72,424 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of (2+1)-flavor QCD
We report on the status of our QCD thermodynamics project. It is performed on
the QCDOC machine at Brookhaven National Laboratory and the APEnext machine at
Bielefeld University. Using a 2+1 flavor formulation of QCD at almost realistic
quark masses we calculated several thermodynamical quantities. In this
proceeding we show the susceptibilites of the chiral condensate and the
Polyakov loop, the static quark potential and the spatial string tension.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of International Conference on Strong
and Electroweak Matter (SEWM 2006), Upton, New York, 10-13 May 200
Inflatable stretcher to transport patients
Inflatable plastic bag inside strong, inflexible outer bag facilitates emergency transport of seriously burned or disabled patients. When the bag is inflated the patient is completely immobilized and cushioned from external shock. Air for breathing, temperature controls and communications may be provided by appropriate plug-in connections
Personality traits in resident and migratory warbler species.
Animals are often confronted with environmental challenges and the way in which they cope with these challenges can have important fitness consequences. There is increasing evidence that individuals differ consistently in their reaction to the environment (personality traits). However, little is known about whether different life-styles (e.g., resident or migratory) influence personality traits and if so, in what manner. We compared neophobic and exploratory behaviours, both of which play an important role in personality traits, between two closely related species, the resident Sardinian warblers and the migratory garden warblers, at two different times during the year. Neophobia was tested by placing a novel object, a mop, beside the feeding dish and measuring the latency to feed (neophobia score). Exploration was tested by offering another novel object, a tube, attached to a perch at a neutral location and measuring latency to approach and investigate the tube (exploration score). Both tests were carried out at the end of the breeding season and repeated ten months later in spring. The Sardinian warblers showed consistent behavioural reactions over time. Furthermore, neophobia and exploration scores were negatively related. The garden warblers neither behaved consistently over time nor was there a correlation between neophobia and exploration. Overall, Sardinian warblers were less neophobic and more explorative than garden warblers. The different reactivity may be due to a different frequency distribution of the individuals of the two species along a reactivity axis. It can be concluded that the Sardinian warblers have personality traits. The situation is less clear in the garden warblers. Possibly, different life-styles require different organisation of behaviours
Voltage-Controlled Spin Selection in a Magnetic Resonant Tunnelling Diode
We have fabricated all II-VI semiconductor resonant tunneling diodes based on
the (Zn,Mn,Be)Se material system, containing dilute magnetic material in the
quantum well, and studied their current-voltage characteristics. When subjected
to an external magnetic field the resulting spin splitting of the levels in the
quantum well leads to a splitting of the transmission resonance into two
separate peaks. This is interpreted as evidence of tunneling transport through
spin polarized levels, and could be the first step towards a voltage controlled
spin filter.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Precision Photometry for Q0957+561 Images A and B
Since the persuasive determination of the time-delay in Q0957+561, much
interest has centered around shifting and subtracting the A and B light-curves
to look for residuals due to microlensing. Solar mass objects in the lens
galaxy produce variations on timescales of decades, with amplitudes of a few
tenths of a magnitude, but MACHO's (with masses of order to
) produce variations at only the 5% level. To detect such small
variations, highly precise photometry is required.
To that end, we have used 200 observations over three nights to examine the
effects of seeing on the light-curves. We have determined that seeing itself
can be responsible for correlated 5% variations in the light-curves of A and B.
We have found, however, that these effects can be accurately removed, by
subtracting the light from the lens galaxy, and by correcting for cross
contamination of light between the closely juxtaposed A and B images. We find
that these corrections improve the variations due to seeing from 5% to a level
only marginally detectable over photon shot noise (0.5%).Comment: 21 Pages with 9 PostScript figures, AASTeX 4 (preprint style
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