6,948 research outputs found
Performance experience with the new jpl wind tunnel data acquisition system
Performance characteristics of data acquisition system for wind tunnel digital data functio
Organization Development for Social Change
The field of organization development (OD) has emerged from efforts to improve the performance of organizations, largely in the for-profit sector but more recently in the public and not-for-profit sectors as well. This paper examines how OD concepts and tools can be used to solve problems and foster constructive change at the societal level as well. It examines four areas in which OD can make such contributions: (1) strengthening social change-focused organizations, (2) scaling up the impacts of such agencies, (3) creating new inter-organizational systems, and (4) changing contexts that shape the action of actors strategic to social change. It discusses examples and the kinds of change agent roles and interventions that are important for each. Finally, it discusses some implications for organization development intervention, practitioners, and the field at large.This publication is Hauser Center Working Paper No. 25. The Hauser Center Working Paper Series was launched during the summer of 2000. The Series enables the Hauser Center to share with a broad audience important works-in-progress written by Hauser Center scholars and researchers
Periodic photometric variability of the brown dwarf Kelu-1
We have detected a strong periodicity of 1.80+/-0.05 hours in photometric
observations of the brown dwarf Kelu-1. The peak-to-peak amplitude of the
variation is ~1.1% (11.9+/-0.8 mmag) in a 41nm wide filter centred on 857nm and
including the dust/temperature sensitive TiO & CrH bands. We have identified
two plausible causes of variability: surface features rotating into- and
out-of-view and so modulating the light curve at the rotation period; or,
elliposidal variability caused by an orbiting companion. In the first scenario,
we combine the observed vsin(i) of Kelu-1 and standard model radius to
determine that the axis of rotation is inclined at 65+/-12 degrees to the line
of sight.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
2000-times repeated imaging of strontium atoms in clock-magic tweezer arrays
We demonstrate single-atom resolved imaging with a survival probability of
and a fidelity of , enabling us to perform repeated
high-fidelity imaging of single atoms in tweezers for thousands of times. We
further observe lifetimes under laser cooling of more than seven minutes, an
order of magnitude longer than in previous tweezer studies. Experiments are
performed with strontium atoms in tweezer arrays, which is at
a magic wavelength for the clock transition. Tuning to this wavelength is
enabled by off-magic Sisyphus cooling on the intercombination line, which lets
us choose the tweezer wavelength almost arbitrarily. We find that a single not
retro-reflected cooling beam in the radial direction is sufficient for
mitigating recoil heating during imaging. Moreover, this cooling technique
yields temperatures below K, as measured by release and recapture.
Finally, we demonstrate clock-state resolved detection with average survival
probability of and average state detection fidelity of .
Our work paves the way for atom-by-atom assembly of large defect-free arrays of
alkaline-earth atoms, in which repeated interrogation of the clock transition
is an imminent possibility.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 1 vide
Global environmental effects of impact-generated aerosols: Results from a general circulation model
Cooling and darkening at Earth's surface are expected to result from the interception of sunlight by the high altitude worldwide dust cloud generated by impact of a large asteroid or comet, according to the one-dimensional radioactive-convective atmospheric model (RCM) of Pollack et al. An analogous three-dimensional general circulation model (GCM) simulation obtains the same basic result as the RCM but there are important differences in detail. In the GCM simulation the heat capacity of the oceans, not included in the RCM, substantially mitigates land surface cooling. On the other hand, the GCM's low heat capacity surface allows surface temperatures to drop much more rapidly than reported by Pollack et al. These two differences between RCM and GCM simulations were noted previously in studies of nuclear winter; GCM results for comet/asteroid winter, however, are much more severe than for nuclear winter because the assumed aerosol amount is large enough to intercept all sunlight falling on Earth. In the simulation the global average of land surface temperature drops to the freezing point in just 4.5 days, one-tenth the time required in the Pollack et al. simulation. In addition to the standard case of Pollack et al., which represents the collision of a 10-km diameter asteroid with Earth, additional scenarios are considered ranging from the statistically more frequent impacts of smaller asteroids to the collision of Halley's comet with Earth. In the latter case the kinetic energy of impact is extremely large due to the head-on collision resulting from Halley's retrograde orbit
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