58,149 research outputs found
(WP 2017-02) The Great Recession and Public Education
We examine the impact of the Great Recession on K-12 education finance and employment and generate five key results. First, nearly 300,000 school employees lost their jobs. Second, schools that were heavily dependent financially on state governments were particularly vulnerable to the recession. Third local revenues from the property tax actually increased during the recession, primarily because millage rates rose in response to declining property values. Fourth, inequality in school spending rose sharply during the Great Recession. Fifth, the federal government’s efforts to shield education from some of the worst effects of the recession achieved their major goal
Noise measurements for various configurations of a model of a mixer nozzle externally blown flap system
Noise data were taken for variations to a large scale model of an externally blown flap lift augmentation system. The variations included two different mixer nozzles (7 and 8 lobes), two different wing models (2 and 3 flaps), and different lateral distances between the wing chord line and the nozzle centerline. When the seven lobe was used with the trailing flap in the 60 deg position, increasing the wing to nozzle distance had no effect on the sound level. When the eight lobe nozzle was used there was a decrease in sound level. With the 20 deg flap setting the noise level decreased when the distance was increased using either nozzle
Neutron Resonance Spin Flippers: Static Coils Manufactured by Electrical Discharge Machining
Radiofrequency spin flippers (RFSF) are key elements of Neutron Resonance
Spin Echo (NRSE) spectrometers, which allow performing controlled manipulations
of the beam polarization. We report on the design and test of a new type of
RFSF which originality lies in the new manufacturing technique for the static
coil. The largely automated procedure ensures reproducible construction as well
as an excellent homogeneity of the neutron magnetic resonance condition over
the coil volume. Two salient features of this concept are the large neutron
window and the closure of the coil by a -metal yoke which prevents field
leakage outside of the coil volume. These properties are essential for working
with large beams and enable new applications with coils tilted with respect to
the beam axis such as neutron Larmor diffraction or the study of dispersive
excitations by inelastic NRSE.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Effects of scopolamine on matching to sample paradigm and related tests in human subjects
This was a double-blind placebo-controlled study with a cross-over design to examine the effects of scopolamine on cognitive functions in young healthy subjects. Scopolamine hydrobromide was administered subcutaneously to 12 subjects (mean +/- SD age 23.8 +/- 2.2 years) at doses of 0.3 and 0.6 mg in comparison with two placebo conditions. Scopolamine at both doses produced marked sedation as rated by subjects and an observer. In the continuous performance test, vigilance was impaired by both doses of scopolamine. The span of apprehension test showed differing results (only the high dose of scopolamine showed a performance decrement only in the three-character version of the span of apprehension test). Significant impairment by both doses of scopolamine was seen in immediate and delayed free recall, continuous visual recognition, running word recognition and running picture recognition. While scopolamine caused a significant slowing in average reaction times for simultaneous matching as well as for delayed matching, subjects made more errors under scopolamine compared to placebo only in delayed matching, not in simultaneous matching. Also, the main outcome of matching to sample showed significant effects only in delayed matching, not in simultaneous matching. Notable in this study is the incongruity between the simultaneous matching test and the span of apprehension test on the one hand and the other cognitive tests used on the other. These results demonstrated that scopolamine has a greater effect on memory than on attention. Thus, the scopolamine-induced effects in the present study seem to be more relevant to Alzheimer's disease in an advanced phase than to normal aging. Copyright (C) 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel
XPS characterization of silver electrodes and catalyst for oxygen reduction
The combined analysis of the silver GDE using an ex-situ surface sensitive technique (XPS) and in-situ electrochemical measurements (EIS, CV) show that the performance of the silver GDE is significantly influenced by the degree of degradation of the electrodes, e. g., the reduction of the active surface due to the decomposition of the PTFE. These findings indicate a different degree of decomposition of the PTFE on the on the GDE
Experimental Determination of the Antineutrino Spectrum of the Fission Products of U
An experiment was performed at the scientific neutron source FRM II in
Garching to determine the cumulative antineutrino spectrum of the fission
products of U. This was achieved by irradiating target foils of natural
uranium with a thermal and a fast neutron beam and recording the emitted
-spectra with a gamma-suppressing electron-telescope. The obtained
-spectrum of the fission products of U was normalized to the
data of the magnetic spectrometer BILL of U. This method strongly
reduces systematic errors in the U measurement. The -spectrum of
U was converted into the corresponding antineutrino spectrum. The final
-spectrum is given in 250 keV bins in the range from 2.875 MeV to
7.625 MeV with an energy-dependent error of 3.5 % at 3 MeV, 7.6 % at 6 MeV and
14 % at energies 7 MeV (68 % confidence level).
Furthermore, an energy-independent uncertainty of 3.3 % due to the
absolute normalization is added. Compared to the generally used summation
calculations, the obtained spectrum reveals a slight spectral distortion of
10 % but returns the same value for the mean cross section per fission
for the inverse beta decay
Antechamber facilitates loading and unloading of vacuum furnace
Antechamber facilitates the use of a furnace in which materials are heat treated in a high vacuum or a gas atmosphere. It has a high vacuum pumping system, a means for backfilling with a selected gas, an access door, glove ports, and a motor driven platform
Exploring complex networks by walking on them
We carry out a comparative study on the problem for a walker searching on
several typical complex networks. The search efficiency is evaluated for
various strategies. Having no knowledge of the global properties of the
underlying networks and the optimal path between any two given nodes, it is
found that the best search strategy is the self-avoid random walk. The
preferentially self-avoid random walk does not help in improving the search
efficiency further. In return, topological information of the underlying
networks may be drawn by comparing the results of the different search
strategies.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Neutrinos in Large Extra Dimensions and Short-Baseline Appearance
We show that, in the presence of bulk masses, sterile neutrinos propagating
in large extra dimensions (LED) can induce electron-neutrino appearance
effects. This is in contrast to what happens in the standard LED scenario and
hence LED models with explicit bulk masses have the potential to address the
MiniBooNE and LSND appearance results, as well as the reactor and Gallium
anomalies. A special feature in our scenario is that the mixing of the first KK
modes to active neutrinos can be suppressed, making the contribution of heavier
sterile neutrinos to oscillations relatively more important. We study the
implications of this neutrino mass generation mechanism for current and future
neutrino oscillation experiments, and show that the Short-Baseline Neutrino
Program at Fermilab will be able to efficiently probe such a scenario. In
addition, this framework leads to massive Dirac neutrinos and thus precludes
any signal in neutrinoless double beta decay experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure
High Harmonic Generation in SF: Raman-excited Vibrational Quantum Beats
In a recent experiment (N. Wagner et al., PNAS v103, p13279) on SF, a
high-harmonic generating laser pulse is preceded by a pump pulse which
stimulates Raman-active modes in the molecule. Varying the time delay between
the two pulses modulates high harmonic intensity, with frequencies equal to the
vibration frequencies of the Raman-active modes. We propose an explanation of
this modulation as a quantum interference between competing pathways that occur
via adjacent vibrational states of the molecule. The Raman and high harmonic
processes act as beamsplitters, producing vibrational quantum beats among the
Raman-active vibrational modes that are excited by the first pulse. We
introduce a rigorous treatment of the electron-ion recombination process and
the effect of the ionic Coulomb field in the electron propagation outside the
molecule, improving over the widely-used three-step model.Comment: submitted to PR
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