19,382 research outputs found

    Centrifuge mounted motion simulator Patent

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    Centrifuge mounted motion simulator with elevator mechanis

    The selection, appraisal and retention of digital scientific data: dighlights of an ERPANET/CODATA workshop

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    CODATA and ERPANET collaborated to convene an international archiving workshop on the selection, appraisal, and retention of digital scientific data, which was held on 15-17 December 2003 at the Biblioteca Nacional in Lisbon, Portugal. The workshop brought together more than 65 researchers, data and information managers, archivists, and librarians from 13 countries to discuss the issues involved in making critical decisions regarding the long-term preservation of the scientific record. One of the major aims for this workshop was to provide an international forum to exchange information about data archiving policies and practices across different scientific, institutional, and national contexts. Highlights from the workshop discussions are presented

    Precise Determination of Electroweak Parameters in Neutrino-Nucleon Scattering

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    A systematic error in the extraction of sin2θW\sin^2 \theta_W from nuclear deep inelastic scattering of neutrinos and antineutrinos arises from higher-twist effects arising from nuclear shadowing. We explain that these effects cause a correction to the results of the recently reported significant deviation from the Standard Model that is potentially as large as the deviation claimed, and of a sign that cannot be determined without an extremely careful study of the data set used to model the input parton distribution functions.Comment: 3pages, 0 figures, version to be published by IJMP

    Interpretations of the NuTeV sin2θW\sin^2 \theta_W

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    We summarize theoretical explanations of the three σ\sigma discrepancy between sin2θW\sin^2 \theta_W measured by NuTeV and predicted by the Standard Model global fit. Possible new physics explanations ({\it e.g.} an unmized ZZ') are not compelling. The discrepancy would be reduced by a positive momentum asymmetry ss^- in the strange sea; present experimental estimates of ss^- are unreliable or incomplete. Upgrading the NuTeV analysis to NLO would alleviate concerns that the discrepancy is a QCD effect.Comment: (proceedings for the NuFact'02 Workshop); reference and footnote added, following the NuTeV proceeding

    Auger electron intensity variations in oxygen-exposed large grain polycrystalline silver

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    Auger electron spectroscopic studies of the grains in oxygen-charged polycrystal-line silver show significant intensity variations as a function of crystallographic orientation. These intensity variations were observed by studies of the Auger images and line scans of the different grains (randomly selected) for each silver transition energy. The results can be attributed to the diffraction of the ejected Auger electrons and interpreted by corresponding changes in the electron mean-free path for inelastic scattering and by oxygen atom accumulation in the subsurface. The subsurface (second layer) octahedral sites increased in size because of surface relaxation and serve as a stable reservoir for the dissolved oxygen

    On rigidly rotating perfect fluid cylinders

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    The gravitational field of a rigidly rotating perfect fluid cylinder with gamma- law equation of state is found analytically. The solution has two parameters and is physically realistic for gamma in the interval (1.41,2]. Closed timelike curves always appear at large distances.Comment: 10 pages, Revtex (galley

    Velocity of Light in Dark Matter with Charge

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    We propose an interesting mechanism to reconcile the recent experiments of the Michelson-Morley type and slowdown of the velocity of light in dark matter with a fractional electric charge when the index of refraction of dark matter depends on the frequency of a photon. After deriving the formula for the velocity of light in a medium with the index of refraction n(ω)n(\omega) in a relativistic regime, it is shown that the local anisotropy of the light speed is proportional to the second order in n(ω)1n(\omega) - 1. This result implies that the experiments of the Michelson-Morley type do not give rise to a stringent constraint on the slowdown of the velocity of light in dark matter with electric charge.Comment: 10 page

    Granivory in a desert ecosystem: experimental evidence for indirect facilitation of ants by rodents

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    Journal ArticleTwo major groups of desert granivores, ants and rodents, coexist as permanent residents of local desert habitats in southwestern North America. At our Sonoran Desert study site, both of the major taxa exhibited short-term increase in density when the other taxon was experimentally removed. Over the longer term, density compensation continued at a relatively constant level for rodents in the absence of ants. In contrast, beginning about 2 years after initiation of experiments, ant populations on rodent removal plots showed a gradual but significant decline relative to densities on control plots. Indirect interactions, mediated through ant and rodent resources, may account for these differences. Removal of harvester ants leads to higher annual plant densities only in small-seeded species. These plants are relatively poor competitors and do not displace the large-seeded annuals, on whose seeds rodents specialize. In contrast, rodent removal leads to a differential increase in large-seeded annuals, which competitively displace the small-seeded resource species of ants. The decline of ant populations on rodent removal plots preceded by several years the first detectable evidence for competitive suppression of small-seeded annuals. Because ants do not excavate buried seed, they probably experienced resource depression before buried seed reserves were exhausted through germination and subsequent competitive inhibition

    Dispersal adaptations of some acacia species in the Australian arid zone

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    Journal ArticleMost Australian representatives of the genus Acacia have diaspores with arillate appendages indicative of adaptation for active dispersal by animals. Based on physical and chemical characteristics of these arils and mechanisms of diaspore presentation, a number of arid zone acacias can be distinguished as probable ornithochores, myrmecochores, or species lacking active dispersal by animals. Two factors suggest that dispersal adaptations are evolutionarily labile in the face of changing selection pressures. Both myrmecochores and ornithochores are prevalent in each of the three largest taxonomic sections of the Australian subgenus Phyllodineae. Second, diaspores of at least one species, Acacia ligulata, exhibit geographic variation, resembling those of myrmecochores in one population and ornithochores in a second population. The colorful lipid-rich arils of avian-dispersed species are nutritionally more valuable than the relatively small, white appendages of ant-dispersed species with similar-sized propagules. While ants often collect the diaspores of ornithochorous acacias, we have no evidence that birds use the arils of myrmecochores. Patterns of seedling establishment on ant mounds, and under the canopies of trees where birds perch and defecate, are consistent with these observations. Exploitation of diaspores by birds may help to reduce the destruction of seeds by parasitoids and, in part, compensate for the higher aril expenditures (per milligram of propagule) in avian-dispersed species. Dispersal of seeds by both ants and birds directs seeds to microhabitats where nutrients are concentrated and water resources are more plentiful and/or are used more efficiently. Similarities between mound and subcanopy microhabitats may have facilitated evolutionary transitions between myrmecochory and ornithochory. The nutrient poverty that generally characterizes Australian soils has possibly played a role in selecting for seed dispersal by ants and birds in this genus as well as in many other Australian plants
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