2012-01-01
Mikhailovsky, Su Xu, A. Malko, J. A. Hollingsworth, C. A. Leatherdale, H.-J. Eisler , and M. G. Bawendi, “Optical Gain and Stimulated Emission in...electronics,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 2059 ( 1987 ). 5 S. John, “Strong localization of photons in certain disordered superlattices,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 2486... 1987 ). 6 J. D. Joannopoulos, R. D. Meade, and J. N. Winn, Photonic Crystals, Molding the Flow of Light (Princeton Univ. Press, 1995). 7 M
Joint University Program for Air Transportation Research, 1986
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Morrell, Frederick R. (Compiler)
1988-01-01
The research conducted under the NASA/FAA sponsored Joint University Program for Air Transportation Research is summarized. The Joint University Program is a coordinated set of three grants sponsored by NASA and the FAA, one each with the Mass. Inst. of Tech., Ohio Univ., and Princeton Univ. Completed works, status reports, and bibliographies are presented for research topics, which include computer science, guidance and control theory and practice, aircraft performance, flight dynamics, and applied experimental psychology. An overview of activities is presented.
On the Measurement of Morphology and Its Change.
1982-03-01
that transitions within the ceratopsian dinosaurs necessitated overly complex or impossible grid deformations. THETA-RHO ANALYSIS An alternative...1982, A robust comparison of the three dimensional configurations of protein molelcules. Tech. Rpt. 224, Ser. 2, Dept. Statistics Princeton Univ., 18 p
76 FR 59803 - Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-09-27
...,'' covering the ``myriad of computer and telecommunications facilities, including equipment and operating..., Dir. and Professor of Computer Sci. and Pub. Affairs, Princeton Univ. (currently Chief Technologist at... data in the manner of a personal computer. See Electronic Privacy Information Center (``EPIC...
Joint University Program for Air Transportation Research, 1987
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Morrell, Frederick R. (Compiler)
1989-01-01
The research conducted during 1987 under the NASA/FAA sponsored Joint University Program for Air Transportation Research is summarized. The Joint University Program is a coordinated set of 3 grants sponsored by NASA-Langley and the FAA, one each with the MIT, Ohio Univ., and Princeton Univ. Completed works, status reports, and annotated bibliographies are presented for research topics, which include computer science, guidance and control theory and practice, aircraft performance, flight dynamics, and applied experimental psychology. An overview of the year's activities for each university is also presented.
United Nations Intervention for Humanitarian Relief in Bosnia- Herzegovina
1993-02-22
govinan Corps I i~leca) 5th Mixed A.dr Peql ath Motorized Ode 149ithIME-dium AA Arty Regt’ (SA-6) 13th Motor- zeC Mde 5th Light A-A Arty Regt `145th...34 1. Carl Von Clausewitz, On War, Translated and Edited by Michael Howard and Peter Paret, (Princeton: Princeton University Press), p. 579. 2...Michael Howard and Peter Paret, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976. Cohen, Leonard J. "The Disintegration of Yugoslavia", Current History
In Defense of the Defense: The Continuing Political Value of Denial of Enemy Aims
2013-01-01
Propositions, 8–19, 28–40. 4. Carl von Clausewitz, On War, ed. and trans. Michael Howard and Peter Paret ( Prince - ton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976), 81...From Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986), 148, 154–55, 159, 161, 168–70, 174–75. 40. Clausewitz, On War
Toward economics as a new complex system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kaizoji, Taisei
2016-12-01
The 2015 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded to Eugene Fama, Lars Peter Hansen and Robert Shiller for their contributions to the empirical analysis of asset prices. Eugene Fama [J. Finance 25(2), 383 (1970)] is an advocate of the efficient market hypothesis. The efficient market hypothesis assumes that asset price is determined by using all available information and only reacts to new information not incorporated into the fundamentals. Thus, the movement of stock prices is unpredictable. Robert Shiller [ Irrational Exuberance (Princeton Univ. Press, 2015)] has been studying the existence of irrational bubbles, which are defined as the long term deviations of asset price from the fundamentals. This drives us to the unsettled question of how the market actually works. In this paper, I look back at the development of economics and consider the direction in which we should move in order to truly understand the workings of an economic society.
EFFECTS OF NATURAL AND FORCED BASEMENT VENTILATION ON RADON LEVELS IN SINGLE FAMILY DWELLINGS
The report gives, for the first time, results of an extensive study of the effect of ventilation on radon concentrations and radon entry rate in a single-family dwelling. Measurements of radon concentrations, building dynamics, and environmental parameters made in Princeton Unive...
Plasma Instabilities and Transport in the MPD Thruster
1993-06-01
driven plasma accelera- tion vesrus current-deiven energy dissipation Part III: anomalous trasnport . In 2 8’A Joint Propulsion Conference, Nashville... trasnport In the March/April Bi- monthly Progress Report of the Electric Propulsion and Plasma Dynamics Laboratory. Technical Report MAE 1776.36, EPPDyL, Princeton Univer- sity, 1992. 0 0
Probabilistic Structures of Modern Lottery Games
1981-05-01
credited with the development of probability theory. However, it is now believed that an Italian physician gambler, Cardano had given the elements of the...Translated and edited by S. Kotz). Academic Press, New York. Ore, 0. (1953). Cardano : The Gambling Scholar. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New
Cold War Conflict: American Intervention in Greece
1993-05-01
PR**E*L*U* D * * *A** R *A* *I*V**V PRELUDE TO AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT 7 The Greek Civil War cannot be understood simply by looking at the years 1947-1949...30 1. John 0. Iatrides, Ambassador MacVeagh Reports: Greece 1933-1947 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980), 8. 2. D . George Kousoulas...N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980), 376-377. 13. Ibid., 372. 14. R . Harris Smith, OSS: The Secret History of America’s First Central Intelligence
The Demands of Nuclear Safety: Mishaps and USSTRATCOM
2011-06-01
maintenance operation—the unexpected will occur. Scott D. Sagan On 30 August 2007 the unexpected occurred. Ironically, the safety problem did... Sagan , The Limits of Safety: Organizations, Accidents, and Nuclear Weapons (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993), 14, 48. 39 Sagan , Limits...1 Scott D. Sagan , The Limits of Safety: Organizations, Accidents, and Nuclear Weapons (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
French Nuclear Strategy in an Age of Terrorism
2006-12-01
PAGES 115 14. SUBJECT TERMS French Nuclear Strategy, Deterrence, Nuclear Doctrine, France , European Nuclear Deterrence, Franco-American Relations...Certain Idea of France (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993); Wilfrid L Kohl, French Nuclear Diplomacy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University...nuclear program. 1. A Nuclear France : Inception of the force de frappe The French nuclear program started during the Fourth Republic, immediately
Terrorism: A Selected Bibliography
2009-12-01
and the Courts. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. 319pp. (KF5060 .P67 2007) Ramsay , Maureen. "Can the Torture of Terrorist Suspects Be...Perceptions of the United States since 9/11. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007. 187pp. (E169.1 .W31 2007) Forest, James J. F . The Making of a...Anne Marie, and Paul F . Steinberg. The Road to Martyrs’ Square: A Journey into the World of the Suicide Bomber. New York: Oxford University Press
From Red Cliffs to Chosin: The Chinese Way of War
2010-05-01
Thinking, (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004), 1. 30 Thomas Cleary, trans., The Essential Tao: An Initiation into the Heart of Taoism Through...oversight methods that enabled fuller use of the land and greater food production, expanded industry and trade, and more effective conscription and...and trans. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976. Cleary, Thomas, trans. The Essential Tao: An Initiation into the Heart of Taoism Through
To Know Thy Enemy: Sociological Intelligence in Strategy development
2010-06-01
Military Adventure in Iraq. London: Allen Lane, 2006. Rokeach, Milton. The Nature of Human Values. New York: Free Press, 1973. Schelling, Thomas C ...his theories. See C . G. Jung, The Practice of Psychotherapy: Essays on the Psychology of the Transference and Other Subjects, trans. R. F. C . Hull...2nd ed., vol. 16, The Collected Works of C . G. Jung (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966). Maslow was an American psychologist renowned for
2007-05-17
10 Ibid., 532-533. 11 Ibid., 76. 12 James L. Gibson, John M. Ivancevich , and James H. Donnelly, Organizations, 3d ed...Nuclear Age. Edited by Peter Paret. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986. Gibson, James L., John M. Ivancevich and James H. Donnelly, Jr
Thornton, I W; Zann, R A; Rawlinson, P A; Tidemann, C R; Adikerana, A S; Widjoya, A H
1988-01-01
MacArthur and Wilson [MacArthur, R. H. & Wilson, E. O. (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography (Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, NJ)] used the rate of recolonization of the Krakatau Islands (sterilized in the cataclysmic 1883 eruption) by birds and vascular plants to test their equilibrium model of immigration and extinction processes on islands. Working with data only up to 1933, they concluded that the number of resident land bird species had approached equilibrium by 1908-1919, 25-36 years after the eruption, when the number of vascular plant species was still increasing. Recent surveys of vertebrates on the archipelago show continuing colonization, as well as species turnover. Nonmigrant nonmarine birds and reptiles are only now approaching equilibrium species numbers; archipelago acquisition rates for these groups are lower than in the 40 years following the 1883 eruption. Apparent (minimal) annual extinction rates are an order of magnitude lower than those calculated for equilibrium by MacArthur and Wilson. The active volcano Anak Krakatau emerged in 1930 and suffered an eruption in 1952 that destroyed the vegetation. It is still at an early stage of succession and on the threshold of major vegetational change. This island and a physically dynamic, ever-young spit on Sertung I, also held at an early successional stage, may provide (i) ecological refuges for some species whose optimal habitat on the older islands is being extirpated by vegetational succession and (ii) ecological "windows" through which such species may still establish from the mainland, thus postponing their extinction on the archipelago. PMID:3422440
The role of personality in the development and perpetuation of chronic fatigue syndrome.
