11,848 research outputs found
Status of Women and Girls in Southern Arizona 2010
With the publication of the Status of Women and Girls in Southern Arizona report in the spring of 2009, the Women's Foundation of Southern Arizona achieved one of its major goals of establishing a comprehensive and accessible resource to provide data and analysis documenting the lives of women and girls in our region. We are now very pleased to publish the first of what are intended to be annual updates to the original report. These yearly updates will allow us not only to present the most current data on women's education, health, employment and other topics, but also to track where change is needed and measure the impact we, and our partners, have in the community at arge
The New Knowledge Environment: Quality Initiatives in Health Sciences Libraries
published or submitted for publicatio
Toroidal cell and battery
A toroidal storage battery designed to handle relatively high amp-hour loads is described. The cell includes a wound core disposed within a pair of toroidal channel shaped electrodes spaced apart by nylon insulator. The shape of the case electrodes of this toroidal cell allows a first planar doughnut shaped surface and the inner cylindrical case wall to be used as a first electrode and a second planar doughnut shaped surface and the outer cylindrical case wall to be used as a second electrode. Connectors may be used to stack two or more toroidal cells together by connecting substantially the entire surface area of the first electrode of a first cell to substantially the entire surface area of the second electrode of a second cell. The central cavity of each toroidal cell may be used as a conduit for pumping a fluid through the toroidal cell to thereby cool the cell
Relativistic Heavy Ion Physics in the New Millennium
The field of relativistic heavy ion physics has seen significant advancement
in the new millennium toward a greater understanding of QCD at high
temperatures with the commissioning and operation of the Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider. Here we review progress in the field as presented in a set of
lectures at the Lake Louise Winter Institute on Fundamental Interactions in
February 2004.Comment: 30 pages, 17 figures, Lake Louise Winter Institute on Fundamental
Interactions 2004 conference proceeding
Enjoying Katmai
Katmai National Park has been part of the national park system since 1918, just two years after Congress created the National Park Service. Located about 300 miles southwest of Anchorage, Katmai’s attractions have evolved from the aftermath of an epic volcanic eruption to world-class fishing to the place to go to see brown bears catch salmon. These attractions have yet to attract the hordes of people who visit other national parks, and Katmai remains one of the least visited of the 59 national parks. The Park Service is responsible for managing Katmai consistent with the Organic Act’s dual goals of enjoyment and conservation. In practice, Katmai experiences much more conservation than enjoyment. The proposals to increase visitation to Katmai have failed because of a consensus that not all national parks are alike even though the law governing them is nearly the same. Katmai’s history of benign neglect by Congress and the courts demonstrates that the Park Service is capable of managing remote national parks in a manner that achieves the law’s goals while serving the public’s desires
First results from RHIC: What are they telling us?
The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) facility at Brookhaven National
Laboratory is the first accelerator specifically constructed for the study of
very hot and dense nuclear matter. At sufficiently high temperature, nuclear
matter is expected to undergo a phase transition to a quark-gluon plasma. It is
the specific goal of the field to study the nature of this plasma and
understand the phase transitions between different states. The RHIC accelerator
along with four experiments BRAHMS, PHENIX, PHOBOS, and STAR were commissioned
last year with first collisions occurring in June 2000. Presented here are the
first results from low luminosity beam in Run I. They are a glimpse of the
wealth of physics to be extracted from the RHIC program over the next several
years.Comment: Invited Talk at the International Nuclear Physics Conference
INPC2001, Berkeley, CA, July 29th - August 3rd 200
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