29,763 research outputs found
Condensation of Cytidylic Acid in the Presence of Polyphosphoric Acid
Condensation of cytidylic acid in presence of polyphosphoric aci
Gamma-ray burst variability above 4 MeV
The relationship between the hard X-ray and gamma ray emissions during four bursts using the anti-coincidence shields of the High Energy Astronomy Observatory 3 (HEAO 3) Gamma Ray Spectrometer is explored. Recent observations of gamma ray bursts by the Solar Maximum Mission Gamma Ray Spectrometer (GRS) have shown that high energy emission above 1 MeV is a common and energetically important feature (Matz et al. 1985). Time histories of four gamma ray bursts in 3 energy bands ( keV, around 511 keV, and 4 MeV) with 10.24 a resolution show that the 4 MeV flux is only weakly coupled to the spectrum below approximately 600 keV
School reform, school size, and student achievement
An estimation of the effect of school size on student achievement, with the results suggesting that market-based school reform could enhance student performance if the reform reduced school size.Education
Simultaneous Arithmetic Progressions on Algebraic Curves
A simultaneous arithmetic progression (s.a.p.) of length k consists of k
points (x_i, y_\sigma(i)), where x_i and y_i are arithmetic progressions and
\sigma is a permutation. Garcia-Selfa and Tornero asked whether there is a
bound on the length of an s.a.p. on an elliptic curve in Weierstrass form over
Q. We show that 4319 is such a bound for curves over R. This is done by
considering translates of the curve in a grid as a graph. A simple upper bound
is found for the number of crossings and the 'crossing inequality' gives a
lower bound. Together these bound the length of an s.a.p. on the curve. We then
use a similar method to extend the result to arbitrary real algebraic curves.
Instead of considering s.a.p.'s we consider k^2/3 points in a grid. The number
of crossings is bounded by Bezout's Theorem. We then give another proof using a
result of Jarnik bounding the number of grid points on a convex curve. This
result applies as any real algebraic curve can be broken up into convex and
concave parts, the number of which depend on the degree. Lastly, these results
are extended to complex algebraic curves.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, order of email addresses corrected 12 pages,
closing remarks, a reference and an acknowledgment adde
The effects of alcohol on driver performance in a decision making situation
The results are reviewed of driving simulator and in-vehicle field test experiments of alcohol effects on driver risk taking. The objective was to investigate changes in risk taking under alcoholic intoxication and relate these changes to effects on traffic safety. The experiments involved complex 15 minute driving scenarios requiring decision making and steering and speed control throughout a series of typical driving situations. Monetary rewards and penalties were employed to simulate the real-world motivations inherent in driving. A full placebo experimental design was employed, and measures related to traffic safety, driver/vehicle performance and driver behavior were obtained. Alcohol impairment was found to increase the rate of accidents and speeding tickets. Behavioral measures showed these traffic safety effects to be due to impaired psychomotor performance and perceptual distortions. Subjective estimates of risk failed to show any change in the driver's willingness to take risks when intoxicated
Novel applications of the NASA/GSFC Viterbi decoder hardware simulator
The NASA/GSFC developed an all digital, real time, programmable Viterbi decoder simulator operating at rates up to 6 Msps. With this simulator, the bit error rate (BER) performance of convolutionally encoded/Viterbi decoded Shuttle-TDRSS return link channels under pulsed radio frequency interference (RFI) conditions has been predicted. The principles of the simulator are described with special emphasis on the channel simulator and the essential interaction between CLASS software and the simulator. The sensitivity of coded BER as function of several illustrative RFI parameters is discussed for two typical Shuttle-TDRSS return link configurations
Space program: Space debris a potential threat to Space Station and shuttle
Experts estimate that more than 3.5 million man-made objects are orbiting the earth. These objects - space debris - include whole and fragmentary parts of rocket bodies and other discarded equipment from space missions. About 24,500 of these objects are 1 centimeter across or larger. A 1-centimeter man-made object travels in orbit at roughly 22,000 miles per hour. If it hit a spacecraft, it would do about the same damage as would a 400-pound safe traveling at 60 miles per hour. The Government Accounting Office (GAO) reviews NASA's plans for protecting the space station from debris, the extent and precision of current NASA and Defense Department (DOD) debris-tracking capabilities, and the extent to which debris has already affected shuttle operations. GAO recommends that the space debris model be updated, and that the findings be incorporated into the plans for protecting the space station from such debris. GAO further recommends that the increased risk from debris to the space shuttle operations be analyzed
Effects of low energy electron irradiation on formation of nitrogen-vacancy centers in single-crystal diamond
Exposure to beams of low energy electrons (2 to 30 keV) in a scanning
electron microscope locally induces formation of NV-centers without thermal
annealing in diamonds that have been implanted with nitrogen ions. We find that
non-thermal, electron beam induced NV-formation is about four times less
efficient than thermal annealing. But NV-center formation in a consecutive
thermal annealing step (800C) following exposure to low energy electrons
increases by a factor of up to 1.8 compared to thermal annealing alone. These
observations point to reconstruction of nitrogen-vacancy complexes induced by
electronic excitations from low energy electrons as an NV-center formation
mechanism and identify local electronic excitations as a means for spatially
controlled room-temperature NV-center formation
Combining Quote-Driven and Order-Driven Trading Systems in Next-Generation Stock Markets: An Experimental Investigation
We use computer-based simulations of a stock market as a background environment
for experimental tests of the integration of an order-driven trading system
into a dealer/quote-driven market. Experimental subjects traded using a traditional
dealer quote screen (such as Nasdaq in the U.S. or the London Stock
Exchange's SEAQ), to which was added a public limit order facility. Data
captured on subjects' trading decisions under different market structures revealed
that: (1) When available, the limit order facility was used by the subjects,
attracting some orders that would have otherwise gone to dealers, and reducing
investor trading costs. (2) The relative use of market orders and limit orders was
related to the bid-ask spread; wider spreads (higher cost of immediate trading) led
subjects to enter fewer market orders. (3) Limit order use was reduced when the
dealers were provided with an "informational advantage. " (4) While the introduction
of a limit order facility did not have a substantial effect on dealer profit
margins, dealers' activities as a percentage of total market volume declined.
Overall, we find the simulation environment is a workable device for analyzing
the effect of market design changes on trader behavior and market quality. It can
provide solid guidance on market structure issues, such as how best to incorporate
a limit order facility in a competing dealer market.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
The nature of AFGL 2591 and its associated molecular outflow: Infrared and millimeter-wave observations
The results of infrared photometry from 2 to 160 microns of AFGL and CO(12) observations of its associated molecular cloud and high velocity molecular outflow are presented and discussed. The observed solar luminosity is 6.7 x 10(4) at a distance of 2 kpc. The spectrum of AFGL 2591 is interpreted in the context of a model in which a single embedded object is the dominant source of the infrared luminosity. This object is determined to be surrounded by a compact, optically thick dust shell with a temperature in excess of several hundred degrees kelvin. The extinction to this source is estimated to be between 26 and 50 visual magnitudes. The absolute position of the infrared sources at 10 microns was determined to an accuracy of + or in. This indicates for the first time that the IR source and H2O source are not coincident. The CO(12) observations show the high-velocity molecular flow near AFGL 2591 to be extended, bipolar and roughly centered on the infrared emission. The observations suggest that the red-shifted flow component extends beyond the boundary of the ambient cloud within which AFGL 2591 is embedded. The CO(12) observations also show that AFGL 2591 is embedded in a molecular cloud with an LSR velocity of -5 km/s
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