16,451 research outputs found
Multimedia courseware: Never mind the quality how much will it cost to develop?
This paper evaluates multimedia courseware costing techniques such as the US Airforce Interactive Courseware Method (Golas, 1993), CBT Analyst (Kearsley, 1985), CEAC (Schooley, 1988) and MEEM (Marshall, Samson, Dugard, & Scott, 1994) against the data from ten multimedia courseware developments. The Relative Error and Mean Absolute Relative Error (MARE) are calculated to allow comparison of the different methods
Active management of multi-service networks.
Future multiservice networks will be extremely large and complex. Novel management solutions will be required to keep the management costs reasonable. Active networking enables management to be delegated to network users as a large set of independent small scale management systems. A novel architecture for an active network based management solution for multiservice networking is presented
Heritability of testosterone levels in 12-year-old twins and its relation to pubertal development
The aim of this study was to estimate the heritability of variation in testosterone levels in 12-year-old children, and to explore the overlap in genetic and environmental influences on circulating testosterone levels and androgen dependent pubertal development. Midday salivary testosterone samples were collected on two consecutive days in a sample of 183 unselected twin pairs. Androgen induced pubertal development was assessed using self report Tanner scales of pubic hair development (boys and girls) and genital development (boys). A significant contribution of genetic effects to the variance in testosterone levels was found.
Heritability was approximately 50% in both boys and girls. The remaining proportion of the variance in testosterone levels could be explained by non-shared environmental influences. The relatively high correlation between testosterone levels of opposite sex dizygotic twins suggests that sex differences in genes influencing variation in testosterone levels have not yet developed in pre- and early puberty. Variance in pubertal development was explained by a large genetic component, moderate shared environmental influences, and a small non-shared environmental effect. Testosterone levels correlated moderately (r = .31) with pubertal development; the covariance between testosterone levels and pubertal development was entirely accounted for by genetic influences
The relaxation of OH (v = 1) and OD (v = 1) by H2O and D2O at temperatures from 251 to 390 K
We report rate coefficients for the relaxation of OH(v = 1) and OD(v = 1) by H2O and D2O as a function of temperature between 251 and 390 K. All four rate coefficients exhibit a negative dependence on temperature. In Arrhenius form, the rate coefficients for relaxation (in units of 10–12 cm3 molecule–1 s–1) can be expressed as: for OH(v = 1) + H2O between 263 and 390 K: k = (2.4 ± 0.9) exp((460 ± 115)/T); for OH(v = 1) + D2O between 256 and 371 K: k = (0.49 ± 0.16) exp((610 ± 90)/T); for OD(v = 1) + H2O between 251 and 371 K: k = (0.92 ± 0.16) exp((485 ± 48)/T); for OD(v = 1) + D2O between 253 and 366 K: k = (2.57 ± 0.09) exp((342 ± 10)/T). Rate coefficients at (297 ± 1 K) are also reported for the relaxation of OH(v = 2) by D2O and the relaxation of OD(v = 2) by H2O and D2O. The results are discussed in terms of a mechanism involving the formation of hydrogen-bonded complexes in which intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution can occur at rates competitive with re-dissociation to the initial collision partners in their original vibrational states. New ab initio calculations on the H2O–HO system have been performed which, inter alia, yield vibrational frequencies for all four complexes: H2O–HO, D2O–HO, H2O–DO and D2O–DO. These data are then employed, adapting a formalism due to Troe (J. Troe, J. Chem. Phys., 1977, 66, 4758), in order to estimate the rates of intramolecular energy transfer from the OH (OD) vibration to other modes in the complexes in order to explain the measured relaxation rates—assuming that relaxation proceeds via the hydrogen-bonded complexes
Conditions for entanglement transformation between a class of multipartite pure states with generalized Schmidt decompositions
In this note we generalize Nielsen's marjoization criterion for the
convertibility of bipartite pure states [Phys. Rev. Lett \textbf{83},
436(1999)] to a special class of multipartite pure states which have
generalized Schmidt decompositions.Comment: 3 pages (Revetex 4), no figures. A brief note on entanglement
transformation. Comments are welcom
Character of Locally Inequivalent Classes of States and Entropy of Entanglement
In this letter we have established the physical character of pure bipartite
states with the same amount of entanglement in the same Schmidt rank that
either they are local unitarily connected or they are incomparable. There exist
infinite number of deterministically locally inequivalent classes of pure
bipartite states in the same Schmidt rank (starting from three) having same
amount of entanglement. Further, if there exists incomparable states with same
entanglement in higher Schmidt ranks (greater than three), then they should
differ in at least three Schmidt coefficients.Comment: 4 pages, revtex4, no figure, accepted in Physical Review A (rapid
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The fine structure of microwave-induced magneto-oscillations in photoconductivity of the two-dimensional electron system formed on a liquid-helium surface
The influence of the inelastic nature of electron scattering by surface
excitations of liquid helium (ripplons) on the shape of magnetoconductivity
oscillations induced by resonance microwave (MW) excitation is theoretically
studied. The MW field provides a substantial filling of the first excited
surface subband which sparks off inter-subband electron scattering by ripplons.
This scattering is the origin of magneto-oscillations in the momentum
relaxation rate. The inelastic effect becomes important when the energy of a
ripplon involved compares with the collision broadening of Landau levels.
Usually, such a condition is realized only at sufficiently high magnetic
fields. On the contrary, the inelastic nature of inter-subband scattering is
shown to be more important in a lower magnetic field range because of the new
enhancement factor: the ratio of the inter-subband transition frequency to the
cyclotron frequency. This inelastic effect affects strongly the shape of
conductivity oscillations which acquires an additional wavy feature (a mixture
of splitting and inversion) in the vicinity of the level-matching points where
the above noted ratio is close to an integer.Comment: 10 pages 6 figure
The Size Distribution of Kuiper Belt Objects
We describe analytical and numerical collisional evolution calculations for
the size distribution of icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt. For a wide range of
bulk properties, initial masses, and orbital parameters, our results yield
power-law cumulative size distributions, N_C propto r^{-q}, with q_L = 3.5 for
large bodies with radii of 10-100 km, and q_s = 2.5-3 for small bodies with
radii lesss than 0.1-1 km. The transition between the two power laws occurs at
a break radius of 1-30 km. The break radius is more sensitive to the initial
mass in the Kuiper Belt and the amount of stirring by Neptune than the bulk
properties of individual Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs). Comparisons with
observations indicate that most models can explain the observed sky surface
density of KBOs for red magnitudes, R = 22-27. For R 28, the model
surface density is sensitive to the amount of stirring by Neptune, suggesting
that the size distribution of icy planets in the outer solar system provides
independent constraints on the formation of Neptune.Comment: 24 pages of text, 12 figures; to appear in the Astronomical Journal,
October 200
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