White, C; Schweitzer, R
2000-06-01
Qualitative evidence suggests that personality may have special relevance to the predisposition, precipitation and perpetuation of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). This study compares three dimensions of personality - perfectionism, self-esteem, and emotional control in the personality profiles of CFS patients (N=44) and a control group (N=44) without a history of CFS, matched for age and gender. Participants were assessed on the MPS [Frost RO, Marten P, Lahart C, Rosenblate R. The dimensions of perfectionism. Cognit Ther Res 1990;14:449-468.]; the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale [Rosenberg M. Society and the Adolescent Self-image. Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ Press, 1965.]; the Courtauld Emotional Scale [Watson M, Greer S. Development of a questionnaire measure of emotional control. J Psychosom Res 1983;27:299-305.] and the Marlowe-Crowne Social Desirability Scale [Crowne DP, Marlowe D. A new scale of social desirability independent of psychopathology. J Consult Psychol 1960;24:349-354.]. Analyses revealed that the CFS group reported higher levels than the control group on the Total Perfectionism score and Doubts about Actions and the Concern over Mistakes subscales. Furthermore, the CFS group also reported lower self-esteem than the control group. No difference between the two groups was found on the dimensions of emotional control and social desirability response bias. A developmental model of CFS, which considers the predisposing, precipitating, and perpetuating factors that may account for the course of the disorder irrespective of etiology, is proposed. In the context of the results, recommendations for practice and future research are discussed.
Personality Traits of U.S. (United States) Army Prisoners
1983-03-25
scales from the Edwards Personal Preference Schedule (Edwards, 1959); Rosenberg’s (1965) Self - Esteem Scale; and Hudson’s (1974) Index of Self - Esteem were...Delinquency." Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1952, 16, 207-212. Hudson, W.W. Manual Index of Self - Esteem . Princeton: Educational Testing Service. Nie...M. Self - Esteem Scale. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965. Taylor, R.M. et al. Taylor-Johnson Temperament Analysis Manual. Los Angeles
Book review: Bovids of the World: Antelopes, gazelles, cattle, goats, sheep, and relatives
Leslie, David
2017-01-01
No abstract available.Book info: Bovids of the World: Antelopes, Gazelles, Cattle, Goats, Sheep, and Relatives. José R. Castelló. 2016. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, USA. 664 pp. ISBN 978-0-691-16717-6.
Models and Estimation Procedures for the Analysis of Subjects-by-Items Data Arrays.
1982-06-30
Conclusions and recommendations The usefulness of Tukey’s model for model-based psychological testing is probably greatest for analyses of responses which are...22314 National Institute of Education Attn: TC 1200 19th Street NW Washington, DC 20208 Dr. William Graham Testing Directorate 1 Dr. Lorraine D. Eyde ...Educational Testing Service 1 Dr. Norman Cliff Princeton, NJ 08450 Dept. of Psychology Univ. of So. California 1 Dr. Ina Bilodeau University Park
Complexity, Global Politics, and National Security
1997-01-01
behind the front lines. 26. The author is greatly indebted to his colleague (and wife) Harriet for her careful reading of the first draft leading to...Ecosystem. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1992. Ruelle, David. Chance and Chaos. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991. Sarigul-Klijn, Martinus M
Nuclear Deterrence in the 21st Century
2008-03-25
Freedman, Makers of Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), 735. 4 Carl von Clausewitz, On...26 Scott D. Sagan , "How to Keep the Bomb from Iran," Foreign Affairs 85, (September/October 2006): 45 27 Matthew Bunn, "Bombs We Can Stop
A Transformation Yielding an Additive Representation of Data in a Two-Way Array.
1980-08-15
Psychological Association 1200 17th Street N.W. 1 Dr. Gary Marco Washington, DC 20036 Educational Testing Service Princeton, NJ 08450 Dr. Wilson A. Judd...ADA,11 b6b PORTLAND STATE UNIV OR DEPT OF PSYCHOLOGY F/G 12/1 A TRANSFORMATION YILLDING AN ADDITIVE REPRESENTATION OF DATA IN--ETC(U) AUG bO J A PAUL...DATA IN A TWO-WAY ARRAY James A. Paulson Psychology Department Portland State University Approved for public release; distribution unlimited
Final Report on A. R. A. P.’s Model for the Atmospheric Marine Environment
1982-01-01
Around Airports," NASA CR-2752, prepared by A.R.A.P. for Marshall Space Center. 25. Brost , R.A. and Wyngaard, N.C., 1978: "A Model Study of the...FRANCE DR. R. A. BROST NCAR P.O. BOX 3000 BOULDER, CO 80307 JOHNS HOPKINS UNIV. APPLIED PHYSICS LAB R.E. GIBSON LIBRARY JOHNS HOPKINS ROAD...RESEARCH LABS BOULDER, CO 80303 DR. GEORGE L. HELLOR GEOPHYSICAL FLUID DYNAMICS LAE PRINCETON, NJ 08540 DR. TETSUJI YAMADA LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LAB
The wave-equivalent of the Black-Scholes option price: an interpretation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Haven, Emmanuel
2004-12-01
We propose an interpretation of the wave-equivalent of the Black-Scholes option price. We consider Nelson's version of the Brownian motion (Dynamical Theories of Brownian Motion, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1967) and we use this specific motion as an input to produce a Black-Scholes PDE with a risk premium.
A Cognitive Model for Exposition of Human Deception and Counterdeception
1987-10-01
for understanding deception and counterdeceptlon, for developing related tactics, and for stimulating research in cognitive processes. Further...Processing Resources; Attention) BUFFER MEMORY MANAGER (Local) (Problem Solving; Learning; Procedures) BUFFER MEMORY SENSORS Visual, Auditory ...Perception and Misperception in International Politics, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1976. Key, W.B., Subliminal Seduction. New
2006-06-01
New York, NY: Pleiades Publishing, 2004), 1-16. 148 Fukuyama, Francis. The End of History and the Last Man (New York, NY: The Free Press, 1992...New York, NY: Pleiades Publishing, 2004. Clausewitz, Carl von. On War. trans. by Michael Howard and Peter Paret. Princeton, NJ: Princeton
1990-07-01
Participation of Married Women: A Study of Labor Supply," in NBER, Aspects of Labor Economics , Princeton: Princeton University Press. 8. (1975). "The...Carolina. 11. Rosen, Sherwin (1977). "Human Capital: A Survey of Empirical Research," in Ehrenberg, R., ed., Research in Labor Economics , Vol. 1
2010-06-11
Makers of Modern Strategy: from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, ed. Peter Paret (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986), 102-104. 5 Common...Strategy in the Age of Machine Warfare, 1914-1945,” in Makers of Modern Strategy: from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, ed. Peter Paret (Princeton, NJ...4142, folder 6, file 2, p3., in Rawling , Surviving Trench Warfare: Technology and the Canadian Corps, 1914-1918, 162. 154HQ, 12th Canadian
Enhancing Teachers’ Skills for Executive Level Seminars
1992-02-21
Washington: GPO, 19 Jun 1987) 2. 51bid. 3. 6The metaphor of a "lens" for "frame of reference" is taken from Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People , (New...Howard and P. Paret, Trans & Eds.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. Covey, S.R. (1989). The 7 habits of highly effective people . New York
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
A book review is presented for “Beetles of Eastern North America” by Arthur V. Evans. This 560 page book was published in 2014 and treats over 1,400 species of beetles distributed in eastern North America....
2010-09-01
genetic relationships between kin.33 Regardless of the underlying mechanism, individual symbiotic relationships can confer multiple benefits to the...allocation guidelines for homeland security and emergency management policymakers. The framework provides an operationally relevant rubric for...S. Wells, The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002). 4 A. Jakubowicz, “Anglo-multiculturalism
Specialized Silicon Compilers for Language Recognition.
1984-07-01
realizations of non-deterministic automata have been reported that solve these problems in diffierent ways. Floyd and Ullman [ 281 have presented a...in Applied Mathematics, pages 19-31. American Mathematical Society, 1967. [ 281 Floyd, R. W. and J. D. Ullman. The Compilation of Regular Expressions...Shannon (editor). Automata Studies, chapter 1, pages 3-41. Princeton University Press, Princeton. N. J., 1956. [44] Kohavi, Zwi . Switching and Finite
Bosnia: A Question of Intervention
1993-05-10
to Influence Events: Realpolitik Chancellor Otto von Bismarck was the most easily identifiable practioner of the use of military force to shape...Islamic tidal wave smashed into Europe as the Ottoman Turks overwhelmed the Balkan states; ’ Carl von Clausewitz, On War (Princeton: Princeton... Falk , ed., The Law of Intervention in Civil War (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1971). 17 can be defined as the absence of violence. To
The Assessment of Habit Disorders: A Tripartite Perspective in Measuring Change.
1982-08-01
blood carbon monoxide levels which is discussed below (Paxton & Bernacca, 1979; Russell & Feyerabend , 1975). The advantages to the urinary nicotine...nicotine in the blood or urine (Russell & Feyerabend , 1975). Zeidenberg, Jaffe, Kanzler, Levitt, Langone, and Van Vunakis (1977) have proposed the...Rosenberg, M. Society and the adolescent self-image. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965. Russell, M. A., & Feyerabend , C. Blood and urinary
Ambiguity and Uncertainty in Probabilistic Inference.
1984-06-01
Bulletin, 1967, 68, 29-46. *Rappoport, A., a Wllston, T. S . *individual decision behavior . Annual Review of Psychology, 1972, 23, 131-176. * Savage, L... Behavior and Human Performance, 1973, 10 40-423. Shafer , G. A. A mathematical theory of evidence. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976.- *~-7... S . Comparison of Bayesian and regression approaches to the study of information processing in judgment. Organizational Behavior and Human
Collisional and Dynamical Evolution of Planetary Systems
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Weidenschilling, Stuart J.
