503 research outputs found
RETROCAM: A Versatile Optical Imager for Synoptic Studies
We present RETROCAM, an auxiliary CCD camera that can be rapidly inserted
into the optical beam of the MDM 2.4m telescope. The speed and ease of
reconfiguring the telescope to use the imager and a straightforward user
interface permit the camera to be used during the course of other observing
programs. This in turn encourages RETROCAM's use for a variety of monitoring
projects.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Accepted by A
Dictionarius pauperum, vel Summa de abstinentia.
Copia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Cultura. Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria, 2006sign.: a-m\p8\s no\p6\s; fol.: [1]Primo-Octavo, IX-CV [3].=4º.L. gót.de 3 tam.(180G 96G 64G), 2 col.de 45-46 lÃn.Inic.lombardas.Cab.numéricas.Port.orlada.Esc.tipográfico.Tint.roja y negra.Hoj.1r.,sign.[a]: Summa d'absti//netia predicato//ribus multum necessaria//Esc.tipogr.y orla en rojo//Venales reperiutur // A lestrille faulx veau : // Hoj.1v.,en bl.-Hoj.2r.,sign.A2,col.1: // Incipit Summula omnibus verbi // diuni seminatorib9 pnecessaria q de // abstinetia intitulatur... lÃn.9: Rubrica de abstinetia c.i. // [\p2\s]Uplex est absti//nentia. Laudabilis et // detestabilis vt // In ypocritis... Sign.b: tentiam agite a pl.eni re.Mat.iii.a p' // Serue bone... Hoj.96r.,col.2, lÃn.18... que preparauit deus electis suis. // Ad que nos perducat qui viuit tre-//gnat in secula seculorum.Amen. // Hoj.96v.,col1: Incipiunt adaptationes oimsermo-//num in hoc libro tepto2 (sic) p'ut petut // ... t feriis totius anni. // ... Hoj.107r.,col.2,lÃn.12: Explicit.Sumula... // ...q // est extracta a magno dictionario. t po//test dici dictionarius pauperum... lÃn.22: Impressum parisius per felicem // baligault.Impensis durandi ger-//lier Cmmor(sic) in vico Maturinorum.// Alestrille faulx veau. // Hoj.107v.,col.1: Ad habendam contepto2 (sic) in hac // summa elucidationem... lÃn.39 ...cunctis qui eam perleget // facile cognitu erit. // col.2 y hoj.108, en bl
Magnetic properties of Fe-doped CuAlO2 and role of impurities
The delafossite CuAlO2 is a rare p-type semiconductor with potential applications as a thermoelectric and as a dilute magnetic semiconductor when doped with transition metal ions. Reported here are results from our investigations of CuAl1-xFexO2 (x = 0, 0.01, 0.05, and 0.1) with a focus on the x-dependence of structural and magnetic properties, and role of impurities. The samples prepared by the solid-state reaction at 1,100°C were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), energy dispersive (X-ray) spectroscopy (EDS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The magnetic results show that the Curie constant (C), low temperature magnetization (M) and the lattice constants scale with x. High resolution M-H loop measurements at 300 K and 10 K show negligible coercivity HCat 10 K but HC ∼ 100 Oe at 300K. These results suggest the presence of minute quantities of hematite (α-Fe2O3) that are not detected in our XRD and XPS. The role of impurities on the published results in this system is discussed
"Smoking gun" signatures of topological milestones in trivial materials by measurement fine-tuning and data postselection
Exploring the topology of electronic bands is a way to realize new states of
matter with possible implications for information technology. Because bands
cannot always be observed directly, a central question is how to tell that a
topological regime has been achieved. Experiments are often guided by a
prediction of a unique signal or a pattern, called "the smoking gun". Examples
include peaks in conductivity, microwave resonances, and shifts in interference
fringes. However, many condensed matter experiments are performed on relatively
small, micron or nanometer-scale, specimens. These structures are in the
so-called mesoscopic regime, between atomic and macroscopic physics, where
phenomenology is particularly rich. In this paper, we demonstrate that the
trivial effects of quantum confinement, quantum interference and charge
dynamics in nanostructures can reproduce accepted smoking gun signatures of
triplet supercurrents, Majorana modes, topological Josephson junctions and
fractionalized particles. The examples we use correspond to milestones of
topological quantum computing: qubit spectroscopy, fusion and braiding. None of
the samples we use are in the topological regime. The smoking gun patterns are
achieved by fine-tuning during data acquisition and by subsequent data
selection to pick non-representative examples out of a fluid multitude of
similar patterns that do not generally fit the "smoking gun" designation.
Building on this insight, we discuss ways that experimentalists can rigorously
delineate between topological and non-topological effects, and the effects of
fine-tuning by deeper analysis of larger volumes of data.Comment: Data are available through Zenodo at DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.834930
Does implementation matter if comprehension is lacking? A qualitative investigation into perceptions of advance care planning in people with cancer
Purpose: While advance care planning holds promise, uptake is variable and it is unclear how well people engage with or comprehend advance care planning. The objective of this study was to explore how people with cancer comprehended Advance Care Plans and examine how accurately advance care planning documentation represented patient wishes.
