10,479 research outputs found
Computer program conducts facilities utilization and occupancy survey
Computer program identifies the uses of all facilities and provides information on the net area in each room as well as the number and classification of people occupying them. The system also provides a means to indicate unsatisfactory work areas and may be able to be updated each month
Statistical analysis for thermometric sensors test program final report
Statistical models for regression analysis of thermometric sensor
Self-Regulation in a Web-Based Course: A Case Study
Little is known about how successful students in Web-based courses self-regulate their learning. This descriptive case study used a social cognitive model of self-regulated learning (SRL) to investigate how six graduate students used and adapted traditional SRL strategies to complete tasks and cope with challenges in a Web-based technology course; it also explored motivational and environmental influences on strategy use. Primary data sources were three transcribed interviews with each of the students over the course of the semester, a transcribed interview with the course instructor, and the students’ reflective journals. Archived course documents, including transcripts of threaded discussions and student Web pages, were secondary data sources. Content analysis of the data indicated that these students used many traditional SRL strategies, but they also adapted planning, organization, environmental structuring, help seeking, monitoring, record keeping, and self-reflection strategies in ways that were unique to the Web-based learning environment. The data also suggested that important motivational influences on SRL strategy use—self-efficacy, goal orientation, interest, and attributions—were shaped largely by student successes in managing the technical and social environment of the course. Important environmental influences on SRL strategy use included instructor support, peer support, and course design. Implications for online course instructors and designers, and suggestions for future research are offered
The robustness of interdependent clustered networks
It was recently found that cascading failures can cause the abrupt breakdown
of a system of interdependent networks. Using the percolation method developed
for single clustered networks by Newman [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 103}, 058701
(2009)], we develop an analytical method for studying how clustering within the
networks of a system of interdependent networks affects the system's
robustness. We find that clustering significantly increases the vulnerability
of the system, which is represented by the increased value of the percolation
threshold in interdependent networks.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Beam Test Results of the BTeV Silicon Pixel Detector
The results of the BTeV silicon pixel detector beam test carried out at
Fermilab in 1999-2000 are reported. The pixel detector spatial resolution has
been studied as a function of track inclination, sensor bias, and readout
threshold.Comment: 8 pages of text, 8 figures, Proceedings paper of Pixel 2000:
International Workshop on Semiconductor Pixel Detectors for Particles and
X-Rays, Genova, June 5-8, 200
An Optical Readout TPC (O-TPC) for Studies in Nuclear Astrophysics With Gamma-Ray Beams at HIgS
We report on the construction, tests, calibrations and commissioning of an
Optical Readout Time Projection Chamber (O-TPC) detector operating with a
CO2(80%) + N2(20%) gas mixture at 100 and 150 Torr. It was designed to measure
the cross sections of several key nuclear reactions involved in stellar
evolution. In particular, a study of the rate of formation of oxygen and carbon
during the process of helium burning will be performed by exposing the chamber
gas to intense nearly mono-energetic gamma-ray beams at the High Intensity
Gamma Source (HIgS) facility. The O-TPC has a sensitive target-drift volume of
30x30x21 cm^3. Ionization electrons drift towards a double parallel grid
avalanche multiplier, yielding charge multiplication and light emission.
Avalanche induced photons from N2 emission are collected, intensified and
recorded with a Charge Coupled Device (CCD) camera, providing two-dimensional
track images. The event's time projection (third coordinate) and the deposited
energy are recorded by photomultipliers and by the TPC charge-signal,
respectively. A dedicated VME-based data acquisition system and associated data
analysis tools were developed to record and analyze these data. The O-TPC has
been tested and calibrated with 3.183 MeV alpha-particles emitted by a 148Gd
source placed within its volume with a measured energy resolution of 3.0%.
Tracks of alpha and 12C particles from the dissociation of 16O and of three
alpha-particles from the dissociation of 12C have been measured during initial
in-beam test experiments performed at the HIgS facility at Duke University. The
full detection system and its performance are described and the results of the
preliminary in-beam test experiments are reported.Comment: Supported by the Richard F. Goodman Yale-Weizmann Exchange Program,
ACWIS, NY, and USDOE grant Numbers: DE-FG02-94ER40870 and DE-FG02-97ER4103
The cytoplasm of living cells: A functional mixture of thousands of components
Inside every living cell is the cytoplasm: a fluid mixture of thousands of
different macromolecules, predominantly proteins. This mixture is where most of
the biochemistry occurs that enables living cells to function, and it is
perhaps the most complex liquid on earth. Here we take an inventory of what is
actually in this mixture. Recent genome-sequencing work has given us for the
first time at least some information on all of these thousands of components.
Having done so we consider two physical phenomena in the cytoplasm: diffusion
and possible phase separation. Diffusion is slower in the highly crowded
cytoplasm than in dilute solution. Reasonable estimates of this slowdown can be
obtained and their consequences explored, for example, monomer-dimer equilibria
are established approximately twenty times slower than in a dilute solution.
Phase separation in all except exceptional cells appears not to be a problem,
despite the high density and so strong protein-protein interactions present. We
suggest that this may be partially a byproduct of the evolution of other
properties, and partially a result of the huge number of components present.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
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