temperature Na battery was studied. This battery is to operate at a temperature in the range of 100-150 C. Two kinds of cathode were investigated: (1) a soluble S cathode consisting of a solution of Na2Sn in an organic solvent and (2) an insoluble S cathode consisting of a transition metal dichalcogenide in contact with a Na(+)ion conducting electrolyte. Four amide solvents, dimethyl acetamide, diethyl acetamide, N-methyl acetamide and acetamide, were investigated as possible solvents for the soluble S cathode. Results of stability and electrochemical studies using these solvents are presented. The dialkyl substituted amides were found to be superior. Although the alcohol 1,3-cyclohexanediol was found to be stable in the presence of Na2Sn at 130 C, its Na2Sn solutions did not appear to have suitable electrochemical properties
Entry and Competition in Local Hospital Markets
There has been considerable consolidation in the hospital industry in recent years. Over 900 deals occurred from 1994-2000, and many local markets, even in large urban areas, have been reduced to monopolies, duopolies, or triopolies. This surge in consolidation has led to concern about competition in local markets for hospital services. We examine the effect of market structure on competition in local hospital markets -- specifically, does the hardness of competition increase with the number of firms? We extend the entry model developed by Bresnahan and Reiss to make use of quantity information, and apply it to data on the U.S. hospital industry. In the hospital markets we examine, entry leads to a quick convergence to competitive conduct. Entry reduces variable profits and increases quantity. Most of the effects of entry come from having a second and a third firm enter the market. The fourth entrant has little estimated effect. The use of quantity information allows us to infer that entry is consumer-surplus-increasing.
The ultrafilter number for singular cardinals
We prove the consistency of a singular cardinal with small value of
the ultrafilter number , and arbitrarily large value of .Comment: 8 page
Cosmic Variance In the Transparency of the Intergalactic Medium After Reionization
Following the completion of cosmic reionization, the mean-free-path of
ionizing photons was set by a population of Ly-limit absorbers. As the
mean-free-path steadily grew, the intensity of the ionizing background also
grew, thus lowering the residual neutral fraction of hydrogen in ionization
equilibrium throughout the diffuse intergalactic medium (IGM). Ly-alpha photons
provide a sensitive probe for tracing the distribution of this residual
hydrogen at the end of reionization. Here we calculate the cosmic variance
among different lines-of-sight in the distribution of the mean Ly-alpha optical
depths. We find fractional variations in the effective post-reionization
optical depth that are of order unity on a scale of ~100 co-moving Mpc, in
agreement with observations towards high-redshift quasars. Significant
contributions to these variations are provided by the cosmic variance in the
density contrast on the scale of the mean-free-path for ionizing photons, and
by fluctuations in the ionizing background induced by delayed or enhanced
structure formation. Cosmic variance results in a highly asymmetric
distribution of transmission through the IGM, with fractional fluctuations in
Ly-alpha transmission that ar larger than in Ly-beta transmission.Comment: 7 pages 3 figures. Replaced with version accepted for publication in
Ap
Generic local distinguishability and completely entangled subspaces
A subspace of a multipartite Hilbert space is completely entangled if it
contains no product states. Such subspaces can be large with a known maximum
size, S, approaching the full dimension of the system, D. We show that almost
all subspaces with dimension less than or equal to S are completely entangled,
and then use this fact to prove that n random pure quantum states are
unambiguously locally distinguishable if and only if n does not exceed D-S.
This condition holds for almost all sets of states of all multipartite systems,
and reveals something surprising. The criterion is identical for separable and
for nonseparable states: entanglement makes no difference.Comment: 12 page
Determination of the phase of an electromagnetic field via incoherent detection of fluorescence
We show that the phase of a field can be determined by incoherent detection
of the population of one state of a two-level system if the Rabi frequency is
comparable to the Bohr frequency so that the rotating wave approximation is
inappropriate. This implies that a process employing the measurement of
population is not a square-law detector in this limit. We discuss how the
sensitivity of the degree of excitation to the phase of the field may pose
severe constraints on precise rotations of quantum bits involving low-frequency
transitions. We present a scheme for observing this effect in an atomic beam,
despite the spread in the interaction time.Comment: 4 pages, 2 fig
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