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Report of Investigations No. 123 Petroleum Potential of the Palo Duro Basin, Texas Panhandle
UT Librarie
On the Relation between Solar Activity and Clear-Sky Terrestrial Irradiance
The Mauna Loa Observatory record of direct-beam solar irradiance measurements
for the years 1958-2010 is analysed to investigate the variation of clear-sky
terrestrial insolation with solar activity over more than four solar cycles.
The raw irradiance data exhibit a marked seasonal cycle, extended periods of
lower irradiance due to emissions of volcanic aerosols, and a long-term
decrease in atmospheric transmission independent of solar activity. After
correcting for these effects, it is found that clear-sky terrestrial irradiance
typically varies by about 0.2 +/- 0.1% over the course of the solar cycle, a
change of the same order of magnitude as the variations of the total solar
irradiance above the atmosphere. An investigation of changes in the clear-sky
atmospheric transmission fails to find a significant trend with sunspot number.
Hence there is no evidence for a yet unknown effect amplifying variations of
clear-sky irradiance with solar activity.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, in press at Solar Physics; minor changes to the
text to match final published versio
Sagnac interferometry based on ultra-slow polaritons in cold atomic vapors
The advantages of light and matter-wave Sagnac interferometers -- large area
on one hand and high rotational sensitivity per unit area on the other -- can
be combined utilizing ultra-slow light in cold atomic gases. While a
group-velocity reduction alone does not affect the Sagnac phase shift, the
associated momentum transfer from light to atoms generates a coherent
matter-wave component which gives rise to a substantially enhanced rotational
signal. It is shown that matter-wave sensitivity in a large-area interferometer
can be achieved if an optically dense vapor at sub-recoil temperatures is used.
Already a noticeable enhancement of the Sagnac phase shift is possible however
with much less cooling requirements.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Nurse telephone triage for same day appointments in general practice: multiple interrupted time series trial of effect on workload and costs
OBJECTIVE: To compare the workloads of general practitioners and nurses and costs of patient care for nurse telephone triage and standard management of requests for same day appointments in routine primary care. DESIGN: Multiple interrupted time series using sequential introduction of experimental triage system in different sites with repeated measures taken one week in every month for 12 months. SETTING: Three primary care sites in York. Participants: 4685 patients: 1233 in standard management, 3452 in the triage system. All patients requesting same day appointments during study weeks were included in the trial. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Type of consultation (telephone, appointment, or visit), time taken for consultation, presenting complaints, use of services during the month after same day contact, and costs of drugs and same day, follow up, and emergency care. RESULTS: The triage system reduced appointments with general practitioner by 29-44%. Compared with standard management, the triage system had a relative risk (95% confidence interval) of 0.85 (0.72 to 1.00) for home visits, 2.41 (2.08 to 2.80) for telephone care, and 3.79 (3.21 to 4.48) for nurse care. Mean overall time in the triage system was 1.70 minutes longer, but mean general practitioner time was reduced by 2.45 minutes. Routine appointments and nursing time increased, as did out of hours and accident and emergency attendance. Costs did not differ significantly between standard management and triage: mean difference £1.48 more per patient for triage (95% confidence interval -0.19 to 3.15). CONCLUSIONS: Triage reduced the number of same day appointments with general practitioners but resulted in busier routine surgeries, increased nursing time, and a small but significant increase in out of hours and accident and emergency attendance. Consequently, triage does not reduce overall costs per patient for managing same day appointments
Space shuttle external tank performance improvements: The challenge
The external tank (ET) has been actively involved in performance improvements since the inception of the space shuttle program, primarily by weight savings. Weight savings were realized on the first block of flight articles (standard weight tank). With a need for further performance improvements, the ET Program Office was requested to develop a program to reduce tank weight an additional 6000 lb and schedule delivery of the first lightweight ET (LWT) for June 1982. The weight savings program was accomplished by: (1) a unique approach to use of factors of safety; (2) design optimization; and (3) redesign of structures with large margins of safety which resulted in an actual weight savings of 7294 lb. Additional studies have identified further weight savings which are to be implemented at appropriate times in production flow. Examples are an improved thermal protection system for the LH2 tank aft dome and reduction of slosh baffles in the LO2 tank based on flight data. All performance improvements were compared and selected based on non-recurring and recurring cost and technical risk
Medieval English Multilingualisms
This article introduces the nonmedievalist reader to the multilingual landscape of England 700–1400. Building on recent work exploring in particular the relationships among English, French, and Latin in medieval England, it discusses a series of “multilingual moments” from a range of sources, including letters, poems, travel writings, and French language teaching texts. Together, these examples build a picture of the complex interrelationships of languages, both spoken and written, that existed for medieval English people at home and when traveling abroad. Then, as now, people can be seen using their linguistic resources for pragmatic and creative effect. We demonstrate that multilingualism is nothing new. From a methodological perspective, our work also underlines the importance of viewing linguistic attitudes in their particular intellectual and historical contexts
A multi-mode model of a non-classical atom laser produced by outcoupling from a Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light
We examine the properties of an atom laser produced by outcoupling from a
Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light. We introduce a method which
allows us to model the full multimode dynamics of the squeezed optical field
and the outcoupled atoms. We show that for experimentally reasonable parameters
that the quantum statistics of the optical field are almost completely
transferred to the outcoupled atoms, and investigate the robustness to the
coupling strength and the two-photon detuning.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted to Laser physics letter
Anomalous quantum reflection of Bose-Einstein condensates from a silicon surface: the role of dynamical excitations
We investigate the effect of inter-atomic interactions on the
quantum-mechanical reflection of Bose-Einstein condensates from regions of
rapid potential variation. The reflection process depends critically on the
density and incident velocity of the condensate. For low densities and high
velocities, the atom cloud has almost the same form before and after
reflection. Conversely, at high densities and low velocities, the reflection
process generates solitons and vortex rings that fragment the condensate. We
show that this fragmentation can explain the anomalously low reflection
probabilities recently measured for low-velocity condensates incident on a
silicon surface.Comment: 5 figures, 5 pages, references correcte
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