Methods: This study used a qualitative descriptive design. Data collection comprised interviews and an examination of participants’ existing advance care planning documentation. Participants included those who had any diagnosis of cancer with an advance care plan recorded: Refusal of Treatment Certificate; Statement of Choices; and/or Enduring Power of Attorney (Medical Treatment) at one cancer treatment centre.
Results: Fourteen participants were involved in the study. Twelve participants were female (86%). The mean age was 77 (range: 61-91) and participants had completed their advance care planning documentation between 8 and 72 weeks prior to the interview (mean 33 weeks). Three themes were evident from the data: Incomplete advance care planning understanding and confidence; Limited congruence for attitude and documentation; Advance care planning can enable peace of mind. Complete advance care planning understanding was unusual; most participants demonstrated partial comprehension of their own advance care plan, and some indicated very limited understanding. Participants’ attitudes and their written document congruence was limited, but advance care planning was seen as helpful.
Conclusions: This study highlighted advance care planning was not a completely accurate representation of patient wishes. There is opportunity to improve how patients comprehend their own advance care planning documentation
Mechanical Performance of Polylactic Acid from Sustainable Screw-Based 3D Printing
Screw-extrusion-based 3D printing or fused granular fabrication (FGF) is a less widespread variant of filament-based 3D printing for polymers. An FGF printer can be fed directly from polymer granules for improved sustainability. Shorter manufacturing routes and the potential of using recycled pellets from waste plastics are key features of FGF in the circular economy framework. A modified version of a standard Prusa i3 plus printer, which was equipped with a Mahor screw extruder, is used to test the mechanical performance of polylactic acid (PLA) processed with different layer infill and printing speed. Rheological and thermal analyses are carried out to characterise the material. The energy consumption of the FGF printer was measured during the fabrication of Dumbbell specimens. Tensile test results are consistent with other investigations presented in the literature. A higher printing speed promotes FGF eco-efficiency without a detrimental effect on the material strength, whereas lower printing speed should be preferred for increased material stiffness
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Carboxylic acids in clouds at a high-elevation forested site in central Virginia
During September 1990 we sampled coarse (>18-μm diameter) and fine (18- to 5.5-μm diameter) droplets and liquid-water content (LWC) in cloud from a tower on a forested ridge top in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. Cloud-water pH and aqueous- and vapor-phase concentrations of carboxylic acids (HCOOH and CH3COOH) and formaldehyde (HCHO) were measured in parallel over 1- to 1.5-hour intervals. Both size fractions of cloud droplets contained similar concentrations of carboxylic species and H+ during most sampling; most cloud water was in coarse droplets. The pH of coarse (3.27–4.76) and fine (3.22–4.70) droplets coupled with total LWC of 0.04–0.56 g m−3 STP (standard m3 at 0°C and 1 atm) resulted in the partitioning of carboxylic acids primarily in the vapor phase. The observed phase partitioning for CH3COOH was within the uncertainty range of thermodynamic data. However, HCOOH exhibited significant phase disequilibria, which could not be explained by artifacts from variable LWC or from mixing droplets of different acidities. We hypothesize that the large volume of liquid water deposited on the forest canopy interacted with the near-surface cloud leading to apparent disequilibria based on time-integrated samples. HCOOH was selectively depleted relative to CH3COOH in cloud, particularly at higher pH, suggesting rapid removal of HCOOH by cloud-water deposition. We saw no evidence for significant production of HCOOH from the aqueous-phase oxidation of HCHO.Engineering and Applied Science
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Carboxylic acids in the rural continental atmosphere over the eastern United States during the Shenandoah Cloud and Photochemistry Experiment
The Shenandoah Cloud and Photochemistry Experiment (SCAPE) was conducted during September 1990 in the rural continental atmosphere at a mountain top site (1014 m) in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. We report here the extensive set of trace gas measurements performed during clear sky periods of SCAPE, with particular focus on the carboxylic acids, formic, acetic, and pyruvic. Median mixing ratios were 5.4 and 2.1 parts per billion by volume (ppbv) for formic and acetic acid, respectively, and they did not exhibit the diurnal variation characteristic of low-elevation sites. Mixing ratios of formic acid often approached or exceeded 10 ppbv, which are the largest values yet reported for the nonurban troposphere. Over the rural eastern United States, formic and acetic acid appear to have significant nonphotochemical sources. Secondary production from suspected pathways appears to be relatively unimportant. The observed lack of correlation between formic and acetic acid with peroxide species argues against a significant source from permutation reactions of peroxy radicals. In addition, model calculations using the SCAPE data indicate minimal production of carboxylics from olefin/O3 oxidation reactions. The tight correlation (r2 = 0.88) between mixing ratios of formic and acetic acid is strongly suggestive of a commonality in their sources. The seasonal cycle of carboxylic acids in the atmosphere and precipitation over the eastern United States is evidence that combustion emissions are not a principal source of these species. It appears that direct biogenic emissions from vegetation and soils cannot be ruled out as important sources. In particular, the correlation between the seasonal variation of formic and acetic acid and the ambient temperature is consistent with a soil microbial source. Similar conclusions were reached for pyruvic acid, with its mixing ratio ranging 4–266 parts per trillion by volume (pptv) (median = 63) and most likely supported by biogenic emissions and possibly photochemical sources.Engineering and Applied Science
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