417 research outputs found
American Etiquette and Rules of Politeness (Part One)
This is a volume dedicated to explaining American etiquette, which the authors consider to be, The most complete work on Etiquette that has yet been presented to the public. This first part of the book covers the value of etiquette, good manners, social intercourse, home etiquette, home culture, entrance into society, introductions, salutations, conversation, table etiquette, street etiquette, traveling, riding, driving, public etiquette, calling and visiting, receptions, parties, dinners, women\u27s higher culture, courtship, marriage, wedding etiquette, good conduct, anniversaries, personal care and hygiene, and clothing.https://openworks.wooster.edu/motherhomeheaven/1080/thumbnail.jp
American Etiquette and Rules of Politeness (Part Two)
This is a volume dedicated to explaining American etiquette, which the authors consider to be, The most complete work on Etiquette that has yet been presented to the public. This second part of the book discusses the etiquette of gifts, business, letter writing, notes, cards, funerals, addressing foreign people with titles, games, and amusements. It also discusses specific etiquette for Washington, D.C. The final chapters explain the language of flowers, the significance of precious stones, and recipes for personal care.https://openworks.wooster.edu/motherhomeheaven/1081/thumbnail.jp
Inter- and intragrain currents in bulk melt-grown YBaCuO rings
A simple contactless method suitable to discern between the intergrain
(circular) current, which flows in the thin superconducting ring, and the
intragrain current, which does not cross the weakest link, has been proposed.
At first, we show that the intergrain current may directly be estimated from
the magnetic flux density measured by the Hall sensor positioned
in the special points above/below the ring center. The experimental
and the numerical techniques to determine the value are discussed. Being
very promising for characterization of a current flowing across the joints in
welded YBaCuO rings (its dependencies on the temperature and the external
magnetic field as well as the time dissipation), the approach has been applied
to study corresponding properties of the intra- and intergrain currents flowing
across the -twisted grain boundaries which are frequent in bulk
melt-textured YBaCuO samples. We present experimental data related to the flux
penetration inside a bore of MT YBaCuO rings both in the non-magnetized, virgin
state and during the field reversal. The shielding properties and their
dependence on external magnetic fields are also studied. Besides, we consider
the flux creep effects and their influence on the current re-distribution
during a dwell.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures (EPS), RevTeX4. In the revised version,
corrections to perturbing effects near the weak links are introduced, one
more figure is added. lin
Branch-and-lift algorithm for deterministic global optimization in nonlinear optimal control
This paper presents a branch-and-lift algorithm for solving optimal control problems with smooth nonlinear dynamics and potentially nonconvex objective and constraint functionals to guaranteed global optimality. This algorithm features a direct sequential method and builds upon a generic, spatial branch-and-bound algorithm. A new operation, called lifting, is introduced, which refines the control parameterization via a Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization process, while simultaneously eliminating control subregions that are either infeasible or that provably cannot contain any global optima. Conditions are given under which the image of the control parameterization error in the state space contracts exponentially as the parameterization order is increased, thereby making the lifting operation efficient. A computational technique based on ellipsoidal calculus is also developed that satisfies these conditions. The practical applicability of branch-and-lift is illustrated in a numerical example. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York
On the Lagrangian Realization of Non-Critical -Strings
A large class of non-critical string theories with extended worldsheet gauge
symmetry are described by two coupled, gauged Wess-Zumino-Witten Models. We
give a detailed analysis of the gauge invariant action and in particular the
gauge fixing procedure and the resulting BRST symmetries. The results are
applied to the example of strings.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX (REVTEX macro's
Chemostratigraphy of Neoproterozoic carbonates: implications for 'blind dating'
The delta C-13(carb) and Sr-87/Sr-86 secular variations in Neoproteozoic seawater have been used for the purpose of 'isotope stratigraphy' but there are a number of problems that can preclude its routine use. In particular, it cannot be used with confidence for 'blind dating'. The compilation of isotopic data on carbonate rocks reveals a high level of inconsistency between various carbon isotope age curves constructed for Neoproteozoic seawater, caused by a relatively high frequency of both global and local delta C-13(carb) fluctuations combined with few reliable age determinations. Further complication is caused by the unresolved problem as to whether two or four glaciations, and associated negative delta C-13(carb) excursions, can be reliably documented. Carbon isotope stratigraphy cannot be used alone for geological correlation and 'blind dating'. Strontium isotope stratigraphy is a more reliable and precise tool for stratigraphic correlations and indirect age determinations. Combining strontium and carbon isotope stratigraphy, several discrete ages within the 590-544 Myr interval, and two age-groups at 660-610 and 740-690 Myr can be resolved
cGMP stimulation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator Cl- channels co-expressed with cGMP-dependent protein kinase type II but not type Ibeta
In order to investigate the involvement of cGMP-dependent protein kinase
(cGK) type II in cGMP-provoked intestinal Cl- secretion, cGMP-dependent
activation and phosphorylation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane
conductance regulator (CFTR) Cl- channels was analyzed after expression of
cGK II or cGK Ibeta in intact cells. An intestinal cell line which stably
expresses CFTR (IEC-CF7) but contains no detectable endogenous cGK II was
infected with a recombinant adenoviral vector containing the cGK II coding
region (Ad-cGK II) resulting in co-expression of active cGK II. In these
cells, CFTR was activated by membrane-permeant analogs of cGMP or by the
cGMP-elevating hormone atrial natriuretic peptide as measured by 125I-
efflux assays and whole-cell patch clamp analysis. In contrast, infection
with recombinant adenoviruses expressing cGK Ibeta or luciferase did not
convey cGMP sensitivity to CFTR in IEC-CF7 cells. Concordant with the
activation of CFTR by only cGK II, infection with Ad-cGK II but not Ad-cGK
Ibeta enabled cGMP analogs to increase CFTR phosphorylation in intact
cells. These and other data provide evidence that endogenous cGK II is a
key mediator of cGMP-provoked activation of CFTR in cells where both
proteins are co-localized, e. g. intestinal epithelial cells. Furthermore,
they demonstrate that neither the soluble cGK Ibeta nor cAMP-dependent
protein kinase are able to substitute for cGK II in this cGMP-regulated
function
Effect of synthetic antioxidants on the oxidative stability of biodiesel
Biodiesels were prepared using base catalyzed methanolysis of sunflower, soybean and canola oils.
