1,369 research outputs found

    Proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC 1990)

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    Presented here are the proceedings of the Second International Mobile Satellite Conference (IMSC), held June 17-20, 1990 in Ottawa, Canada. Topics covered include future mobile satellite communications concepts, aeronautical applications, modulation and coding, propagation and experimental systems, mobile terminal equipment, network architecture and control, regulatory and policy considerations, vehicle antennas, and speech compression

    Coadsorption of Cinchona Alkaloids on Supported Palladium: Nonlinear Effects in Asymmetric Hydrogenation and Resistance of Alkaloids Against Hydrogenation

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    The transient behavior of the adsorption of cinchona alkaloid modifiers on Pd/TiO2 has been investigated in situ during the enantioselective hydrogenation of 4-methoxy-6-methyl-2-pyrone (1). Modifier mixtures consisting of pairs of alkaloids that alone afford the opposite enantiomers in comparable excess were applied to probe the adsorption behavior and possible nonlinear phenomena. Complementary information has been gathered from an indirect UV-vis study of the adsorption and hydrogenation of cinchonidine and quinidine on Pd/TiO2. The striking nonlinear behavior of cinchonidine-quinidine and cinchonine-quinine pairs in the hydrogenation of 1, and in the competitive saturation of the quinoline rings of the alkaloids, is attributed to differences in the adsorption strength and geometry of the alkaloids. The results are in good agreement with our former mechanistic model assuming that the quinoline ring of cinchona alkaloid and 1 adsorb parallel to the Pd surface during the enantiodifferentiating ste

    Spectral response of the Viking lander camera: Preliminary evaluation

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    One of the objectives of the Viking lander imaging investigation is to obtain color and near-infrared multispectral panoramas of the Martian surface using six spectral channels in the 0.4 to 1.1 microns wavelength range. This data can be compared with data obtained by imaging a reference test chart to construct approximate spectral reflectance curves that can then be matched to laboratory standards to aid in identifying surface materials. Some channels exhibit appreciable out-of-band spectral responses, making data reduction and interpretation difficult. A preliminary evaluation of predicted multispectral data for eight geological materials reveals that fairly good reflectance estimates can be made for those materials which have monotonically increasing or decreasing reflectances. Reflectance estimates for materials with more complex reflectances often do not reveal important spectral features and sometimes provide misleading results

    Effects of precompetition state anxiety interventions on performance time and accuracy among amateur soccer players: Revisiting the matching hypothesis

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    In this study, we tested the matching ypothesis, which contends that administration of a cognitive or somatic anxiety intervention should be matched to a participant's dominant anxiety response. Sixty-one male soccer players (mean age 31.6 years, s=6.3) were assigned to one of four groups based on their responses to the Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2, which was modified to include a directional scale. Interventions were randomly administered in a counterbalanced order 10 min before each performance trial on a soccer skill test. The dominantly cognitive anxious group (n=17), the dominantly somatic anxious group (n=17), and the non-anxious control intervention group (n=14) completed a baseline performance trial. The second and third trials were completed with random administration of brief cognitive and somatic interventions. The non-anxious control group (n=13) completed three trials with no intervention. A mixed-model, GroupTreatment multivariate analysis of variance indicated significant (P0.05), or performance time or accuracy (P>0.05). The present findings do not provide support for the matching hypothesis for state anxiety intensity and direction, or for performance

    Quantum Interference of Coulomb Interaction and Disorder: Phase Shift of Friedel Oscillations and an Instability of the Fermi Sea

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    We investigate the influence of interference between Coulomb interaction and impurity scattering on the static electronic response χ(0,q)\chi (0,q) in disordered metals to leading order in the effective Coulomb interaction. When the transport relaxation time τtr\tau _{tr} is much shorter than the quasiparticle life time, we find a \mbox{sgn}(2p_F-q)/\sqrt{|2p_F-q|} divergence of the polarization function at the Fermi surface (q=2pFq=2p_F). It causes a phase shift of the Friedel oscillations as well as an enhancement of their amplitude. Our results are consistent with experiments and may be relevant for understanding the stability of the amorphous state of certain alloys against crystallization.Comment: 11 pages, 4 PostScript figures appended as a self-extracting tar archive; includes output instruction

    On reminder effects, drop-outs and dominance: evidence from an online experiment on charitable giving

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    We present the results of an experiment that (a) shows the usefulness of screening out drop-outs and (b) tests whether different methods of payment and reminder intervals affect charitable giving. Following a lab session, participants could make online donations to charity for a total duration of three months. Our procedure justifying the exclusion of drop-outs consists in requiring participants to collect payments in person flexibly and as known in advance and as highlighted to them later. Our interpretation is that participants who failed to collect their positive payments under these circumstances are likely not to satisfy dominance. If we restrict the sample to subjects who did not drop out, but not otherwise, reminders significantly increase the overall amount of charitable giving. We also find that weekly reminders are no more effective than monthly reminders in increasing charitable giving, and that, in our three months duration experiment, standing orders do not increase giving relative to one-off donations

    Uniqueness in Discrete Tomography of Delone Sets with Long-Range Order

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    We address the problem of determining finite subsets of Delone sets ΛRd\varLambda\subset\R^d with long-range order by XX-rays in prescribed Λ\varLambda-directions, i.e., directions parallel to non-zero interpoint vectors of Λ\varLambda. Here, an XX-ray in direction uu of a finite set gives the number of points in the set on each line parallel to uu. For our main result, we introduce the notion of algebraic Delone sets ΛR2\varLambda\subset\R^2 and derive a sufficient condition for the determination of the convex subsets of these sets by XX-rays in four prescribed Λ\varLambda-directions.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures; condensed and revised versio

    Matching schemes and public goods : a review

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    Matching schemes, where a party matches the contribution of others, reduce the effective price of a good and aim to foster its demand. We review the empirical literature on the effectiveness of these schemes in the context of public goods, especially in the field of charitable giving. As different measures of effectiveness are used, we classify results according to (i) the level of public good provision, (ii) the amount of individuals' contributions, (iii) the likelihood to give and (iv) the contribution conditional on contributing a positive amount. Generalizing results is challenging, since context specific factors matter. Predominantly, a match is found to create a significant increase in public good provision without crowding out individuals' contributions, while the effect on the likelihood of giving and contribution condition on contributing a positive amount is nonnegative. The discussion reveals several avenues for future research, as putting stronger emphasizes on long term effects, public good competition or heterogeneity in responses

    Quantum Statistics of Surface Plasmon Polaritons in Metallic Stripe Waveguides

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    Single surface plasmon polaritons are excited using photons generated via spontaneous parametric down-conversion. The mean excitation rates, intensity correlations and Fock state populations are studied. The observed dependence of the second order coherence in our experiment is consistent with a linear uncorrelated Markovian environment in the quantum regime. Our results provide important information about the effect of loss for assessing the potential of plasmonic waveguides for future nanophotonic circuitry in the quantum regime.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, published in Nano Letters, publication date (web): March 27 (2012
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