14,346 research outputs found
Developing a New Partnership
Many factors contribute to the success and impact of a Mathematics Resource Teacher on K-5 mathematics instruction. Developing a strong partnership with stakeholders and sharing a common vision for quality mathematics instruction are key factors in the successful implementation of the Mathematics Resource Teacher program. In this article, we share the experience of elementary school principal, Timothy Martino, as he prepared to open a new elementary school in August 2012. Frederick Douglass Elementary opened with a full-time, school-embedded Mathematics Resource Teacher, Mrs. Cindy Brady. Timothy Martino and Mrs. Brady developed a partnership with division-level central office staff and with the teachers of Frederick Douglass Elementary. Thus, they began the journey toward improving mathematics instruction for students through a team approach
Statistical analysis of the 70 meter antenna surface distortions
Statistical analysis of surface distortions of the 70 meter NASA/JPL antenna, located at Goldstone, was performed. The purpose of this analysis is to verify whether deviations due to gravity loading can be treated as quasi-random variables with normal distribution. Histograms of the RF pathlength error distribution for several antenna elevation positions were generated. The results indicate that the deviations from the ideal antenna surface are not normally distributed. The observed density distribution for all antenna elevation angles is taller and narrower than the normal density, which results in large positive values of kurtosis and a significant amount of skewness. The skewness of the distribution changes from positive to negative as the antenna elevation changes from zenith to horizon
Where are the Hedgehogs in Nematics?
In experiments which take a liquid crystal rapidly from the isotropic to the
nematic phase, a dense tangle of defects is formed. In nematics, there are in
principle both line and point defects (``hedgehogs''), but no point defects are
observed until the defect network has coarsened appreciably. In this letter the
expected density of point defects is shown to be extremely low, approximately
per initially correlated domain, as result of the topology
(specifically, the homology) of the order parameter space.Comment: 6 pages, latex, 1 figure (self-unpacking PostScript)
Numerical methods for analyzing electromagnetic scattering
Attenuation properties of the normal modes in an overmoded waveguide coated with a lossy material were analyzed. It is found that the low-order modes, can be significantly attenuated even with a thin layer of coating if the coating material is not too lossy. A thinner layer of coating is required for large attenuation of the low-order modes if the coating material is magnetic rather than dielectric. The Radar Cross Section (RCS) from an uncoated circular guide terminated by a perfect electric conductor was calculated and compared with available experimental data. It is confirmed that the interior irradiation contributes to the RCS. The equivalent-current method based on the geometrical theory of diffraction (GTD) was chosen for the calculation of the contribution from the rim diffraction. The RCS reduction from a coated circular guide terminated by a PEC are planned schemes for the experiments are included. The waveguide coated with a lossy magnetic material is suggested as a substitute for the corrugated waveguide
Numerical methods for analyzing electromagnetic scattering
Numerical methods to analyze electromagnetic scattering are presented. The dispersions and attenuations of the normal modes in a circular waveguide coated with lossy material were completely analyzed. The radar cross section (RCS) from a circular waveguide coated with lossy material was calculated. The following is observed: (1) the interior irradiation contributes to the RCS much more than does the rim diffraction; (2) at low frequency, the RCS from the circular waveguide terminated by a perfect electric conductor (PEC) can be reduced more than 13 dB down with a coating thickness less than 1% of the radius using the best lossy material available in a 6 radius-long cylinder; (3) at high frequency, a modal separation between the highly attenuated and the lowly attenuated modes is evident if the coating material is too lossy, however, a large RCS reduction can be achieved for a small incident angle with a thin layer of coating. It is found that the waveguide coated with a lossy magnetic material can be used as a substitute for a corrugated waveguide to produce a circularly polarized radiation yield
Asymmetric Spin-wave Dispersion on Fe(110): Direct Evidence of Dzyaloshinskii--Moriya Interaction
The influence of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction on the spin-wave
dispersion in an Fe double layer grown on W(110) is measured for the first
time. It is demonstrated that the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction breaks the
degeneracy of spin waves and leads to an asymmetric spin-wave dispersion
relation. An extended Heisenberg spin Hamiltonian is employed to obtain the
longitudinal component of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya vectors from the
experimentally measured energy asymmetry
Local invariants of stabilizer codes
In [Phys. Rev. A 58, 1833 (1998)] a family of polynomial invariants which
separate the orbits of multi-qubit density operators under the action of
the local unitary group was presented. We consider this family of invariants
for the class of those which are the projection operators describing
stabilizer codes and give a complete translation of these invariants into the
binary framework in which stabilizer codes are usually described. Such an
investigation of local invariants of quantum codes is of natural importance in
quantum coding theory, since locally equivalent codes have the same
error-correcting capabilities and local invariants are powerful tools to
explore their structure. Moreover, the present result is relevant in the
context of multipartite entanglement and the development of the
measurement-based model of quantum computation known as the one-way quantum
computer.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure. Minor changes. Accepted in Phys. Rev.
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