32,527 research outputs found
Spin tests of a single-engine, high-wing light airplane
The airplane has a relatively steep spin mode (low angle of attack) with a high load factor and high velocity. The airplane recovers almost immediately after any deviation from the prospin control positions, except for one maneuver with reduced flexibility in the elevator control system
Health Research Participants' Preferences for Receiving Research Results
BACKGROUND: Participants in health research studies typically express interest in receiving results from the studies in which they participate. However, participants’ preferences and experiences related to receiving results are not well understood. In general, existing studies have had relatively small sample sizes and typically address specific and often sensitive issues within targeted populations. METHODS: The present study used an online survey to explore attitudes and experiences of registrants in ResearchMatch, a large database of past, present, and potential health research participants. Survey respondents provided information related to whether or not they received research results from studies in which they participated, the methods used to communicate results, their satisfaction with results, and when and how they would like to receive research results from future studies. 70,699 ResearchMatch registrants were notified of the study’s topic. Of the 5,207 registrants who requested full information about the study, 3,381 respondents completed the survey. RESULTS: Approximately 33% of respondents with previous health research participation reported receiving results. Approximately half of respondents with previous research participation reported no opportunity to request results. However, almost all respondents said researchers should always or sometimes offer results to participants. Respondents expressed particular interest in results related to their (or a loved one's) health, as well as information about studies’ purposes and any medical advances based on the results. In general, respondents’ most preferred dissemination methods for results were email and website postings. The least desirable dissemination methods for results included Twitter, conference calls, and text messages. Across all results, we compare the responses of respondents with and without previous research participation experience, and those who have worked in research organizations vs. those who have not. Compared to respondents who have previous participation experience, a greater proportion of respondents with no participation experience indicated that results should always be shared with participants. Likewise, respondents with no participation experience placed higher importance on the receipt of each type of results information included in the survey. CONCLUSIONS: We present findings from a survey assessing attitudes and experiences of a broad sample of respondents that addresses gaps in knowledge related to participants’ preferences for receiving results. The study’s findings highlight the potential for inconsistency between respondents’ expressed preferences to receive specific types of results via specific methods and researchers’ unwillingness or inability to provide them. We present specific recommendations to shift the approach of new studies to investigate participants’ preferences for receiving research results
p-wave Feshbach molecules
We have produced and detected molecules using a p-wave Feshbach resonance
between 40K atoms. We have measured the binding energy and lifetime for these
molecules and we find that the binding energy scales approximately linearly
with magnetic field near the resonance. The lifetime of bound p-wave molecules
is measured to be 1.0 +/- 0.1 ms and 2.3 +/- 0.2 ms for the m_l = +/- 1 and m_l
= 0 angular momentum projections, respectively. At magnetic fields above the
resonance, we detect quasi-bound molecules whose lifetime is set by the
tunneling rate through the centrifugal barrier
Age and size at maturity: sex, environmental variability and developmental thresholds
In most organisms, transitions between different life-history stages occur later and at smaller sizes as growth conditions deteriorate. Day and Rowe recently proposed that this pattern could be explained by the existence of developmental thresholds (minimum sizes or levels of condition below which transitions are unable to proceed). The developmental-threshold model predicts that the reaction norm of age and size at maturity will rotate in an anticlockwise manner from positive to a shallow negative slope if: (i) initial body size or condition is reduced; and/or (ii) some individuals encounter poor growth conditions at increasingly early developmental stages. We tested these predictions by rearing replicated populations of soil mites Sancassania berlesei (Michael) under different growth conditions. High-food environments produced a vertical relationship between age and size at maturity. The slope became increasingly shallow as food was reduced. By contrast, high food in the maternal environment reduced the slope of the reaction norm of age and size at maturity, whereas low food increased it. Overall, the reaction norm of age and size at maturity in S. berlesei was significantly nonlinear and differed for males and females. We describe how growth conditions, mother's environment and sex determine age and size at maturity in S. berlesei
EDIN design study alternate space shuttle booster replacement concepts. Volume 2: Design simulation results
Historical weight estimating relationships were developed for the liquid rocket booster (LRB) using Saturn technology, and modified as required to support the EDIN05 study. Mission performance was computed using February 1975 shuttle configuration groundrules to allow reasonable comparison of the existing shuttle with the EDIN05 designs. The launch trajectory was constrained to pass through both the RTLS/AOA and main engine cut-off points. Performance analysis was based on a point design trajectory model which optimized initial tilt rate and exo-atmospheric pitch profile. A gravity turn was employed during the boost phase in place of the shuttle angle-of-attack profile. Engine throttling add/or shutdown was used to constrain dynamic pressure and/or longitudinal acceleration where necessary
D-term Inflation and Nonperturbative Kahler Potential of Dilaton
We study the -term inflation scenario with a nonperturbative K\"ahler
potential of the dilaton field. Although the FI term which leads an
inflationary expansion is given by the derivative of the K\"ahler potential
with respect to the dilaton in heterotic string models with anomalous U(1), the
too large magnitude is problematic for a viable -term inflation. In this
paper, we point out that the K\"ahler potential with a nonperturbative term can
reduce the magnitude of FI term to desired values while both the dilaton
stabilization and -term domination in the potential are realized by
nonperturbative superpotential.Comment: 13 pages, latex, 3 figure
The potential energy of a K Fermi gas in the BCS-BEC crossover
We present a measurement of the potential energy of an ultracold trapped gas
of K atoms in the BCS-BEC crossover and investigate the temperature
dependence of this energy at a wide Feshbach resonance, where the gas is in the
unitarity limit. In particular, we study the ratio of the potential energy in
the region of the unitarity limit to that of a non-interacting gas, and in the
T=0 limit we extract the universal many-body parameter . We find ; this value is consistent with previous measurements
using Li atoms and also with recent theory and Monte Carlo calculations.
This result demonstrates the universality of ultracold Fermi gases in the
strongly interacting regime
On Israel-Wilson-Perjes black holes
We show, under certain conditions, that regular Israel-Wilson-Perj\'es black
holes necessarily belong to the Majumdar-Papapetrou family
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