2004-01-01
Senior Scientst S. J. Weidenschilling presents his final administrative report in the research program entitled "Collisional and Dynamical Evolution of Planetary Systems," on which he was the Principal Investigator. This research program produced the following publications: 1) "Jumping Jupiters" in binary star systems. F. Marzari, S. J. Weidenschilling, M. Barbieri and V. Granata. Astrophys. J., in press, 2005; 2) Formation of the cores of the outer planets. To appear in "The Outer Planets" (R. Kallenbach, ED), ISSI Conference Proceedings (Space Sci. Rev.), in press, 2005; 3) Accretion dynamics and timescales: Relation to chondrites. S. J. Weidenschilling and J. Cuzzi. In Meteorites and the Early Solar System LI (D. Lauretta et al., Eds.), Univ. of Arizona Press, 2005; 4) Asteroidal heating and thermal stratification of the asteroid belt. A. Ghosh, S. J.Weidenschilling, H. Y. McSween, Jr. and A. Rubin. In Meteorites and the Early Solar System I1 (D. Lauretta et al., Eds.), Univ. of Arizona Press, 2005.
Impact Assessment In Special Warfare
2017-12-01
Field Experiment with High -Risk Men in a Fragile State,” American Political Science Review 110, no. 1 (2016): 1-17. 47 Christopher Paul, "Foundations...responsibilities that, when performed in an integrated way, create a powerful reinforcing effect that builds trust in the system as a whole.83 These... When States Fail : Causes and Consequences, ed. Robert I. Rotberg (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004). 85 Meierhenrich, “Forming States,” 156
Challenging Minimum Deterrence: Articulating the Contemporary Relevance of Nuclear Weapons
2016-07-13
Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident , and the Illusion of Safety (New York: Penguin Press, 2013), 484. 36. Keir A. Lieber and...Remembrance of Things Past,” 78. 53. Scott D. Sagan, The Limits of Safety: Organizations, Accidents , and Nuclear Weapons (Princeton, NJ: Princeton...16 | Air & Space Power Journal Challenging Minimum Deterrence Articulating the Contemporary Relevance of Nuclear Weapons Maj Joshua D. Wiitala, USAF
Evolving Agents: Communication and Cognition
2005-06-01
systems [11] and the first Chomsky ideas concerning mechanisms of language grammar related to deep structure [12] encountered CC of rules. Model-based...Perennial (2000) 3. Jackendoff, R.: Foundations of Language: Brain, Meaning, Grammar , Evolution. Oxford University Press, New York, NY (2002) 4. Pinker, S... University Press, Princeton, NJ (1961) 11. Minsky, M.L.: Semantic Information Processing. The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA (1968) 12. Chomsky , N
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gabrick, Andrea
2002-01-01
Presents an interview on student newspapers with Bob Durkee, vice president for public affairs at Princeton University, about how his experience as a student reporter and editor has influenced his views as an administrator, what has changed over the years, and how he manages and interacts with a vigorous student press. (EV)
Office of Strategic Services Training during World War II
2010-06-01
First Central Intelligence Agency (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972); Thomas F. Troy, Donovan and the CIA: A History of the...William E. Colby Papers, Box 14, Folder 7, Seeley G. Mudd Library, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jer- sey. 50. Gerald K. Haines, “Virginia...subject heading] 29 January 1945, 2–3, CIA Records (RG 263), Thomas Troy Files, Box 6, Folder 46, National Archives, II. In August 2008, the
Sword Paper. Strategic Country Assessment, El Salvador
1988-02-04
de la Guerra y sus Perspectivas," ECA, Estudios Centroamericanos, (#449, marzo 1986), pp. 169-204. Also see: "The Role of Unity in the Revolutionary...War, edited and translated by Michael Howard and Peter Paret, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976 ), p. 597. 10 _ - .. ".. _ "".. ."N...consideration and the highest priority in the present and in future counterinsurgency efforts. * Joaquin Villalobos, "El Estado Actual de la Guerra y sus
1978-09-01
international law like Hans Kelsen argued that the U.N. Charter itself, which partially grew out of the experience of the League of Nations and the...by Thomas Nagel (Princeton: Princeton University Press, ]974), p. 139.. 2Hans Kelsen , The Law of Nations (London: 1950), p. 29. 3 3Quoted in Heribert
Cyberwar: Are Civilians Back on the Battlefield
2015-02-17
long before the Wright brothers finally achieved it in 1903. States, having experienced balloons and anticipating the advent of other forms of...flight, agreed in the 1899 Hague Convention to “prohibit, for a term of five years, the launching of projectiles and explosives from balloons , or by...Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976), 87. 8Friedman, The Law of War, xiii. 9 Paul J. Springer, America’s Captives : Treatment of POWs
Surface Warfare Junior Officer Retention; Spouses’ Influence on Career Decisions
1981-08-01
1974), and (4) Self - esteem ( Rosenberg , 1965 ). In November 1978, the survey questionnaire was mailed to a random sample of 691 male surface warfare... Rosenberg , M. Society and the adolescent self -image. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1965 . 29 ___________ Stumpf, S. 5., & Kieckhaefer, N...these services with no loss in st.- is or self - esteem . If this approach is not sLIccessful, a separate branch of Family Service. may be required
The Post-9/11 American Serviceman
2010-01-01
their own unique ways. A clear majority in the military adhere to a decidedly Judeo- Christian worldview, which holds a belief in a higher power...military have with the Republican Party is a marked example of a Judeo- Christian worldview set to politics. It is an affiliation that crosses the...Battles (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004). 5 Sean Alfano , “Rangel Will Push to Bring Back the Draft,” November 20, 2006, available at
Understanding Indian Insurgencies: Implications for Counterinsurgency Operations in the Third World
2005-12-01
contested area (e.g., Lenin in France and Austria, Sun Yat- Sen in Japan, Fidel Castro in Mexico, Che Guevara in Mexico, Hekmatyar in Pakistan, and Ho Chi...Princeton University Press. Sageman, M. (2004). Understanding terror networks. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. Sen , A. (1999). World
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Intemann, Kristen
2008-11-01
Recent feminist philosophers of science have argued that feminist values can contribute to rational decisions about which scientific theories to accept. On this view, increasing the number of feminist scientists is important for ensuring rational and objective theory acceptance. The Underdetermination Thesis has played a key role in arguments for this view [Anderson (1995) Hypatia 10(3), 50 84; Hankinson Nelson (1990) Who knows? From Quine to a feminist empiricism. Temple University Press, Philadelphia; Longino (1990) Science as social knowledge. Princeton University Press, Princeton; Longino (2002) The fate of knowledge. Princeton University Press, Princeton; Kourany (2003) Philosophy of Science 70, 1 14]. This thesis is alleged to open an argumentative “gap” between evidence and theory acceptance and provide a rationale for filling the gap with feminist values. While I agree with the conclusion that feminist values can contribute to rational decisions about which theories to accept, I argue that the Underdetermination Thesis cannot support this claim. First, using earlier arguments [Laudan (1990) in: R. Giere (ed) Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science, vol 14, pp 267 297; Slezak (1991) International Studies in Philosophy of Science 5, 241 256; Pinnick (1994) Philosophy of Science 61, 664 657] I show that Underdetermination cannot, by itself, establish that feminist values should fill the gap in theory acceptance. Secondly, I argue that the very use of the Underdetermination Thesis concedes that feminist values are extra-scientific, a-rational, factors in theory acceptance. This concession denies feminists grounds to explain why their values contribute to rational scientific reasoning. Finally, I propose two alternative ways to explain how feminist values can contribute to rational theory acceptance that do not rely on Underdetermination.
Illustrative Examples of Principal Component Analysis using SPSS-X/FACTOR.
1987-06-26
south of the Third #rmv §*ctar. Montoomer. al O ordered LTG J. Lawton Collins. VII Corps commander, to be precared to counterattaci south as soon as the...Ike Plan to Blame Montgomery For ’Bulge’ Defeat?" Article form The Dail Progress, Charlottesville. Virginia. May 2 and 3. 1976, p. 16-17. OOJ. Lawton ...Clausewitz. Carl von. On War. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 1184. Collins. J. Lawton . Lightning Joe. Baton Rouae: Louisiana State University
A Build-Up Interior Method for Linear Programming: Affine Scaling Form
1990-02-01
initiating a major iteration imply convergence in a finite number of iterations. Each iteration t of the Dikin algorithm starts with an interior dual...this variant with the affine scaling method of Dikin [5] (in dual form). We have also looked into the analogous variant for the related Karmarkar’s...4] G. B. Dantzig, Linear Programming and Extensions (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1963). [5] I. I. Dikin , "Iterative solution of
The Russo-Japanese War, Lessons Not Learned
2003-05-06
USACGSC, August, 2002), CR3.7-1--CR3.7-14; Michael Howard , “Men Against Fire, Expectations of War in 1914,” International Security (Summer 1984): 41-57...169; Carl von Clausewitz, On War, trans. and ed. Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984), 37-38. 8Service in...Cleator, P. Weapons of War. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1967. Clausewitz, Carl von. On War. Edited and translated by Michael Howard and
A Search for Warriors: The Effects of Technology on the Air Force Ethos
1997-04-01
quoted by Oberstleutnant Peter F. Hauser, and Lt Col John Rawls , C., and Maj. John C. Ornduff, “Lessons from the Kriegsakademie: A Reflection of the...Engagement: A Vision for the 21st Century Air Force. Washington DC: Headquarters USAF, November 1996. Hauser, Oberstleutnant Peter F., and Rawls , Lt Col...Modern Strategy from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age. Princeton, NJ.: Princeton University Press, 1986. “Recent Space Issues and Development.” Air Force
Confederate Staff Work At Chickamauga: An Analysis of the Staff of the Army of Tennessee.
