2,817 research outputs found
The Issues and Challenges of Assessing Media Literacy Education
In the media literacy literature, the challenges associated with assessment have, to a great extent, been ignored. The purpose of this mixed methods study was therefore to explore the views of media literacy scholars and professionals on assessment challenges through qualitative interviews (n = 10) with the intent of using this information to develop a quantitative survey to validate and extend the qualitative findings with a larger sample of media literacy professionals and scholars from around the world (n = 133). The findings offer an overview of the assessment challenges encountered by these participants
The Central Retail Food Market of Cleveland, Ohio
A study of the Central Retail Food Market in Cleveland, Ohio was made in 1947 at the request of Mayor Thomas A. Burke (Marketing and Facilities Research Branch 3 of the Production and Marketing Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture) to determine the public need for a new market. In the previous year the city had voted favorably on a bond issue of $1,000,000 for the relocation and rebuilding of the market, provided it could be made self-supporting in a reasonable length of time. The Central Market building, built in 1857 and occupied until December 1949, when it was destroyed by fire....The final determination of whether or not a new public retail market should be built in downtown Cleveland to replace Central Market will have to be made by city officials (excerpt from survey summary).https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks/1023/thumbnail.jp
Rydberg Wave Packets are Squeezed States
We point out that Rydberg wave packets (and similar ``coherent" molecular
packets) are, in general, squeezed states, rather than the more elementary
coherent states. This observation allows a more intuitive understanding of
their properties; e.g., their revivals.Comment: 7 pages of text plus one figure available in the literature, LA-UR
93-2804, to be published in Quantum Optics, LaTe
Exact results for `bouncing' Gaussian wave packets
We consider time-dependent Gaussian wave packet solutions of the Schrodinger
equation (with arbitrary initial central position, x_0, and momentum, p_0, for
an otherwise free-particle, but with an infinite wall at x=0, so-called
bouncing wave packets. We show how difference or mirror solutions of the form
psi(x,t)-psi(-x,t) can, in this case, be normalized exactly, allowing for the
evaluation of a number of time-dependent expectation values and other
quantities in closed form. For example, we calculate _t explicitly which
illustrates how the free-particle kinetic (and hence total) energy is affected
by the presence of the distant boundary. We also discuss the time dependence of
the expectation values of position, _t, and momentum, _t, and their
relation to the impulsive force during the `collision' with the wall. Finally,
the x_0,p_0 --> 0 limit is shown to reduce to a special case of a non-standard
free-particle Gaussian solution. The addition of this example to the literature
then expands on the relatively small number of Gaussian solutions to quantum
mechanical problems with familiar classical analogs (free particle, uniform
acceleration, harmonic oscillator, unstable oscillator, and uniform magnetic
field) available in closed form.Comment: 14 pages, 1 embedded .eps figur
Acid-Labile Traceless Click Linker for Protein Transduction
Intracellular delivery of active proteins presents an interesting approach in research and therapy. We created a protein transduction shuttle based on a new traceless click linker that combines the advantages of click reactions with implementation of reversible pH-sensitive bonds. The azidomethyl-methylmaleic anhydride (AzMMMan) linker was found compatible with different click chemistries, demonstrated in bioreversible protein modification with dyes, polyethylene glycol, or a transduction carrier. Linkages were stable at physiological pH but reversible at the mild acidic pH of endosomes or lysosomes. We show that pH-reversible attachment of a defined endosome-destabilizing three-arm oligo(ethane amino)amide carrier generates an effective shuttle for protein delivery. The cargo protein nlsEGFP, when coupled via the traceless AzMMMan linker, experiences efficient cellular uptake and endosomal escape into the cytosol, followed by import into the nucleus. In contrast, irreversible linkage to the same shuttle hampers nuclear delivery of nlsEGFP which after uptake remains trapped in the cytosol. Successful intracellular delivery of bioactive ß-galactosidase as a model enzyme was also demonstrated using the pH-controlled shuttle system
The Central Retail Food Market of Cleveland, Ohio
A study of the Central Retail Food Market in Cleveland, Ohio was made in 1947 at the request of Mayor Thomas A. Burke (Marketing and Facilities Research Branch 3 of the Production and Marketing Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture) to determine the public need for a new market. In the previous year the city had voted favorably on a bond issue of $1,000,000 for the relocation and rebuilding of the market, provided it could be made self-supporting in a reasonable length of time. The Central Market building, built in 1857 and occupied until December 1949, when it was destroyed by fire....The final determination of whether or not a new public retail market should be built in downtown Cleveland to replace Central Market will have to be made by city officials (excerpt from survey summary). Original publication date 1951.https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks/1023/thumbnail.jp
The Stark effect in linear potentials
We examine the Stark effect (the second-order shift in the energy spectrum
due to an external constant force) for two 1-dimensional model quantum
mechanical systems described by linear potentials, the so-called quantum
bouncer (defined by V(z) = Fz for z>0 and V(z) infinite for z<0) and the
symmetric linear potential (given by V(z) = F|z|). We show how straightforward
use of the most obvious properties of the Airy function solutions and simple
Taylor expansions give closed form results for the Stark shifts in both
systems. These exact results are then compared to other approximation
techniques, such as perturbation theory and WKB methods. These expressions add
to the small number of closed-form descriptions available for the Stark effect
in model quantum mechanical systems.Comment: 15 pages. To appear in Eur. J. Phys. Needs Institute of Physics
(iopart) style file
A unitary model for meson-nucleon scattering
In an effective Lagrangian model employing the K-matrix approximation we
extract nucleon resonance parameters. To this end we analyze simultaneously all
available data for reactions involving the final states , ,
and in the energy range GeV. The background contributions are generated consistently from the
relevant Feynman amplitudes, thus significantly reducing the number of free
parameters.Comment: Revised version. 60 pages, 17 figures. Two figures and a short
discussion (\pi N \to \eta N, K \Lambda amplitudes) added, typos and minor
errors in the citations correcte
Production, Decay, and Polarization of Excited Heavy Hadrons
We discuss the production via fragmentation of excited heavy mesons and
baryons, and their subsequent decay. In particular, we consider the question of
whether a net polarization of the initial heavy quark may be detected, either
in a polarization of the final ground state or in anisotropies in the decay
products of the excited hadron. The result hinges in part on a nonperturbative
parameter which measures the net transverse alignment of the light degrees of
freedom in the fragmentation process. We use existing data on charmed mesons to
extract this quantity for certain excited mesons. Using this result, we
estimate the polarization retention of charm and bottom baryons.Comment: 37 pages, 3 figures available upon request, uses phyzzx forma
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