3,631 research outputs found

    Lawyer-Controlled Title Insurance Companies: Legal Ethics and the Need for Insurance Department Regulation

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    Lawyer-Controlled Title Insurance Companies: Legal Ethics and the Need for Insurance Department Regulation

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    Thulium and ytterbium-doped titanium oxide thin films deposited by ultrasonic spray pyrolysis

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    Thin films of thulium and ytterbium-doped titanium oxide were grown by metal-organic spray pyrolysis deposition from titanium(IV)oxide bis(acetylacetonate), thulium(III) tris(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionate) and ytterbium(III) tris(acetylacetonate). Deposition temperatures have been investigated from 300{\deg}C to 600{\deg}C. Films have been studied regarding their crystallity and doping quality. Structural and composition characterisations of TiO2:Tm,Yb were performed by electron microprobe, X-ray diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The deposition rate can reach 0.8 \mum/h. The anatase phase of TiO2 was obtained after synthesis at 400{\deg}C or higher. Organic contamination at low deposition temperature is eliminated by annealing treatments.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure

    SPIRE imaging of M 82: Cool dust in the wind and tidal streams

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    M 82 is a unique representative of a whole class of galaxies, starbursts with superwinds, in the Very Nearby Galaxy Survey with Herschel. In addition, its interaction with the M 81 group has stripped a significant portion of its interstellar medium from its disk. SPIRE maps now afford better characterization of the far-infrared emission from cool dust outside the disk, and sketch a far more complete picture of its mass distribution and energetics than previously possible. They show emission coincident in projection with the starburst wind and in a large halo, much more extended than the PAH band emission seen with Spitzer. Some complex substructures coincide with the brightest PAH filaments, and others with tidal streams seen in atomic hydrogen. We subtract the far-infrared emission of the starburst and underlying disk from the maps, and derive spatially-resolved far-infrared colors for the wind and halo. We interpret the results in terms of dust mass, dust temperature, and global physical conditions. In particular, we examine variations in the dust physical properties as a function of distance from the center and the wind polar axis, and conclude that more than two thirds of the extraplanar dust has been removed by tidal interaction, and not entrained by the starburst wind

    Radiative properties of a plasma moving across a magnetic field. II: Numerical results

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    A theoretical analysis developed in a companion paper to treat the early‐time evolution of plasmas moving across a background magnetic field is applied to the modeling of low‐beta, barium chemical releases in the magnetosphere. The results indicate that radiation damping plays an important role in defining the plasma cloud evolution, causing a rapid decay of the polarization field and a loss of plasma kinetic energy and momentum on time scales comparable to several ion gyroperiods. The radiation spectrum consists of a burst of chirped, high‐frequency (in the range of the cloud plasma frequencies) waves, followed by a pulse of whistler waves, and subsequently by ion cyclotron emission. Scaling laws are derived for the plasma momentum and energy loss rates and predictions for the braking time, the amplitude and spectrum of the radiation field, and the total radiated power are presented for conditions relevant to the recent Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite (CRRES) experiments [Phys. Fluids B 4, 2249 (1992)].Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70589/2/PFBPEI-5-4-1306-1.pd

    Radiative properties of a plasma moving across a magnetic field. I: Theoretical analysis

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    The early‐time evolution of plasmas moving across a background magnetic field is addressed with a two‐dimensional model in which a plasma cloud is assumed to have formed instantaneously with a velocity across a uniform background magnetic field and with a Gaussian density profile in the two dimensions perpendicular to the direction of motion. This model treats both the dynamics associated with the formation of a polarization field and the generation and propagation of electromagnetic waves. In general, the results indicate that, to zeroth order, the plasma cloud behaves like a large dipole antenna oriented in the direction of the polarization field which oscillates at frequencies defined by the normal mode of the system. The magnitude of the radiation field and the amount of plasma momentum and energy carried away by and stored instantaneously in the fields are discussed only qualitatively in this paper, quantitative results for specific cloud parameters and scaling laws for the magnitude of the fields and the slowing down of the plasma cloud are presented in a companion manuscript.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70196/2/PFBPEI-5-4-1289-1.pd

    Calculation of the spectrum of 12Li by using the multistep shell model method in the complex energy plane

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    The unbound nucleus 12^{12}Li is evaluated by using the multistep shell model in the complex energy plane assuming that the spectrum is determined by the motion of three neutrons outside the 9^9Li core. It is found that the ground state of this system consists of an antibound 1/2+1/2^+ state and that only this and a 1/2−1/2^- and a 5/2+5/2^+ excited states are physically meaningful resonances.Comment: 9 pages, 5 tables, 7 figures, printer-friendly versio

    Scanamorphos: a map-making software for Herschel and similar scanning bolometer arrays

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    Scanamorphos is one of the public softwares available to post-process scan observations performed with the Herschel photometer arrays. This post-processing mainly consists in subtracting the total low-frequency noise (both its thermal and non-thermal components), masking high-frequency artefacts such as cosmic ray hits, and projecting the data onto a map. Although it was developed for Herschel, it is also applicable with minimal adjustment to scan observations made with some other imaging arrays subjected to low-frequency noise, provided they entail sufficient redundancy; it was successfully applied to P-Artemis, an instrument operating on the APEX telescope. Contrary to matrix-inversion softwares and high-pass filters, Scanamorphos does not assume any particular noise model, and does not apply any Fourier-space filtering to the data, but is an empirical tool using purely the redundancy built in the observations -- taking advantage of the fact that each portion of the sky is sampled at multiple times by multiple bolometers. It is an interactive software in the sense that the user is allowed to optionally visualize and control results at each intermediate step, but the processing is fully automated. This paper describes the principles and algorithm of Scanamorphos and presents several examples of application.Comment: This is the final version as accepted by PASP (on July 27, 2013). A copy with much better-quality figures is available on http://www2.iap.fr/users/roussel/herschel
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