Rancimat oxidative stability measurements showed that the induction period (IP) for neat canola biodiesel
conformed to EN 14214, the European specification for biodiesel (IP > 6 h). Stability was enhanced
when 0.5 wt.% of the synthetic antioxidants di-tert-butylhydroquinone (DTBHQ) or poly(1,2-dihydro-
2,2,4-trimethylquinoline) (Orox PK) was added. Soybean-based biodiesel spiked with 0.5 wt.% DTBHQ
also reached this specification. Orox PK improved the stability of sunflower biodiesel but the 3 h induction
period specified by ASTM D-6751 could not be reached. Curiously, canola biodiesel was destabilized
on adding the antioxidant Naugard P (tris(nonylphenyl) phosphite).The Institutional Research
Development Programme (IRDP) and the THRIP program
of the Department of Trade and Industry and the National Research
Foundation of South Africa, Ltd as well as Xyris Technology.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/fuelai201
Finite-Temperature Transport in Finite-Size Hubbard Rings in the Strong-Coupling Limit
We study the current, the curvature of levels, and the finite temperature
charge stiffness, D(T,L), in the strongly correlated limit, U>>t, for Hubbard
rings of L sites, with U the on-site Coulomb repulsion and t the hopping
integral. Our study is done for finite-size systems and any band filling. Up to
order t we derive our results following two independent approaches, namely,
using the solution provided by the Bethe ansatz and the solution provided by an
algebraic method, where the electronic operators are represented in a
slave-fermion picture. We find that, in the U=\infty case, the
finite-temperature charge stiffness is finite for electronic densities, n,
smaller than one. These results are essencially those of spinless fermions in a
lattice of size L, apart from small corrections coming from a statistical flux,
due to the spin degrees of freedom. Up to order t, the Mott-Hubbard gap is
\Delta_{MH}=U-4t, and we find that D(T) is finite for n<1, but is zero at
half-filling. This result comes from the effective flux felt by the holon
excitations, which, due to the presence of doubly occupied sites, is
renormalized to
\Phi^{eff}=\phi(N_h-N_d)/(N_d+N_h), and which is zero at half-filling, with
N_d and N_h being the number of doubly occupied and empty lattice sites,
respectively. Further, for half-filling, the current transported by any
eigenstate of the system is zero and, therefore, D(T) is also zero.Comment: 15 pages and 6 figures; accepted for PR
SCExAO/MEC and CHARIS Discovery of a Low Mass, 6 AU-Separation Companion to HIP 109427 using Stochastic Speckle Discrimination and High-Contrast Spectroscopy
We report the direct imaging discovery of a low-mass companion to the nearby
accelerating A star, HIP 109427, with the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive
Optics (SCExAO) instrument coupled with the MKID Exoplanet Camera (MEC) and
CHARIS integral field spectrograph. CHARIS data reduced with reference star PSF
subtraction yield 1.1-2.4 m spectra. MEC reveals the companion in and
band at a comparable signal-to-noise ratio using stochastic speckle
discrimination, with no PSF subtraction techniques. Combined with complementary
follow-up photometry from Keck/NIRC2, the SCExAO data favors a
spectral type, effective temperature, and luminosity of M4-M5.5, 3000-3200 ,
and , respectively.
Relative astrometry of HIP 109427 B from SCExAO/CHARIS and Keck/NIRC2, and
complementary Gaia-Hipparcos absolute astrometry of the primary favor a
semimajor axis of au, an eccentricity of
, an inclination of degrees, and a
dynamical mass of . This work shows the
potential for extreme AO systems to utilize speckle statistics in addition to
widely-used post-processing methods to directly image faint companions to
nearby stars near the telescope diffraction limit.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
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