36,169 research outputs found
Preliminary considerations of optical telescopes for lunar surface use
Design considerations of astronomical telescopes for lunar surface observatio
Are checks overused?
This study overturns the conclusion of a 1990 study by David Humphrey and Allen Berger, which found that check float is responsible for the popularity of checks despite their high resource cost compared to electronic payment instruments. The new study examines recent data on the costs of checks and automated clearinghouse (ACH) payments. It finds that the value of check float has decreased significantly since the 1990 study and is no longer large enough to make checks more attractive than ACH payments. The study also questions whether the idea that float could be responsible for the persistent use of checks is reasonable given standard assumptions about the behavior of economic agents. The study ends by speculating on why checks are used more than less-costly alternatives and by encouraging policymakers to wait for researchers to adequately answer that question before intervening in the market for payment instruments.Clearinghouses (Banking)
The tension between gauge coupling unification, the Higgs boson mass, and a gauge-breaking origin of the supersymmetric mu-term
We investigate the possibility of generating the -term in the MSSM by
the condensation of a field that is a singlet under the SM gauge group but
charged under an additional family-independent gauge symmetry. We
attempt to do so while preserving the gauge coupling unification of the MSSM.
For this, we find that SM non-singlet exotics must be present in the spectrum.
We also prove that the pure anomalies can always be solved with
rationally charged fields, but that a large number of SM singlets are often
required. For charges that are consistent with an embedding of the
MSSM in SU(5) or SO(10), we show that the charges of the MSSM states
can always be expressed as a linear combination of abelian subgroups of .
However, the SM exotics do not appear to have a straightforward embedding into
GUT multiplets. We conclude from this study that if this approach to the
-term is correct, as experiment can probe, it will necessarily complicate
the standard picture of supersymmetric grand unification.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
How Can a Heavy Higgs Boson be Consistent with the Precision Electroweak Measurements?
The fit of precision electroweak data to the Minimal Standard Model currently
gives an upper limit on the Higgs boson mass of 170 GeV at 95% confidence.
Nevertheless, it is often said that the Higgs boson could be much heavier in
more general models. In this paper, we critically review models that have been
proposed in the literature that allow a heavy Higgs boson consistent with the
precision electroweak constraints. All have unusual features, and all can be
distinguished from the Minimal Standard Model either by improved precision
measurements or by other signatures accessible to next-generation colliders.Comment: 25 pages, 5 eps figures. Source contains html and jar files which
make Fig. 1 active. v.3: final corrections and added reference
Flowmeter measures low gas-flow rates
Positive-displacement flowmeter measures low gas-flow rates by gaging the time required for a slug of mercury to pass between two reference levels in a tube of known volume
Gas flowmeter
Mass flowmeter measures rates of flow of all common gases from purges and collected leaks at leak ports. Without dependence on gravity, it measures rates between 5 and 650 cc/min with pressures ranging from 0.001 to 10 to the minus thirteenth torr at temperatures between 70 and 500 degrees K
Fundamental frequency height as a resource for the management of overlap in talk-in-interaction.
Overlapping talk is common in talk-in-interaction. Much of the previous research on this topic agrees that speaker overlaps can be either turn competitive or noncompetitive. An investigation of the differences in prosodic design between these two classes of overlaps can offer insight into how speakers use and orient to prosody as a resource for turn competition.
In this paper, we investigate the role of fundamental frequency (F0) as a resource for turn competition in overlapping speech. Our methodological approach combines detailed conversation analysis of overlap instances with acoustic measurements of F0 in the overlapping sequence and in its local context. The analyses are based on a collection of overlap instances drawn from the ICSI Meeting corpus. We found that overlappers mark an overlapping incoming as competitive by raising F0 above their norm for turn beginnings, and retaining this higher F0 until the point of overlap resolution. Overlappees may respond to these competitive incomings by returning competition, in which case they raise their F0 too. Our results thus provide instrumental support for earlier claims made on impressionistic evidence, namely that participants in talk-in-interaction systematically manipulate F0 height when competing for the turn
Airborne observations of methane in Comet Kohoutek
The experiment is described for airborne observations of Comet Kohoutek using an infrared tilting-filter photometer. Preliminary analysis of the data established an upper limit to the Comet's fluorescence radiation in methane lines at 3.3 microns
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