1992-06-05
Strategy: from Machiavelli to the Nuclear Age, Peter Paret, ed., (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), 143-185, presents an excellent summary...Lieut. P. B. Spence Asst. Inspector General Lieut. John Rawle Acting Chief of Ordnance Capt Felix H. Robertson Acting Chief of Artillery Maj. J. J...F. Sevier Asst. Inspector General Lieut. P. B. Spence Asst. Inspector General Lieut. John Rawle Acting Chief of Ordnance Lt. Col. Marshall T. Polk
The Challenge of Adaptation: The US Army in the Aftermath of Conflict, 1953-2000
2008-03-01
on U.S. National Security Strategy, 21 June 2001, pp.4-5. Chaired by Senator Carl Levin (D-MI). Retrieved from LexisNexis Congressional Search...and Scott D. Sagan , Moving Targets: Nuclear Strategy and National Security (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989). 4. Boyd L. Dastrup, The...KS: Combat Studies Institute, July 1980), available at: http://www. cgsc.army.mil/ carl /resources/csi/heller2/heller2.asp. 13. Condit, HOSD, v.II: The
BG J. Franklin Bell and the Practice of Operational Art in the Philippines, 1901-1902
2011-12-01
direction sequentially: I expect to first clean out the wide Loboo Peninsula south of Batangas, Tiasan, and San Juan de Boc road. I shall then move...in the vicinity of San Pablo, Alaminos, Tanauan, and Santo Tomas will be scoured, ending at Mount Maquiling, which will then be thoroughly searched...on Samar 1901-1902." Army History, Spring 2011: 31-46. Clausewitz, Carl von. On War. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989. De Toy
Resource Conflicts: Emerging Struggles over Strategic Commodities in Latin America. Phase 2
2012-10-01
Madre de Dios , between local communities and Mobil, which sought to develop a natural gas project. In the late 1990s, the audiencia for that project was...for instance, that Grupo de México is not a member of the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM), created in 2001 “to advance the mining...Experiment Reconsidered, ed. Cynthia McClintock and Abraham F. Lowenthal (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983), 187–192. 7 Comisión de la Verdad
Reconstitution as a Guiding Principle to US Army Force Structure: High Risk or Prudent Hedge?
2014-05-20
timely manner.”18 Marvin Kreidberg and Merton Henry’s classic survey of military mobilization from the nation’s inception through the end of World War...treasure. In their comprehensive review of US Army Mobilization from 1775 to 1945, Army Officers Marvin Kreidberg and Merton Henry note "it has been...Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1956. Kreidberg, Marvin A. and Merton G. Henry. History of Military Mobilization in the United States Army
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Joppa, R. G.
1973-01-01
A problem associated with the wind tunnel testing of very slow flying aircraft is the correction of observed pitching moments to free air conditions. The most significant effects of such corrections are to be found at moderate downwash angles typical of the landing approach. The wind tunnel walls induce interference velocities at the tail different from those induced at the wing, and these induced velocities also alter the trajectory of the trailing vortex system. The relocated vortex system induces different velocities at the tail from those experienced in free air. The effect of the relocated vortex and the walls is to cause important changes in the measured pitching moments in the wind tunnel.
Fractionation and Accretion of Meteorite Parent Bodies
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Weidenschilling, Stuart J.
2005-01-01
Senior Scientist Stuart J. Weidenschilling presents his final administrative report for the research program on which he was the Principal Investigator. The research program resulted in the following publications: 1) Particle-gas dynamics and primary accretion. J. N. Cuzzi and S. J . Weidenschilling. To appear in Meteorites and the Early Solar System 11 (D. Lauretta et a]., Eds.), Univ. Arizona Press. 2005; 2) Timescales of the solar protoplanetary disk. S. Russell, L. Hartmann, J . N. Cuzzi, A. Krot, M. Gounelle and S. J. Weidenschilling. To appear in Meteorites and the Early Solar System II (D. Lauretta et al., Eds.), Univ. Arizona Press, 2005; 3) Nebula evolution of thermally processed solids: Reconciling astrophysical models and chondritic meteorites. J. N. Cuzzi, F. J. Ciesla, M. I. Petaev, A. N. Krot, E. R. D. Scott and S . J. Weidenschilling. To appear in Chondrites and the Protoplanetary Disk (A. Krot et a]., Eds.), ASP Conference Series, 2005; 4) Possible chondrule formation in planetesimal bow shocks: Physical processes in the near vicinity of the planetesimal. L. L. Hood, F. J. Ciesla and S. J. Weidenschilling. To appear in Chondrites and the Protoplanetary Disk (A. Krot et al., Eds.), ASP Conference Series, 2005; 5) From icy grains to comets. In Comets II (M. Festou et al., Eds.), Univ. Arizona Press, pp. 97- 104, 2005; 6) Evaluating planetesimal bow shocks as sites for chondrule formation. F. J . Ciesla, L. L. Hood and S. J. Weidenschilling. Meteoritics & Planetary Science 39, 1809-1 821, 2004; and 7) Radial drift of particles in the solar nebula: Implications for planetesimal formation. Icarus 165, 438-442, 2003.
1983-05-01
and Feyerabend (1970) have pointed out, such generalizations are, particularly early on, maintained in the face of falsifying evidence. That is, they... Feyerabend , P. (1970) Against method. In Studies in the philosonhy of science, ed. Radner & Winokur, 17-130. Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota Press. Finetti
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Solomon, Robert C.
2007-01-01
So opined Adam Cohen recently in the "International Herald Tribune", and so, too, according to a recent book by Joshua Foa Dienstag, a political scientist at the University of California at Los Angeles, "Pessimism: Philosophy, Ethic, Spirit "(Princeton University Press, 2006). In his defense of pessimism as an appropriate and realistic philosophy,…
Hezbollah: Psychological Warfare Against Israel
2009-03-01
Lebanese State” in Political Islam: Essays from the Middle East Report, ed. Joel Beinin and Joe Stork (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press 1997... lyrics : It is my right to defend my land and kick out occupiers; it is my right to declare my freedom and raise a flag for the oppressed; it is my...International Journal of Press/Politics 12 (2007): 43-66. Kfoury, Assaf. "Hizb Allah and the Lebanese State." In Political Islam: Essays from the
Orbiting Astronomical Observatory-C (OAO-C): Press kit
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Allaway, H. G.
1972-01-01
Mission planning for the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory-C (OAO-C) is presented. The characteristics of the observatory and its capabilities are described. The following experiments are discussed: (1) Princeton Experiment Package, (2) X-ray experiment, and (3) guest investigator program. Results of the OAO-2 observatory are presented. A tabulation of flight events is included.
AFIT/AFOSR Workshop on the Role of Wavelets in Signal Processing Applications
1992-08-28
Stein and G. Weiss, "Fourier analysis on Eucildean spaces," Princeton University Press, 1971. [V] G. Vitali, Sulla condizione di chiusura di un sistema ...present the more general framework into wavelets fit, suggesting hence companion ways of time-scale analysis for self-similar and 1/f-type processes
Evolution of Earth&'s Atmosphere and Climate
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kasting, J. F.
2004-12-01
Earth's climate prior to 2.5 Ga seems to have been, if anything, warmer than today (1,2), despite the faintness of the young Sun (3). The idea that the young Sun was 25-30 percent less bright has been bolstered by data on mass loss from young, solar-type stars (4). Sagan and Mullen (1) suggested many years ago that the warming required to offset low solar luminosity was provided by high concentrations of reduced greenhouse gases. Ammonia has since been shown to be photochemically unstable in low-O2 atmospheres (5), but methane is a viable candidate. Methane photolyzes only at wavelengths shorter than 145 nm, so it is long-lived in the absence of O2 and O3. Furthermore, it is produced by anaerobic bacteria (methanogens) that are thought to have evolved early in Earth history (6). A biological methane flux comparable to today's flux, ~500 Tg CH4/yr, could have been generated by methanogens living in an anaerobic early ocean and sediments (7). This flux should have increased once oxygenic photosynthesis evolved because of increased production and recycling of organic matter (8). An Archean methane flux equal to today's flux could have generated atmospheric CH4 concentrations in excess of 1000 ppmv (9). This, in turn, could have provided 30 degrees or more of greenhouse warming (10) enough to have kept the early Earth warm even if atmospheric CO2 was no higher than today. All of this does not imply that CO2 concentrations must have been low throughout the Archean. Indeed, siderite-coated stream pebbles imply that pCO2 was greater than 2.5,e10-3 bar, or ~7 times present, at 3.2 Ga (11). Atmospheric CO2 could have been much higher than this if the continents had formed slowly (12) and/or if subduction of carbonates was inhibited (13). The rise in O2 at ~2.3 Ga (14,15) brought an end to the methane greenhouse and may have triggered the Huronian glaciation (10). Although methane concentrations declined with the rise of O2, they may still have remained much higher than today throughout much of the Proterozoic. High methane production rates in marine sediments underlying a sulfidic Proterozoic deep ocean (16) could have generated methane fluxes several times higher than today (17). The response of atmospheric CH4 to its input flux is nonlinear, so Proterozoic CH4 concentrations of 50-100 ppmv are not implausible (ibid.) A rise in either atmospheric O2 or oceanic sulfate near the end of the Proterozoic could have caused CH4 concentrations to decrease a second time and may have triggered the "Snowball Earth" glaciations (18). References: 1. Sagan, C. and Mullen G. Science 177, 52 (1972). 2. Walker, J. C. G. et al. In Schopf, J. W., ed., Earth's Earliest Biosphere: Its Origin and Evolution, p. 260, Princeton, NJ, Princeton Univ. Press (1983). 3. Gough, D.O. Solar Phys. 74, 21 (1981). 4. Wood, B.E. et al., Ap. J. 574, 412 (2002). 5. Kuhn, W.R. and Atreya, S.K. Icarus 37, 207 (1979). 6. Woese, C.R. and Fox, G.E. PNAS 74, 5088 (1977). 7. Kharecha, P. et al., Geobiol. (sub.). 8. Catling, D.C. et al., Science 293, 839 (2001). 9. Pavlov, A.A. et al., JGR 106, 23,267 (2001). 10. Pavlov, A.A., et al., JGR 105, 11,981 (2000). 11. Hessler, A.M., et al., Nature 428, 736 (2004). 12. Walker, J.C.G. Orig. of Life 16, 117 (1985). 13. Sleep, N.H. et al., PNAS 98, 3666 (2001). 14. Holland, H. D. In Early Life on Earth, p. 237, New York, Columbia Univ. Press (1994). 15. Farquhar, J. et al., Science 289, 756 (2000). 16. Canfield, D.E. Nature 396, 450 (1998). 17. Pavlov, A.A. et al., Geol. 31, 87 (2003). 18. Hoffman, P.F., et al., Science 281, 1342 (1998).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Dicarlo, D. J.
