115,268 research outputs found
Measurement of time differences between luminous events Patent
Mechanism for measuring nanosecond time differences between luminous events using streak camer
Evaluation of the usefulness of a computer‐based learning program to support student learning in pharmacology
This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a computer‐based teaching program in supporting and enhancing traditional teaching methods. The program covers the pharmacology of inflammation and has been evaluated with a group of second‐year medical students at a UK university. The study assessed subject‐specific knowledge using a pre‐ and post‐test and surveyed, by questionnaire, students’ perceptions of the usefulness of the program to support learning before and after use. The use of computers for learning amongst this cohort of students was widespread. The results demonstrated an increase in students ‘ knowledge of the pharmacology of inflammation, coupled with a positive attitude towards the CBL program they had used and the advantages that this mode of study may provide in enabling students to manage their own learning. However, students did not feel that the program could substitute for traditional teaching (lectures)
Z' mass limits and the naturalness of supersymmetry
The discovery of a 125 GeV Higgs boson and rising lower bounds on the masses
of superpartners have lead to concerns that supersymmetric models are now fine
tuned. Large stop masses, required for a 125 GeV Higgs, feed into the
electroweak symmetry breaking conditions through renormalisation group
equations forcing one to fine tune these parameters to obtain the correct
electroweak vacuum expectation value. Nonetheless this fine tuning depends
crucially on our assumptions about the supersymmetry breaking scale. At the
same time extensions provide the most compelling solution to the
-problem, which is also a naturalness issue, and allow the tree level
Higgs mass to be raised substantially above . These very well motivated
supersymmetric models predict a new boson which could be discovered at the
LHC and the naturalness of the model requires that the boson mass should
not be too far above the TeV scale. Moreover this fine tuning appears at the
tree level, making it less dependent on assumptions about the supersymmetry
breaking mechanism. Here we study this fine tuning for several
supersymmetric extensions of the Standard Model and compare it to the situation
in the MSSM where the most direct tree level fine tuning can be probed through
chargino mass limits. We show that future LHC searches are extremely
important for challenging the most natural scenarios in these models.Comment: 58 pages, 5 figures; typos corrected, references added; matches
version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Upper transition point for percolation on the enhanced binary tree: A sharpened lower bound
Hyperbolic structures are obtained by tiling a hyperbolic surface with
negative Gaussian curvature. These structures generally exhibit two percolation
transitions: a system-wide connection can be established at a certain
occupation probability and there emerges a unique giant cluster at
. There have been debates about locating the upper transition
point of a prototypical hyperbolic structure called the enhanced binary tree
(EBT), which is constructed by adding loops to a binary tree. This work
presents its lower bound as by using phenomenological
renormalization-group methods and discusses some solvable models related to the
EBT.Comment: 12 pages, 20 figure
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Ultraviolet protection on a snowball Earth
Habitats in the Antarctic provide an insight into habitats available on snowball earth. Physical UV protection on snowball earth would have been dominated by the manifestations of ice and snow in different habitats. The snowball period was a golden age of UV protection
Accelerated Overlap Fermions
Numerical evaluation of the overlap Dirac operator is difficult since it
contains the sign function of the Hermitian Wilson-Dirac
operator with a negative mass term. The problems are due to having
very small eigenvalues on the equilibrium background configurations generated
in current day Monte Carlo simulations. Since these are a consequence of the
lattice discretisation and do not occur in the continuum version of the
operator, we investigate in this paper to what extent the numerical evaluation
of the overlap can be accelerated by making the Wilson-Dirac operator more
continuum-like. Specifically, we study the effect of including the clover term
in the Wilson-Dirac operator and smearing the link variables in the irrelevant
terms. In doing so, we have obtained a factor of two speedup by moving from the
Wilson action to a FLIC (Fat Link Irrelevant Clover) action as the overlap
kernel.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; V2 contains major revision of the introduction
and motivation sections. Conclusion and results unchanged v2.1: formatting
chang
The effect of resin on the impact damage tolerance of graphite-epoxy laminates
The effect of the matrix resin on the impact damage tolerance of graphite-epoxy composite laminates was investigated. The materials were evaluated on the basis of the damage incurred due to local impact and on their ability to retain compression strength in the presence of impact damage. Twenty-four different resin systems were evaluated. Five of the systems demonstrated substantial improvements compared to the baseline system including retention of compression strength in the presence of impact damage. Examination of the neat resin mechanical properties indicates the resin tensile properties influence significantly the laminate damage tolerance and that improvements in laminate damage tolerance are not necessarily made at the expense of room temperature mechanical properties. Preliminary results indicate a resin volume fraction on the order of 40 percent or greater may be required to permit the plastic flow between fibers necessary for improved damage tolerance
Energy and environmental burdens of organic and non-organic agriculture and horticulture
Production of 10 major commodities in England and Wales was studied using Life Cycle Analysis (LCA). Organic and non-organic (contemporary conventional) systems were compared. Organic production was generally less energy consuming, except for poultry meat, eggs and tomatoes. Environmental burdens, such as global warming potential or eutrophication were often greater per unit of production from organic than non-organic systems
Forest land management by satellite: LANDSAT-derived information as input to a forest inventory system
The author has identified the following significant results. Analysis of LANDSAT temporal data, specifically the digitally merged winter and summer scenes, provided the best overall classification results. Comparison of temporal classification results with available ground truth reveal a 94% agreement in the delineation of hardwood categories, a 96% agreement for the combined pine category, and a greater than 50% agreement for each individual pine subcategory. For nearly 1000 acres, compared clearcut acreage estimated with LANDSAT digital data differed from company inventory records by only 3%. Through analysis of summer data, pine stands were successfully classified into subcategories based upon the extent of crown closure. Maximum spectral separability of hardwood and pine stands was obtained from the analysis of winter data
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