3,920 research outputs found
Transportation Systems Evaluation
A methodology for the analysis of transportation systems consisting of five major interacting elements is reported. The analysis begins with the causes of travel demand: geographic, economic, and demographic characteristics as well as attitudes toward travel. Through the analysis, the interaction of these factors with the physical and economic characteristics of the transportation system is determined. The result is an evaluation of the system from the point of view of both passenger and operator. The methodology is applicable to the intraurban transit systems as well as major airlines. Applications of the technique to analysis of a PRT system and a study of intraurban air travel are given. In the discussion several unique models or techniques are mentioned: i.e., passenger preference modeling, an integrated intraurban transit model, and a series of models to perform airline analysis
Modern Michelson-Morley experiment using cryogenic optical resonators
We report on a new test of Lorentz invariance performed by comparing the
resonance frequencies of two orthogonal cryogenic optical resonators subject to
Earth's rotation over 1 year. For a possible anisotropy of the speed of light
c, we obtain 2.6 +/- 1.7 parts in 10^15. Within the Robertson-Mansouri-Sexl
test theory, this implies an isotropy violation parameter beta - delta - 1/2 of
-2.2 +/- 1.5 parts in 10^9, about three times lower than the best previous
result. Within the general extension of the standard model of particle physics,
we extract limits on 7 parameters at accuracies down to a part in 10^15,
improving the best previous result by about two orders of magnitude
Correlation analysis of stochastic gravitational wave background around 0.1-1Hz
We discuss prospects for direct measurement of stochastic gravitational wave
background around 0.1-1Hz with future space missions. It is assumed to use
correlation analysis technique with the optimal TDI variables for two sets of
LISA-type interferometers. The signal to noise for detection of the background
and the estimation errors for its basic parameters (amplitude, spectral index)
are evaluated for proposed missions.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, revised version, to appear in PR
Relativity tests by complementary rotating Michelson-Morley experiments
We report Relativity tests based on data from two simultaneous
Michelson-Morley experiments, spanning a period of more than one year. Both
were actively rotated on turntables. One (in Berlin, Germany) uses optical
Fabry-Perot resonators made of fused silica; the other (in Perth, Australia)
uses microwave whispering-gallery sapphire resonators. Within the standard
model extension, we obtain simultaneous limits on Lorentz violation for
electrons (5 coefficients) and photons (8) at levels down to ,
improved by factors between 3 and 50 compared to previous work.Comment: 5 pages revtex, 2 figure
From manuscript catalogues to a handbook of Syriac literature: Modeling an infrastructure for Syriaca.org
Despite increasing interest in Syriac studies and growing digital
availability of Syriac texts, there is currently no up-to-date infrastructure
for discovering, identifying, classifying, and referencing works of Syriac
literature. The standard reference work (Baumstark's Geschichte) is over ninety
years old, and the perhaps 20,000 Syriac manuscripts extant worldwide can be
accessed only through disparate catalogues and databases. The present article
proposes a tentative data model for Syriaca.org's New Handbook of Syriac
Literature, an open-access digital publication that will serve as both an
authority file for Syriac works and a guide to accessing their manuscript
representations, editions, and translations. The authors hope that by
publishing a draft data model they can receive feedback and incorporate
suggestions into the next stage of the project.Comment: Part of special issue: Computer-Aided Processing of Intertextuality
in Ancient Languages. 15 pages, 4 figure
What Makes the Difference
Reflections on a summer internship in the Chicago office of U.S. Senator Paul Simon
Arago (1810): the first experimental result against the ether
95 years before Special Relativity was born, Arago attempted to detect the
absolute motion of the Earth by measuring the deflection of starlight passing
through a prism fixed to the Earth. The null result of this experiment gave
rise to the Fresnel's hypothesis of an ether partly dragged by a moving
substance. In the context of Einstein's Relativity, the sole frame which is
privileged in Arago's experiment is the proper frame of the prism, and the null
result only says that Snell's law is valid in that frame. We revisit the
history of this premature first evidence against the ether theory and calculate
the Fresnel's dragging coefficient by applying the Huygens' construction in the
frame of the prism. We expose the dissimilar treatment received by the ray and
the wave front as an unavoidable consequence of the classical notions of space
and time.Comment: 16 pages. To appear in European Journal of Physic
pp Wave Big Bangs: Matrix Strings and Shrinking Fuzzy Spheres
We find pp wave solutions in string theory with null-like linear dilatons.
These provide toy models of big bang cosmologies. We formulate Matrix String
Theory in these backgrounds. Near the big bang ``singularity'', the string
theory becomes strongly coupled but the Yang-Mills description of the matrix
string is weakly coupled. The presence of a second length scale allows us to
focus on a specific class of non-abelian configurations, viz. fuzzy cylinders,
for a suitable regime of parameters. We show that, for a class of pp waves,
fuzzy cylinders which start out big at early times dynamically shrink into
usual strings at sufficiently late times.Comment: 29 pages, ReVTeX and AMSLaTeX. 4 Figures. v2: Typo corrected and
reference adde
Breaking the Silence: The role of gossip in organizational culture
From the early 1980s, the number of studies pertaining to organizational culture expanded considerably to the point where it could reasonably be argued that the field had reached a level of maturity. Perhaps indicative of this maturity was the publication of the first handbook of organizational culture and climate (Ashkanasy et al. 2000). The commencement of academic interest in the topic of organizational culture generally coincided with the publication of two books mainly aimed at practitioners—Peters and Waterman’s, In search of excellence (1982) and Deal and Kennedy’s, Corporate cultures: the rites and rituals of corporate life (1982). This is not to suggest that these books account exclusively for the intellectual curiosity generated in the function and purpose of culture for an organization as there were well-known examples which had earlier sought to address the issue of organizational cultures (e.g. Pettigrew 1979). Nonetheless, these tomes were influential in raising interest in, and scope for, research on organizational culture
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