1971-01-01
Lateral-directional dynamic stability derivatives are presented for a O.1-scale model of the XC-142A tilt-wing transport. The tests involved various descending flight conditions achieved at constant speed and wing incidence by varying the vehicle angle of attack. The propeller blade angle and the speed were also changed in the steepest descent case. The experimental data were analyzed assuming that the dynamic motions of the vehicle may be described by linearized equations, with the lateral-directional characteristics of the full-scale aircraft also presented and discussed. Results from this experimental investigation indicated that the full-scale aircraft would have a stable lateral-directional motion in level flight, with the dynamic motion becoming less stable as the descent angle was increased.
Commission 45: Spectral Classification
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Giridhar, Sunetra; Gray, Richard O.; Corbally, Christopher J.; Bailer-Jones, Coryn A. L.; Eyer, Laurent; Irwin, Michael J.; Kirkpatrick, J. Davy; Majewski, Steven; Minniti, Dante; Nordström, Birgitta
This report gives an update of developments (since the last General Assembly at Prague) in the areas that are of relevance to the commission. In addition to numerous papers, a new monograph entitled Stellar Spectral Classification with Richard Gray and Chris Corbally as leading authors will be published by Princeton University Press as part of their Princeton Series in Astrophysics in April 2009. This book is an up-to-date and encyclopedic review of stellar spectral classification across the H-R diagram, including the traditional MK system in the blue-violet, recent extensions into the ultraviolet and infrared, the newly defined L-type and T-type spectral classes, as well as spectral classification of carbon stars, S-type stars, white dwarfs, novae, supernovae and Wolf-Rayet stars.
Theoretical Study of Laser-Induced Surface Excitations on a Grating.
1984-11-01
Physical Review B, in press THEORETICAL STUDY OF LASER-INDUCED SURFACE EXCITATIONS ON A GRATING Ki-Tung Lee and Thomas F. George Department of Chemistr ...Pennsylvania 16802 Dr. T. F. Geor Dr. G. 0. Stein Chemistr artment Mechanical Engineering DepartmentUnivs ty of Rochester Northwestern University ester, New
Aerodynamics Education: Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going
2013-06-24
2661. June 1992. 3 Kroo. I.. "Aerodynamic Analyses for Design and Education ... AIAA Paper 92-2664 . . lune 1992. 12 American Institute of Aeronautics...Paper 98-2792 . . lune 1998. 13 Anderson. J.D .. A l-/ist01y <~/Aero<~wwmics. Cambridge Univers ity Press. Cambridge. 1998. 14http
1977-12-21
sections of the CSP ( Thordarson and others, 1967; Figure 8). Interbedded materials consist of agglomerates, air-fall and ash-flow tuffs which are welded to...of Economic Geology, 1977, Land resource map of Texas: Bur. Econ. Geol., Univ. Texas, Austin, Texas. (in press). Thordarson , W., Young, R.A., and
Separating Belligerent Populations: Mitigating Ethno-Sectarian Conflict
2008-05-22
Princeton University Press, 2003), 132-33. 6 The very idea of reconciliation, much less any return to a state of peaceful, intergrated coexistence...threaten the environment. Such conflicts also threaten international access to natural resources and the security of trade distribution infrastructure...criticize separation because it creates more economic and social problems. Lack of trade and economic opportunity in isolated ethnic enclaves results
Germania Quo Vadis?: Dynamics of Change in German Security Policy
2007-06-01
Keohane, Robert O., Michael Brecher and Frank Harveys, eds. Institutional Theory in international Relations. In: Millennial Reflections on International...Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy, (Princeton University Press, 1984), pp. 78-109; Robert O. Keohane, “ Institutional ... Theory in international Relations,” in Michael Brecher and Frank Harveys, eds., Millennial Reflections on International Studies (University of Michigan
Valuation of Real Options as Competitive Prototyping in System Development
2014-07-01
Brealey & Meyers, 2000; Dixit & Pindyck, 1994; Kulatilaka, 1995; Lander, 1997; Lander & Pinches, 1998; McDonald, 2006; Quigg, 1993; Teisberg, 1995...Brennan & Trigeorgis, 2000; Dixit & Pindyck, 1994; Kemna, 1993; Miller & Lessard, 2000; Trigeorgis, 1995). Examples include valuation of options to... Dixit , A. K., & Pindyck, R. S. (1994). Investment under uncertainty. NJ: Princeton University Press. Ford, D. N., & Bhargav, S. (2006, Spring). Project
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Perla, Rocco J.; Carifio, James
2007-01-01
Princeton University Press recently published the American moral philosopher Harry Frankfurt's book "On Bullshit", which quickly made the New York Times best seller list. Originally published in the journal "Raritan" in 1986, Frankfurt's book has been heralded as an important theoretical development in the study of what he (and society)…
2008-02-01
Starfish and the Spider (New York: Penguin Group, 2006); Richard Dawkins , The Selfish Gene (Oxford: Oxford Univer- sity Press, 1976). See also Nassim...with a certain combination of genes . In COIN, it is even harder to estimate the payoff associated with killing one rebellion member or winning over one
CME Research and Space Weather Support for the SECCHI Experiments on the STEREO Mission
2014-01-14
Corbett, ed., Cambridge Univ. Press (2010) Kahler, S.W. and D. F. Webb, "Tracking Nonradial Motions and Azimuthal Expansions of Interplanetary CME...Imaging and In-situ Data from LASCO, STEREO and SMEI", Bull. AAS, 41(2), p. 855, 2009. Kahler S. and D. Webb, "Tracking Nonradial Motions and
Network Dynamics: Modeling And Generation Of Very Large Heterogeneous Social Networks
2015-11-23
P11035 (2014). [19] P. L. Krapivsky and S. Redner, Phys. Rev. E. 71, 036118 (2005). [20] M. O. Jackson and B. W. Rogers, Amer. Econ . Rev. 97, 890...P06004 (2010). [24] M. E. J. Newman, Networks: An Introduction (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 2010). [25] P. J. Flory, Principles of Polymer Chemistry
Probing Nanoscale Ferroelectricity by Ultraviolet Raman Spectroscopy
2006-09-15
Breaking the Maya Code (Thames & Hudson, London, rev. ed., 1999), p. 13. 11. S. D. Houston, M. D. Coe, Mexicon 25, 151 (2004). 12. K. A. Taube...in Olmec Art and Archaeology in Mesoamerica, J. E. Clark, M. E. Pye, Eds. (Yale Univ. Press, New Haven, CT, 2000), pp. 75–93. 19. K. H. Basso, N
Development of ISO connection-oriented/correctionless gateways
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Landweber, Lawrence H.
1991-01-01
The project had two goals, establishment of a gateway between French and U.S. academic networks and studies of issues related to the development of ISO connection-oriented/connectionless (CO/CL) gateways. The first component involved installation of a 56K bps line between Princeton Univ. and INRIA in France. The end-points of these lines were connected by Vitalink link level bridges. The Princeton end was then connected to the NSFNET via the John Von Neumann Supercomputer Center. The French end was connected to Transpac, the French X.25 public data network and to the French IP research internet. U.S. users may communicate with users of the French internet by e-mail and may access computational and data resources in France by use of remote login and file transfer. The connection to Transpac enables U.S. users to access the SIMBAD astronomical database outside of Paris. Access to this database from the U.S. can be via TCP/IP or DECNET (via a DECNET to TCP/IP gateway) protocols utilizing a TCP/IP to X.25 gateway developed and operated by INRIA. The second component of the project involved experiments aimed at understanding the issues involved is ISO CO/CL gateways. An experimental gateway was developed at Wisconsin and a preliminary report was prepared. Because of the need to devote most resources to the first component of the project, work in this area did not go beyond development of a prototype gateway.
Iqbal, Shahid; Ahmad, Riaz; Ayub, Nadia
2013-02-01
The present study aimed to investigate the level of self-esteem among religious minority adolescents (Christians and Hindus) by making a comparison with their dominant counterparts (Muslims) in Pakistan. It was hypothesized that adolescents of religious minorities would have lower level of self-esteem than their dominant counterparts. In the present study 320 adolescents participated, in which 160 adolescents belonged to minority religious groups (i.e. 76 Christians and 84 Hindus) and 160 adolescents belonged to dominant religious group i.e. Muslims. To assess self-esteem of the participants, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (Rosenberg in Society and the adolescent self image, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1965) was used. One Way Analysis of Variance reveals that religious minority adolescents (Christians and Hindus) inclined to have lower self-esteem as compared to their dominant counterpart (Muslim adolescents).
