7,522 research outputs found

    A photon phreak digs the LDEF happening

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    A year ago at the First Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) Post-Retrieval Symposium, detailed measurements on trunnion sections, as well as results from 'intentional' samples (Co, Ni, In, Ta, and V) and spacecraft parts were reported. For this year's Symposium, some of these findings are re-evaluated in combination with more recent results, to cast a longer perspective on the LDEF experience, and to sketch some promising avenues toward more effective participation in future missions. The LDEF analysis effort has been a superb training exercise, from which lessons learned need to be applied to future missions - right back to the early phases of mission planning

    Calculation of Neutron Flux and Neutron Radiation Dose in a Human Phantom

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    At present, the neutron dose received by personnel working in nuclear installations is recorded by body surface dosimeters worn by workers. To estimate the true neutron dose to internal organs, this ’surface dose” is multiplied by empirical factors to account for the attenuation of the body itself. The objective of this work was to obtain better estimates of the internal dose by calculating the attenuation of the neutron flux provided by the body. Using DOT, a 2-D radiation transport code, the neutron flux as a function of energy was calculated at several points in a 2-D model of the human body. These flux values were used to calculate the neutron dose at all points in the human phantom. These neutron doses were then compared to the ’surface dose.” The ratios thus obtained could be used by practicing health physicists to evaluate internal doses

    The Contribution of the Minimum Wage to U.S. Wage Inequality over Three Decades: A Reassessment

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    We reassess the effect of state and federal minimum wages on U.S. earnings inequality, attending to two issues that appear to bias earlier work: violation of the assumed independence of state wage levels and state wage dispersion, and errors-in-variables that inflate impact estimates via an analogue of the well known division bias problem. We find that the minimum wage reduces inequality in the lower tail of the wage distribution (the 50/10 wage ratio), but the impacts are typically less than half as large as those reported in the literature and are almost negligible for males. Nevertheless, the estimated effects extend to wage percentiles where the minimum is nominally non-binding, implying spillovers. We structurally estimate these spillovers and show that their relative importance grows as the nominal minimum wage becomes less binding. Subsequent analysis underscores, however, that spillovers and measurement error (absent spillovers) have similar implications for the effect of the minimum on the shape of the lower tail of the measured wage distribution. With available precision, we cannot reject the hypothesis that estimated spillovers to non-binding percentiles are due to reporting artifacts. Accepting this null, the implied effect of the minimum wage on the actual wage distribution is smaller than the effect of the minimum wage on the measured wage distribution.Wage structure, inequality, minimum wage

    Oscillator strengths and line widths of dipole-allowed transitions in Âč⁎N₂ between 89.7 and 93.5 nm

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    Line oscillator strengths in the 20 electric dipole-allowed bands of Âč⁎N₂ in the 89.7–93.5nm (111480–106950cm⁻Âč) region are reported from photoabsorptionmeasurements at an instrumental resolution of ∌6mÅ (0.7cm⁻Âč) full width at half maximum. The absorptionspectrum comprises transitions to vibrational levels of the 3pσᔀcâ€Č₄ÂčΣᔀâș, 3pπᔀc³Πᔀ, and 3sσgo₃ÂčΠᔀRydberg states and of the bâ€ČÂčΣᔀâș and bÂčΠᔀ valence states. The J dependences of band f values derived from the experimental line f values are reported as polynomials in Jâ€Č(Jâ€Č+1) and are extrapolated to Jâ€Č=0 in order to facilitate comparisons with results of coupled Schrödinger-equation calculations. Most bands in this study are characterized by a strong J dependence of the band f values and display anomalous P-, Q-, and R-branch intensity patterns. Predissociation line widths, which are reported for 11 bands, also exhibit strong J dependences. The f value and line width patterns can inform current efforts to develop comprehensive spectroscopic models that incorporate rotational effects and predissociation mechanisms, and they are critical for the construction of realistic atmospheric radiative-transfer models.This work was supported in part by NASA Grant No. NNG05GA03G to Wellesley College and Australian Research Council Discovery Program Grant No. DP0558962

    In Vitro Whole Genome DNA Binding Analysis of the Bacterial Replication Initiator and Transcription Factor DnaA

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    DnaA, the replication initiation protein in bacteria, is an AAA+ ATPase that binds and hydrolyzes ATP and exists in a heterogeneous population of ATP-DnaA and ADP-DnaA. DnaA binds cooperatively to the origin of replication and several other chromosomal regions, and functions as a transcription factor at some of these regions. We determined the binding properties of Bacillus subtilis DnaA to genomic DNA in vitro at single nucleotide resolution using in vitro DNA affinity purification and deep sequencing (IDAP-Seq). We used these data to identify 269 binding regions, refine the consensus sequence of the DnaA binding site, and compare the relative affinity of binding regions for ATP-DnaA and ADP-DnaA. Most sites had a slightly higher affinity for ATP-DnaA than ADP-DnaA, but a few had a strong preference for binding ATP-DnaA. Of the 269 sites, only the eight strongest binding ones have been observed to bind DnaA in vivo, suggesting that other cellular factors or the amount of available DnaA in vivo restricts DnaA binding to these additional sites. Conversely, we found several chromosomal regions that were bound by DnaA in vivo but not in vitro, and that the nucleoid-associated protein Rok was required for binding in vivo. Our in vitro characterization of the inherent ability of DnaA to bind the genome at single nucleotide resolution provides a backdrop for interpreting data on in vivo binding and regulation of DnaA, and is an approach that should be adaptable to many other DNA binding proteins.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Award GM41934

    Survival probabilities in the double trapping reaction A +B -> B, B + C -> C

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    We consider the double trapping reaction A + B -> B, B + C -> C in one dimension. The survival probability of a given A particle is calculated under various conditions on the diffusion constants of the reactants, and on the ratio of initial B and C particle densities. The results are of more general form than those obtained in previous work on the problem.Comment: 5 page

    Doing photons with MERLIN 2 at Oroville

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    A very large n-type high-purity Ge-semiconductor detector has recently been installed in the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory's underground low-background facility at Oroville. The detector (named MERLIN II) is mounted in a low-activity cryostat and has a rated 'efficiency' of about 115 percent -- nearly 4 times higher than our original MERLIN detector, which was used extensively to measure the minute amounts of radioactivity in samples from the LDEF satellite. We discuss gamma-spectrometric analyses with MERLIN II on some of the same LDEF samples, providing direct evidence for improvement in performance achieved with the larger detector
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