14,699 research outputs found

    Device for diode tuning in a stripline varactor harmonic multiplier

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    Stripline varactor harmonic multiplier uses a device for positioning the varactor diode with respect to the stripline circuit to obtain series resonance. The device also reduces detuning effects, due to thermal expansion, over a wide temperature range

    The development philosophy for SNAP mechanisms

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    Hardware development for SNAP reactor control mechanis

    Baryonic contributions to e+e- yields in a hydrodynamic model of Pb+Au collisions at the SPS

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    We analyze e+e- yields from matter containing baryons in addition to mesons using a hydrodynamic approach to describe Pb+Au collisions at 158 A GeV/c. We use two distinctly different e+e- production rates to provide contrast. Although the presence of baryons leads to significant enhancement of e+e- emission relative to that from mesons-only matter, the calculated results fall below the data in the range 400 < M/MeV < 600. The calculated results are, however, only 1.3-1.5 standard deviations below the data, which may not be statistically significant.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of Quark Matter 9

    Near-infrared spectroscopy of the very low mass companion to the hot DA white dwarf PG1234+482

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    We present a near-infrared spectrum of the hot (TeffT_{\rm eff} ≈\approx 55,000 K) DA white dwarf PG 1234+482. We confirm that a very low mass companion is responsible for the previously recognised infrared photometric excess. We compare spectra of M and L dwarfs, combined with an appropriate white dwarf model, to the data to constrain the spectral type of the secondary. We find that uncertainties in the 2MASS HKHK photometry of the white dwarf prevent us from distinguishing whether the secondary is stellar or substellar, and assign a spectral type of L0±\pm1 (M9-L1).Therefore, this is the hottest and youngest (≈106\approx 10^6 yr) DA white dwarf with a possible brown dwarf companion.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRA

    Human response to vibration in residential environments (NANR209), technical report 2: measurement of response

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    Based on a review of the literature and the best practice guidance available, a social survey questionnaire was developed to measure residents’ self-reported annoyance and to provide data suitable for establishing exposure-response relationships between levels of annoyance and levels of vibration. The development of the questionnaire was influenced by a number of previous studies such as: the social survey questionnaire developed for the NANR172 Pilot Study of this research (Defra, 2007); best practice guidelines for the development of socio-acoustic surveys issued by ICBEN and presented in the current International Standard (Fields et al., 2001; ISO/TS 15666:2003); the Nordtest Method (2001) for the development of socio-vibration surveys, and a peer review of the social survey questionnaire by international experts in the field. In order to avoid influencing responses and reasons for participation in the research, the survey was introduced as a survey of neighbourhood satisfaction. The questionnaire design, through the use of sections, enables new sections to be added to the questionnaire so that specific vibration sources can be investigated in more depth. In addressing the ‘response’ component in the ‘exposure-response’ relationship, the questionnaire was designed to yield interval-level measurement data suitable for analysis with vibration measurement data via two response scales: the five-point semantic and the eleven-point numerical scales. This decision was largely founded upon the ability of the two scales to meet the criteria established by ICBEN (Fields et al., 2001) for socio-acoustic survey design. Detailed procedures were documented, following the field trial of the questionnaire, in terms of the role of the interviewer, the recording of information and the transfer of the data to the relevant database for subsequent analysis and to inform the vibration team responsible for the ‘exposure’ component of this research project

    Completion Report: Arkansas State Pesticides in Ground Water Monitoring Project Phase V: Vulnerable areas in Jackson, Monroe, Lawrence and Lonoke Counties

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    In 1996, sixty-seven water samples were drawn from 65 wells, including 62 new wells and 3 wells sampled previously . One Woodruff County well and two Pulaski County wells were resampled. Thirty-two samples were drawn from 30 wells in Monroe County (well #1 was sampled 3 times during this phase) . Ten wells in Jackson County, 12 wells in Lawrence County and 10 wells in Lonoke were also tested (Figures 1-5) . With the completion of Phase V, the number of wells tested has risen to 231 with a total of 258 samples analyzed . Initially, the wells were tested for 13 pesticides and ni~rate. Two more pesticides, aldicarb and carbofuran were added to the analyte list during Phase V. The analyte list is shown in Table 3 . All results from all the wells are listed in Appendix A. Quality control information for these data follow the results. The Phase V Quality Assurance Report is included in this document as Part II

    Visual ecology: sensing the social world

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    Social animals, and even solitary animals, must at different points in their life actively search for and locate conspecifics within their environment, using one or multiple senses. One sense in particular, vision, can provide some of the most spatially detailed and temporally rapid information about the environment. Yet, the surrounding environment can also severely challenge animals’ abilities to find fellow conspecifics. Furthermore, once an animal successfully locates conspecifics, it must then make key decisions about when and where to enter group formations, decisions which may strongly impact their access to socially-acquired resources. Even after an animal has positioned itself within a group, it may still rely on vision to successfully interact with conspecifics and acquire the benefits of sociality. My thesis addresses the question of how and why animal visual systems are shaped by both the physical and the social world, as animals attempt to find (chapter 1), enter (chapter 2), and interact (chapter 3) with social formations. In addition, I address how and why the morphology of the eye itself may be linked to specific features of the physical and social environment (chapter 4). Chapters 1-3 focus on field-based behavioral experiments of the highly social terrestrial hermit crab (Coenobita compressus). Chapter 4 compares multiple species within the clade of hermit crabs, which span a range of environments. In chapter 1, we tested how the environment can place sensory constraints on an animal’s ability to locate a social group. In chapter 2, we tested how different elements of a social group’s orientation and organization impact an outsider’s ability to detect and position itself within the group. In chapter 3, we tested how the experimentally-induced loss of vision can impact individuals’ social behavior. Finally, in chapter 4, we compared macroscopic and microscopic dimensions of eye morphology across three species of hermit crab, which inhabit different environments. Overall, my thesis disentangles the complex relationship between an animal’s sensory system and the physical and social environment, revealing the overriding importance of vision in locating conspecifics, entering groups, and making social decisions in complex environments
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