2010-01-01
BriggsTypeIndicator (3d ed.; Palo Alto, Calif.: Consulting Psycholo- gists Press, 1998). 8. Carl G. Jung , PsychologicalTypes (Princeton, N.J...Intuitive, Feeling, and Perceiving preferences. Winter2009-10 37 The Importance of Intuition The MBTI is based on Carl Jung’s theory of personality...preferences. Jung argues that the first function in personality is how one perceives the en- vironment and gathers data. Those with a Sensing
Transitioning from War to Enduring Peace
2008-03-24
supporting anyone. A population’s fundamental interests will often generally follow Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. In his classic work, Maslow ...justice operational element is focused on the individual’s perception about quality of life, opportunity, fairness, and self - esteem ; the governance...Princeton University Press, 1976), 88. 7 Abraham H. Maslow , “A Theory of Human Motivation,” Psychological Review 50 (1943), 370-396, available from
2014-06-01
Univ. Press, New York. Lacy, L. W. 2005. OWL: Represent- ing Information Using the Web Ontology Language , Trafford, Victoria, BC . McGuinness, D. L...to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, protected veteran status, or disability status. Lockheed Martin Operations Research analysts...backgrounds including military veterans, government civilians, and a range of industry. The intellectual curiosity we share binds us together as the
Combinatorial Market Processing for Multilateral Coordination
2005-09-01
8 In the classical auction theory literature, most of the attention is focused on one-sided, single-item auctions [86]. There is now a growing body of...Programming in Infinite-dimensional Spaces: Theory and Applications, Wiley, 1987. [3] K. J. Arrow, “An extension of the basic theorems of classical ...Commodities, Princeton University Press, 1969. [43] D. Friedman and J. Rust, The Double Auction Market: Institutions, Theories, and Evidence, Addison
The Federal Budget: Current and Upcoming Issues
2009-12-31
90 Milton Friedman , Capitalism and Freedom (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1962), pp. 75-84. . The Federal Budget: Current...government made significant financial interventions aimed at alleviating economic recession. The final costs of federal responses to this turmoil will...benefits paid net of Social Security payroll taxes collected and the U.S. Postal Service’s net balance) the (on-budget) FY2008 federal deficit was
The Federal Budget: Current and Upcoming Issues
2009-11-25
90 Milton Friedman , Capitalism and Freedom (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1962), pp. 75-84. The Federal Budget...deficit, according to some budget experts, gives an incomplete view of the government’s fiscal condition because it includes Social Security surpluses...MSR/; “A New Era of Responsibility : Renewing America’s Promise,” February 26, 2009. A detailed discussion of how the FY2009 deficit has changed since
Toward Determining the Comprehensibility of Machine Translations
2012-01-01
responses to a stimulus (Macmillan and Creelman , 1991). It has been applied in areas such as lie detection (truth/lie), inspection (ac- ceptable...1-1/(2N) (Macmil- lan and Creelman , 1991). Negative values, which usually indicate response confusion, were eliminated. The results of...Macmillan, Neil and C. Douglas Creelman . (1991). Detection theory: A User’s guide. Cambridge Univer- sity Press, pp. 10 &125. Marchant
Operational art in the Defense: The German Abwehrschlachten in 1918
2012-05-17
2 Carl von Clausewitz, On War, Michael Howard und Peter Paret ed. and trans. (New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1989...Siegismund, 1937), 74. 21 Jacob Jung , Max von Gallwitz (1852-1937) (Osnabrück: Biblio-Verlag, 1995), 93 & 97. 22 Erich Ludendorff, Meine...23 Jung , Max von Gallwitz (1852-1937), 5-7. 24 Ibid., 8-16. 25 Ibid.,17-23. 13 At the outbreak of the war, Gallwitz received command
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mocko, David M.; Rui, Hualan; Acker, James G.
2013-01-01
The North American Land Data Assimilation System (NLDAS) is a collaboration project between NASA/GSFC, NOAA, Princeton Univ., and the Univ. of Washington. NLDAS has created a surface meteorology dataset using the best-available observations and reanalyses the backbone of this dataset is a gridded precipitation analysis from rain gauges. This dataset is used to drive four separate land-surface models (LSMs) to produce datasets of soil moisture, snow, runoff, and surface fluxes. NLDAS datasets are available hourly and extend from Jan 1979 to near real-time with a typical 4-day lag. The datasets are available at 1/8th-degree over CONUS and portions of Canada and Mexico from 25-53 North. The datasets have been extensively evaluated against observations, and are also used as part of a drought monitor. NLDAS datasets are available from the NASA GES DISC and can be accessed via ftp, GDS, Mirador, and Giovanni. GES DISC news articles were published showing figures from the heat wave of 2011, Hurricane Irene, Tropical Storm Lee, and the low-snow winter of 2011-2012. For this presentation, Giovanni-generated figures using NLDAS data from the derecho across the U.S. Midwest and Mid-Atlantic will be presented. Also, similar figures will be presented from the landfall of Hurricane Isaac and the before-and-after drought conditions of the path of the tropical moisture into the central states of the U.S. Updates on future products and datasets from the NLDAS project will also be introduced.
Cell-Sediment Separation and Elemental Stoichiometries in Extreme Environments
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Neveu, M.; Poret-peterson, A. T.; Lee, Z. M.; Anbar, A. D.; Elser, J. J.
2012-12-01
Better understanding of the coupling of major biogeochemical cycles requires knowledge of the cellular elemental composition of key microbes. This is difficult in benthic sediments and mats, because of the contributions of non-living components. We are particularly interested in microbial extremophiles, and therefore sought to determine and interpret bulk and cellular elemental ratios in complex field-collected sediment samples from diverse hot spring ecosystems of Yellowstone National Park (YNP). These samples covered a broad range of temperature, pH, and chemical composition. We also sought to extend stoichiometric analysis to a broader suite of elements, including metals (Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Mo, etc.) of biological importance (Sterner and Elser, 2002). To overcome the challenge of rigorously isolating communities from their complex mineral matrices (Havig et al., 2011), we adapted a cell-sediment separation procedure from Amalfitano and Fazi (2008). The method involves chemical (use of a detergent and a chelating agent) and physical methods (stirring, gentle sonication, and gradient centrifugation) to break the microbe-mineral bonds. C and N elemental and isotopic abundances were determined by elemental analysis - isotope ratio - mass spectrometry (EA-IR-MS), while P, Na, Mg, Al, K, Ca, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, and Mo contents were determined by inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). We sought to assess the existence of an "Extended Redfield Ratio" (ERR) for these microbes; that is, to establish the multi-element stoichiometric envelope within which extremophilic microbes must operate. Elemental and isotopic mass balance analyses of cultured E. coli before and after separation showed that our procedure preserved cellular C, N, P, Fe, and trace metal contents: neither loss of these elements (e.g., by cell lysis) nor contamination by reagents were observed. On the other hand, cation-forming elements (Na, Mg, K, Ca), were not conserved. Cell counting by epifluorescence microscopy indicated a cell recovery yield between 6 and 40% in field-collected samples (95% for cultured E. coli). Aluminum, assumed to be non-biological in origin, was used to estimate the extent of mineral contamination of isolated cell communities. These results show that our method is successful at separating microbial cells from sediment collected in extreme environments and preserving them for analysis of a broad suite of elements. Photosynthetic sites yielded much more cell material than hotter, chemosynthetic sites (Cox et al., 2011). We are currently measuring cellular elemental abundances and ratios in samples from relatively low-temperature (25 to 65°C), photosynthetic areas, spanning a wide range of pH (2 to 9.5) and composition. These measurements will be compared to existing datasets on the bulk sediment stoichiometry of these ecosystems, and to previous observations of cellular elemental composition. References: Redfield, A.C. (1934) In Daniel, R.J. [Ed.], James Johnstone Memorial Volume, pp. 176-192, Univ. Press Liverpool. Sterner, R.W., Elser, J.J. (2002) Ecological Stoichiometry Princeton Univ. Press, 441p. Havig, J.R., et al. (2011) JGR 116, G01005. Amalfitano, S., Fazi, S. (2008) J. of Microbiol. Methods 75, 237-243. Cox, A., et al. (2011) Chem. Geol. 280, 344-351.
