2,336 research outputs found

    THE EFFECT OF THIRD WORLD POVERTY ON US SECURITY

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    SOVIET CIVIL DEFENSE AND THE US DETERRENT

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    Nonmilitary Threats to Soviet National Security

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    Except, perhaps, in the view of the most brazen martinet, national power is not an end in itself. Rather, it is a means to an end set of ends which usually include such goals as the survival of the nation-state, its culture and its way of life, the improvement in the quality of life of its citizens; and the state\u27s continued ability to increase its infuence with other states in the pursuit of these goals. From this broader perspective, the national security of the Soviet Union is vulnerable to serious structured and systematic industrial and agricultural problems as well as demographic demographic trends which threaten to tear apart from with in the last of the world\u27s great multinational empires

    Where Do Riders Park Dockless, Shared Electric Scooters? Findings from San Jose, California

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    Dockless, shared, electric kick-scooters started popping up on U.S. city streets without warning in 2017. Reaction to the shared scooters came swiftly and strongly. On the one hand, the scooters have proven popular with riders, attracting investment capital and expanding service to additional cities. But others have been less enthusiastic, with a central complaint being how shared scooters are parked. This perspective explores the extent to which parked shared scooters pose a problem to others on streets, sidewalks, and public spaces, using empirical evidence documenting where scooters have been parked in downtown San Jose, California

    Degenerate dispersive equations arising in the study of magma dynamics

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    An outstanding problem in Earth science is understanding the method of transport of magma in the Earth's mantle. Models for this process, transport in a viscously deformable porous media, give rise to scalar degenerate, dispersive, nonlinear wave equations. We establish a general local well-posedness for a physical class of data (roughly H1H^1) via fixed point methods. The strategy requires positive lower bounds on the solution. This is extended to global existence for a subset of possible nonlinearities by making use of certain conservation laws associated with the equations. Furthermore, we construct a Lyapunov energy functional, which is locally convex about the uniform state, and prove (global in time) nonlinear dynamic stability of the uniform state for any choice of nonlinearity. We compare the dynamics to that of other problems and discuss open questions concerning a larger range of nonlinearities, for which we conjecture global existence.Comment: 27 Pages, 7 figures are not present in this version. See http://www.columbia.edu/~grs2103/ for a PDF with figures. Submitted to Nonlinearit

    Photoproduction evidence for and against hidden-strangeness states near 2 GeV

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    Experimental evidence from coherent diffractive proton scattering has been reported for two narrow baryonic resonances which decay predominantly to strange particles. These states, with masses close to 2.0 GeV would, if confirmed, be candidates for hidden strangeness states with unusual internal structure. In this paper we examine the literature on strangeness photoproduction, to seek additional evidence for or against these states. We find that one state is not confirmed, while for the other state there is some mild supporting evidence favoring its existence. New experiments are called for, and the expected photoproduction lineshapes are calculated.Comment: 9 pages, RevTex, five postscript figures, submitted to PR

    Suppression of inelastic collisions of polar 1Σ^1 \Sigma state molecules in an electrostatic field

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    Collisions of polar 1Σ^{1}\Sigma state molecules at ultralow energies are considered, within a model that accounts for long-range dipole-dipole interactions, plus rotation of the molecules. We predict a substantial suppression of dipole-driven inelastic collisions at high values of the applied electric field, namely, field values of several times Be/μB_e/\mu. Here BeB_e is the rotational constant, and μ\mu is the electric dipole moment of molecules. The sudden large drop in the inelastic cross section is attributed to the onset of degeneracy between molecular rotational levels, which dramatically alters the scattering Hamiltonian. As a result of the large ratio of elastic to inelastic collision rates, we predict that evaporative cooling may be feasible for 1Σ^{1}\Sigma state molecules in weak-field-seeking states, provided a large bias electric field is present

    Cold and Slow Molecular Beam

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    Employing a two-stage cryogenic buffer gas cell, we produce a cold, hydrodynamically extracted beam of calcium monohydride molecules with a near effusive velocity distribution. Beam dynamics, thermalization and slowing are studied using laser spectroscopy. The key to this hybrid, effusive-like beam source is a "slowing cell" placed immediately after a hydrodynamic, cryogenic source [Patterson et al., J. Chem. Phys., 2007, 126, 154307]. The resulting CaH beams are created in two regimes. One modestly boosted beam has a forward velocity of vf = 65 m/s, a narrow velocity spread, and a flux of 10^9 molecules per pulse. The other has the slowest forward velocity of vf = 40 m/s, a longitudinal temperature of 3.6 K, and a flux of 5x10^8 molecules per pulse

    Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus

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