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A fruitful parent of injustice: unilateral service of notice to quit by a joint tenant
‘A fruitful parent of injustice is the tyranny of concepts’ (Cardozo 1928). This warning seems apposite when reviewing the impact of the decision of the House of Lords in Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council v Monk [1992] 1 AC 478, HL. Since Monk the law is well settled that one joint tenant of a periodic lease can destroy the lease held by both joint tenants. This destructive ability is justified by a conceptual analysis that refuses to recognise the destructive effects of its utilisation. With a reform of the law on the horizon the time is ripe for a review of this peculiar area of law (see Law Com No 284). If we are correct in our analysis, Monk has been productive of an unnecessary amount of mischief in the law. This is partially due to the deployment of inappropriate concepts in Monk itself, and partially due to an unfortunate subsequent tendency to allow these concepts to act as tyrants in dictating legal development. Monk has had an effect directly or indirectly across many different areas of the legal landscape. This has necessitated both an unwelcome length and a complex structure for this article
Interply layer degradation effects on composite structural response
Recent research activities at NASA Lewis Research Center to computationally evaluate the effects of interply layer progressive weakening (degradation) on the structural response of a composite beam are summarized. The structural responses of interest include: (1) bending, (2) buckling, (3) free vibrations, (4) periodic excitation, and (5) impact. Finite element analysis was used for the computational evaluations. The interply layer degradation effects on the various structural responses were determined and assessed as a function of the interply layer modulus varying from 1 million psi down to 1000 psi and even lower for some limiting cases. The results obtained show that the interply layer degradation has generally negligible effects on composite structural response and, therefore, structural integrity, unless the interply layer modulus degrades to about 10,000 psi or less
Bird Migration Through A Mountain Pass Studied With High Resolution Radar, Ceilometers, And Census
Autumnal migration was studied with high-resolution radar, ceilometer, and daily census in the area of Franconia Notch, a major pass in the northern Appalachian Mountains. Under synoptic conditions favorable for migration, broadfront movements of migrants toward the south passed over the mountains, often above a temperature inversion. Birds at lower elevations appeared to be influenced by local topography. Birds moving southwest were concentrated along the face of the mountain range. Birds appeared to deviate their flights to follow local topography through the pass. Specific migratory behavior was not associated with species or species groups. Under synoptic conditions unfavorable for southward migration, multimodal movements probably associated with local flights were as dense as the southward migrations described above. Avian migrants reacting to local terrain may result in concentrations of migrants over ridge summits or other topographic features
Space-based tests of gravity with laser ranging
Existing capabilities in laser ranging, optical interferometry and metrology,
in combination with precision frequency standards, atom-based quantum sensors,
and drag-free technologies, are critical for the space-based tests of
fundamental physics; as a result, of the recent progress in these disciplines,
the entire area is poised for major advances. Thus, accurate ranging to the
Moon and Mars will provide significant improvements in several gravity tests,
namely the equivalence principle, geodetic precession, PPN parameters
and , and possible variation of the gravitational constant . Other
tests will become possible with development of an optical architecture that
would allow proceeding from meter to centimeter to millimeter range accuracies
on interplanetary distances. Motivated by anticipated accuracy gains, we
discuss the recent renaissance in lunar laser ranging and consider future
relativistic gravity experiments with precision laser ranging over
interplanetary distances.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. To appear in the proceedings of the
International Workshop "From Quantum to Cosmos: Fundamental Physics Research
in Space", 21-24 May 2006, Warrenton, Virginia, USA
http://physics.jpl.nasa.gov/quantum-to-cosmos
Star formation in normal galaxies
The ways in which recent infrared observations, particularly by the Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS), have influenced ideas about star formation in normal galaxies, are discussed
Carbon dioxide concentrator
Passed exhaled air through electrochemical cell containing alkali metal carbonate aqueous solution, and utilizes platinized electrodes causing reaction of oxygen at cathode with water in electrolyte, producing hydroxyl ions which react with carbon dioxide to form carbonate ions
Vortex Fluctuations in the Critical Casimir Effect of Superfluid and Superconducting Films
Vortex-loop renormalization techniques are used to calculate the magnitude of
the critical Casimir forces in superfluid films. The force is found to become
appreciable when size of the thermal vortex loops is comparable to the film
thickness, and the results for T < Tc are found to match very well with
perturbative renormalization theories that have only been carried out for T >
Tc. When applied to a high-Tc superconducting film connected to a bulk sample,
the Casimir force causes a voltage difference to appear between the film and
bulk, and estimates show that this may be readily measurable.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Revtex 4, typo correctio
Study to determine an improved method for Apollo propellant system decontamination and propellant tank drying Summary report
Vapor phase cleaning method for Apollo propellant system decontamination and propellant tank dryin
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