Materials Research Society (MRS) 2014 Fall Meeting, Boston, MA on November 30 December 5, 2014
2015-12-18
10.1557/opl.2015.216, Published online by Cambridge University Press 03 Mar 2015 Lithium - ion Diffusion in Solid Electrolyte Interface (SEI) Predicted by...challenges; Innovation and Inclusion: What It Takes to Move Diversity Forward, Vern Myers, Esq., principal of Vern Myers Consulting Group, LLC, engaged...bacteriophage to synthesize radically novel electronic and battery devices at protein and semiconductor interfaces. Ashutosh Chilkoti (Duke Univ
The American Economy in Transition
1983-03-01
writes the budget. Business Week pp. 30-2, 11 February 1980. Jameson, Kenneth P. and Joseph Philips . Supply-side economics: a skeptical view. Economic...international monetary policy from World War I1 to the present. Berkeley: Univ. of Calif. Press, 1977. (HG 3881 .B547) Cagan, Philip . Recent monetary...October 1980. 41 Kotler , John. Foreign investments in the United States? Editorial Research Reports pp. 747-64, 12 October 1979. Longenecker, Jane
2013-01-01
management survey and ensure that all databases (military and contracted civilian), key leader engagement logs, assistance project files, and other...Princeton University Press, 2000; Michael I. Handel, War Termination—A Critical Survey , Jeru- salem: Hebrew University, 1978; Jane Holl Lute, From the...DoS did not plan to install permanent and more costly security measures.133 Security surveys undertaken collaboratively by USF-I and multiple
Deja Vu: Can We be Ready for the Next War
1997-01-01
ed. Charles E. Heler and William A . Stofft, (Kansas: UP of Kansas, 1986), 243. 6 Thomas Parrish, The Simons and Schuster Encyclopedia of World...Charles E and William A . Stofft. America’s First Battles: 1776-1965. Lawrence: Univ Press of Kansas. 1986 14. Heppenheimer , T.A. Build-Down...next war? Author: Lieutenant Commander M. N. Millard, United States Navy Thesis: A nation can never be truly ready for war but the military
Development of Analysis Tools for Certification of Flight Control Laws
2009-03-31
In Proc. Conf. on Decision and Control, pages 881-886, Bahamas, 2004. [7] G. Chesi, A. Garulli, A. Tesi , and A. Vicino. LMI-based computation of...Minneapolis, MN, 2006, pp. 117-122. [10] G. Chesi, A. Garulli, A. Tesi . and A. Vicino, "LMI-based computation of optimal quadratic Lyapunov functions...Convex Optimization. Cambridge Univ. Press. Chesi, G., A. Garulli, A. Tesi and A. Vicino (2005). LMI-based computation of optimal quadratic Lyapunov
Developing an Effective and Efficient Real Time Strategy Agent for Use as a Computer Generated Force
2010-03-01
Coello, Carlos A., Gary B. Lamont, and David A. Van Veldhuizen . Evolution- ary Algorithms for Solving Multi-Objective Problems (Genetic and...Practice. Oxford Univer- sity Press, 1996. 4. Bakkes, Sander, Philip Kerbusch, Pieter Spronck, and Jaap van den Herik. “Au- tomatically Evaluating...Pieter Spronck, and Jaap van den Herik. “Phase-dependent Evaluation in RTS games”. Proceedings of the 19th Belgian-Dutch Conference on Artificial
A Set of Orthogonal Polynomials That Generalize the Racah Coefficients or 6 - j Symbols.
1978-03-01
Generalized Hypergeometric Functions, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1966. [11] D. Stanton, Some basic hypergeometric polynomials arising from... Some bas ic hypergeometr ic an a logues of the classical orthogonal polynomials and applications , to appear. [3] C. de Boor and G. H. Golub , The...Report #1833 A SET OF ORTHOGONAL POLYNOMIALS THAT GENERALIZE THE RACAR COEFFICIENTS OR 6 — j SYMBOLS Richard Askey and James Wilson •
1985-09-11
president of Pyongyang Music and Dance Univers- ity Kim Tong-sop, president of University of Commerce, and academician, Dr and Prof Pak Si-hyong and...investigation of the building. They decided to demand a meeting with the American Ambassador to Korea and a press conference with reporters from both within and...Chong-chin and Sim Yong-chin who at the underground fountain of the Lotte Department Store at the Ulchiro en- trance collected rocks from the nearby
Dynamic Red Queen Explains Patterns in Fatal Insurgent Attacks
2011-03-01
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION OF ABSTRACT Same as Report (SAR) 18. NUMBER OF PAGES 25 19a. NAME OF RESPONSIBLE PERSON a. REPORT...2010) 3. R.D. Sagarin, Natural Security : A Darwinian Approach to a Dangerous World, Eds. R. Sagarin and T. Taylor, (Univ. California Press, 2009), p...American Security , Washington, 2010) 17. A. Cho, Science, 325, 406 (2009) 18. A. Guttfraind, Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 32, 45 (2009) 19
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kwah, Helen; Milne, Catherine; Tsai, Tzuchi; Goldman, Ricki; Plass, Jan L.
2016-09-01
This formative design study examines how a program curriculum and implementation was emergently (re)designed in dynamic relation to the expressed emotions of teachers and students. The context was a yearlong afterschool game design program for STEM learning at an urban and public all-girls middle school. Using Randall Collins' (Interaction ritual chains, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2004) sociology of emotions framework, our analysis of field notes and video data reveal how the original intended curriculum hindered the generation of positive emotions, mutual foci of attention, and feelings of group solidarity—factors important in the generation of successful group interactions. In response to teacher and student expressed emotions, we took these factors as a guide for redesigning the program curriculum and implementation in order to foster a more positive emotional climate and redirect students' positive emotions toward engagement in learning goals. This study's implications point to the possibilities for designing curricula and program implementations to engender more emotionally responsive environments for STEM learning.
Advanced Modeling in Excel: from Water Jets to Big Bang
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ignatova, Olga; Chyzhyk, D.; Willis, C.; Kazachkov, A.
2006-12-01
An international students’ project is presented focused on application of Open Office and Excel spreadsheets for modeling of projectile-motion type dynamical systems. Variation of the parameters of plotted and animated families of jets flowing at different angles out of the holes in the wall of water-filled reservoir [1,2] revealed unexpected peculiarities of the envelopes, vertices, intersections and landing points of virtual trajectories. Comparison with real-life systems and rigorous calculations were performed to prove predictions of computer experiments. By same technique, the kinematics of fireworks was analyzed. On this basis two-dimensional ‘firework’ computer model of Big Bang was designed and studied, its relevance and limitations checked. 1.R.Ehrlich, Turning the World Inside Out, (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1990), pp. 98-100. 2.A.Kazachkov, Yu.Bogdan, N.Makarovsky, N.Nedbailo. A Bucketful of Physics, in R.Pinto, S.Surinach (eds), International Conference Physics Teacher Education Beyond 2000. Selected Contributions (Elsevier Editions, Paris, 2001), pp.563-564. Sponsored by Courtney Willis.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ekert, Artur
2009-09-01
On 25 March 1935 John Tate, the then editor of Physical Review, received a paper that Einstein had co-authored with Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, his younger colleagues at Princeton. The logbooks of Physical Review show that the EPR paper, as it has since become known, bypassed the refereeing process and went straight to press. Four printed pages of beautifully constructed argument appeared in the 15 May issue. They were heralded by a brief article in the New York Times titled "Einstein attacks quantum theory". And so he did.
Getting to Negotiations in Syria: The Shadow of the Future and the Syrian Civil War
2014-01-01
parties are that there will be a tomorrow, the more willing they will become to talk about it. As Robert Axelrod and Robert O. Keohane write, “The more...N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2002. 35 Walter, 1997, p. 335. 36 Walter, 1997, p. 336. 37 Robert Axelrod and Robert O. Keohane , “Achieving...sovereign states may choose to cooperate under conditions of anarchy. According to Robert Axel- The literature has focused on conditions prior to or
Employing U.S. Information Operations Against Hybrid Warfare Threats
2013-03-01
Article 51.24 Cyber warfare is unique in that vulnerabilities that a network target may have could be discovered by software developers who then... cyber warfare rather than physical combat, a future subject to air strikes or ground-forces raids would likely be a powerful deterrent. Some in the U.S...Manwaring, The Complexity of Modern Asymmetric Warfare, (Norman, OK: Univ. of Oklahoma Press, 2012), 126-129. 23 Arie J. Schaap, “ Cyber Warfare Operations
The Growing Complexity of Sino-Indian Ties
2014-06-01
with a record of dealing with North Korea , Iran , and Libya, reflects China’s growing diplomatic confidence and underscores its view of Pakistan as a...issues. Dr. Pant’s most recent books include The US-India Nuclear Pact: Policy, Process and Great Power Politics (Oxford Univer- sity Press, 2011...membership at the United Nations (UN) but also opposed attempts to condemn the PRC for its actions in Korea . Yet, the issue of Tibet soon emerged as the
The Prussian Reform Movement: A Case Study in Defense Reform
1989-09-01
H ., ed., The German Mind of the 19th Century , Continuum, 1981. Goerlitz, W., History of the German General Staff...set by technology and by the political and social conditions of Prussia in the eighteenth century ."E" ’Frederick H , Miariches Testament von 1768, pp... History of Germany Since 1789. pp. 34-35, Frederick A. Praeger, 1968. "Holbom, H ., A History of Modem Germany 1648-1840, p. 393, Yale Univ. Press,
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: Intercultural Awareness and the Iowa Air National Guard Elf One.
