123,586 research outputs found

    Doctor\u27s Duty to Speak

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    A Lawyer Reviews Plan for Legalized Abortions

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    In-flight testing of the space shuttle orbiter thermal control system

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    In-flight thermal control system testing of a complex manned spacecraft such as the space shuttle orbiter and the considerations attendant to the definition of the tests are described. Design concerns, design mission requirements, flight test objectives, crew vehicle and mission risk considerations, instrumentation, data requirements, and real-time mission monitoring are discussed. An overview of the tests results is presented

    SAMP, the Simple Application Messaging Protocol: Letting applications talk to each other

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    SAMP, the Simple Application Messaging Protocol, is a hub-based communication standard for the exchange of data and control between participating client applications. It has been developed within the context of the Virtual Observatory with the aim of enabling specialised data analysis tools to cooperate as a loosely integrated suite, and is now in use by many and varied desktop and web-based applications dealing with astronomical data. This paper reviews the requirements and design principles that led to SAMP's specification, provides a high-level description of the protocol, and discusses some of its common and possible future usage patterns, with particular attention to those factors that have aided its success in practice.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for Virtual Observatory special issue of Astronomy and Computin

    Annotations on The Oath of Hippocrates and The Geneva Version of The Hippocratic Oath

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    Fewer Malpractice Claims - Via Our American Way: Consent for Treatment

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    Realistic error bounds for a reduced-state model-reference controller

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    Realistic error bounds for reduced-state model-reference controlle

    Thermodynamics of D-brane Probes

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    We discuss the dynamics and thermodynamics of particle and D-brane probes moving in non-extremal black hole/brane backgrounds. When a probe falls from asymptotic infinity to the horizon, it transforms its potential energy into heat, TdSTdS, which is absorbed by the black hole in a way consistent with the first law of thermodynamics. We show that the same remains true in the near-horizon limit, for BPS probes only, with the BPS probe moving from AdS infinity to the horizon. This is a quantitative indication that the brane-probe reaching the horizon corresponds to thermalization in gauge theory. It is shown that this relation provides a way to reliably compute the entropy away from the extremal limit (towards the Schwarzschild limit).Comment: 12 pages; Based on talks presented at the midterm meeting of the TMR network "Physics beyond the standard model," held in Trieste in March 1999, and at the 1998 Corfu Summer Institute on Elementary Particle Physic
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