1983-02-01
Dodge, Iowa, ANG, for assis- tance in preparing the Flight for its winter involvement with "Elf One." After I surveyed our resources, Brigadier General...1978. 0 Cottrell, Alvin J. The Persian Gulf: A General Survey . Baltimore, Johns Hopins Univers. Press. 1980. Helms, Christine Moss. The Cohesion of...have your favorite brand. Recommendat ions: Razor flair Cream Shoe shine equipment Comb Shampoo Sewing kit Bath soap Toothbrush Toothpaste Deoderant
2009-01-01
Relations for the Joint Task Force- Global Network Operations (JTF-GNO/ J5 ). He assists in development of cyber policy and strategy for operations and...History (Manchester, U.K: Manchester Univ. Press, 2000), 1. 10. See The Steamship Appam, 243 U.S. 124 (1917). 11. Jeffrey T. G. Kelsey, “ Hacking into...Arrest for Computer Hacking ,” news release, 1 October 2007, http://www.cybercrime.gov/kingIndict.pdf. 39. Grant Gross, “FBI: Several Nations Eyeing U.S
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Takahashi, Migaku; Saito, Hitoshi; Yoshimura, Satoru; Takanashi, Koki; Sahashi, Masashi; Tsunoda, Masakiyo
2011-01-01
The 2nd International Symposium on Advanced Magnetic Materials and Applications 2010 (ISAMMA 2010) was held in Sendai, Japan, from 12-16, July 2010. ISAMMA is the first consolidated symposium of three independent symposia held in the Asian region: ISPMM (International Symposium on Physics of Magnetic Materials) of Japan which was first held in 1987 in Sendai, and was subsequently held five times, Beijing (1992), Seoul (1995), Sendai (1998), Taipei (2001), and Singapore (2005); ISAMT (International Symposium of Advanced Magnetic Technology) of Taiwan, and SOMMA (International Symposium on Magnetic Materials and Applications) of Korea, both of which were started in 1999, and were held five times up to 2005. ISAMMA was established as a new international symposium which will be held every 3 years in Asia. The concept of this unified international symposium was mainly developed by Prof. M. Takahashi, Conference Chair of this conference, ISAMMA 2010. The first memorial symposium, ISAMMA 2007, was held on Jeju Island, Korea, from 28 May to 1 June 2007. The main purpose and scope of the ISAMMA conferences are to provide an opportunity for scientists and engineers from all over the world to meet in Asia to discuss recent advances in the study of magnetic materials and their physics, and spin related phenomena and materials. Conference photograph The categories of ISAMMA 2010 were: Fundamental Properties of Magnetic Materials; Hard/Soft Magnetic Materials and Applications; Spintronics Materials and Devices; Structured Materials; Multi Functional Magnetic Materials; Spin Dynamics and Micromagnetics; Magnetic Storage; Materials for Applications (Sensors, High Frequency, Power, and Bio/Medical devices); Magnetic Imaging and Characterization. The scientific program commenced on Tuesday 13 July 2010 with opening remarks by the Symposium Chairman and the plenary talks were presented by T Rasing, P Fischer, H Yoda and S Sugimoto. The conference was attended by 511 participants from 23 countries, with about 40 percent of participants attending from overseas (see figure). The program involved 4 plenary talks (45 minutes each), 37 invited talks (30 minutes), 85 contributed talks (15 minutes), and 352 posters. Pie chart Organizing Committee of ISAMMA 2010 M TakahashiTohoku Univ., Japan, Chairman K TakanashiTohoku Univ., Japan, Chair of the Program Committee H SaitoAkita Univ., Japan, Chair of the Publication Committee M SahashiTohoku Univ., Japan, Chair of the Treasury Committee M TsunodaTohoku Univ., Japan, General Secretary H AkinagaAIST, Japan H FukunagaNagasaki Univ., Japan K HonoNIMS, Japan S IshioAkita Univ., Japan S IwataNagoya Univ., Japan K NakagawaNihon Univ., Japan S NakagawaTokyo Inst. of Tech., Japan T OnoKyoto Univ., Japan Y SuzukiOsaka Univ., Japan M TanakaEhime Univ., Japan T Tanaka Univ. of Tokyo, Japan Program Committee of ISAMMA 2010 K TakanashiTohoku Univ., Japan, ChairS MizukamiTohoku Univ., Japan M MizuguchiTohoku Univ., Japan, Vice-chairH NaganumaTohoku Univ., Japan M DoiTohoku Univ., JapanS NakagawaTokyo Inst. of Tech., Japan A FujitaTohoku Univ., JapanK NakamuraTohoku Univ., Japan K IshiyamaTohoku Univ., JapanK OnoKEK, Japan T KatoNagoya Univ., JapanT OnoKyoto Univ., Japan T KawagoeOsaka Pref. Univ.of Edu., JapanF SatoTohoku Univ., Japan O KitakamiTohoku Univ., JapanM ShiraiTohoku Univ., Japan Y KitamotoTokyo Inst. of Tech., JapanS SugimotoTohoku Univ., Japan F MatsukuraTohoku Univ., JapanM YamaguchiTohoku Univ., Japan C MitsumataHitachi Metals, Japan Publication Committee of ISAMMA 2010 H SaitoAkita Univ., Japan, ChairS MitaniNIMS, Japan S YoshimuraAkita Univ., Japan, Vice-chairH MuraokaTohoku, Japan Y AndoTohoku Univ., JapanM NakanoNagasaki Univ., Japan J AriakeAIT, JapanR NakataniOsaka Univ., Japan H AsanoNagoya Univ., JapanK O'GradyUniv. of York, UK M FutamotoChuo Univ., JapanA SakumaTohoku Univ., Japan J HayakawaHitachi, ARL, JapanT SatoKeio Univ., Japan T HondaKyushu Inst. of Tech., JapanT SatoShinshu Univ., Japan M IgarashiHitachi, CRL, JapanK TajimaAkita Univ., Japan H ItoKansai Univ., JapanM TakedaJAEA, Japan H IwasakiToshiba, JapanY TakemuraYokohama Nat'l Univ., Japan H KatoYamagata Univ., JapanM TanakaUniv. of Tokyo, Japan M KonotoAIST, JapanA TsukamotoNihon Univ., Japan H KubotaAIST, JapanS YabukamiTohoku Gakuin Univ., Japan Treasury Committee of ISAMMA 2010 M SahashiTohoku Univ., Japan, ChairS SaitoTohoku Univ., Japan K IshiyamaTohoku Univ., JapanT TanakaEhime Univ., Japan K NakagawaNihon Univ., JapanN TezukaTohoku Univ., Japan T OgawaTohoku Univ., Japan Executive Committee of ISAMMA 2010 M TakahashiTohoku Univ., Japan, ChairS SaitoTohoku Univ., Japan K TakanashiTohoku Univ., Japan, Vice-chairY SakurabaTohoku Univ., Japan K MiyakeTohoku Univ., JapanT ShimaTohoku Gakuin Univ., Japan T OgawaTohoku Univ., JapanN TezukaTohoku Univ., Japan S OkamotoTohoku Univ., JapanM TsunodaTohoku Univ., Japan M OoganeTohoku Univ., Japan We are grateful to all the participants for their valuable contributions and active discussions. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from 17 Japanese companies (ASAKA RIKEN CO., LTD, Fujikin Incorporated, Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd, Hitachi Metals, Ltd, IZUMI-TEC CO., LTD, Miwa Electric Industrial CO., LTD, MIWA MFG CO., LTD, NEOARK Corporation, Optima Corporation, PRESTO CO., LTD, SHOWA DENKO K.K., TAIYO YUDEN CO., LTD, TDK Corporation, TEIJIN LIMITED, Ube Material Industries, Ltd, ULVAC, Inc, and V TEX Corporation) and 7 foundations (SENDAI TOURISM & CONVENTION BUREAU, The Iwatani Naoji Foundation, Tohoku University Electro-Related Departments Global COE Program 'Center of Education and Research for Information Electronics Systems', The Murata Science Foundation, Research Foundation for Materials Science, Nippon Sheet Glass Foundation for Materials Science and Engineering, and Aoba Foundation for The Promotion of Engineering).
Parameters, U.S. Army War College Quarterly. Volume 19, Number 1, March 1989
1989-03-01
to shape the strategy of America during World War 11. The way the officers of that era devoted themselves to mastering their profession should serve... America in Vietnam (New York: Oxford Univ. Press. 1978). pp. 383. 39ff. 48. Ibid.. p. 39 1, 49. Dave Richard Palmer. Summons of the Trtunpet (San Rafael...concerns about delays in transmission of pool reports, censorship of pool products, and difficulties in getting pool products ashore in a timely man
2007-10-25
Exchange Platforms Publishers Resellers iTunes Non-Profit/ Government/ Self- Managed Library of Congress Library Consortia Fed. Tech Transfer Sites Univ...Thompson Dialog – Thomson MicroPatent – Thomson Pharma – WIPO Digital Patent Library* (*nonprofit organization) • iTunes • IP Exchange Platforms...Elsevier SciDirect – Nat’l Acad. Press – Lexis, Westlaw – Newspaper web sites • iTunes • Resellers of Copyrighted Material – JSTOR – EBSCOHost
Boa constrictor (Boa constrictor): foraging behavior
Sorrell, G.G.; Boback, M.S.; Reed, R.N.; Green, S.; Montgomery, Chad E.; DeSouza, L.S.; Chiaraviglio, M.
2011-01-01
Boa constrictor is often referred to as a sit-and-wait or ambush forager that chooses locations to maximize the likelihood of prey encounters (Greene 1983. In Janzen [ed.], Costa Rica Natural History, pp. 380-382. Univ. Chicago Press, Illinois). However, as more is learned about the natural history of snakes in general, the dichotomy between active versus ambush foraging is becoming blurred. Herein, we describe an instance of diurnal active foraging by a B. constrictor, illustrating that this species exhibits a range of foraging behaviors.
The big five and self-esteem among overweight dieting and non-dieting women.
Rubinstein, Gidi
2006-11-01
Overweight is one of the most frequent phenomena, which poses serious health risks, emotional disturbances and esthetic and social problems in the Western world. This study investigated personality differences between women with normal weight, dieting overweight women and non-dieting overweight women. Thirty women with normal weight (NW), 30 overweight women who participated in diet groups (OWD), and 30 overweight women who did not participate in such groups (OWND) filled in a demographic questionnaire, Costa and McCrae's [Costa, P. T. Jr., & McCrae, R. R. (1992). NEO PI-R: Professional manual. Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources.] NEO-FFI, and Rosenberg's [Rosenberg, M. (1965). Society and the adolescent self-image. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.] Self-Esteem questionnaire. The results indicate that the OWND are significantly more neurotic and less open, conscientious, agreeable, and extravert than the other two groups. Self-esteem of the OWND is also lower than both OWD and NW. Contrary to hypothesis, OWD and NW do not significantly differ from each other with respect to both the Big Five and self-esteem.
An application of the LC-LSTM framework to the self-esteem instability case.
Alessandri, Guido; Vecchione, Michele; Donnellan, Brent M; Tisak, John
2013-10-01
The present research evaluates the stability of self-esteem as assessed by a daily version of the Rosenberg (Society and the adolescent self-image, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1965) general self-esteem scale (RGSE). The scale was administered to 391 undergraduates for five consecutive days. The longitudinal data were analyzed using the integrated LC-LSTM framework that allowed us to evaluate: (1) the measurement invariance of the RGSE, (2) its stability and change across the 5-day assessment period, (3) the amount of variance attributable to stable and transitory latent factors, and (4) the criterion-related validity of these factors. Results provided evidence for measurement invariance, mean-level stability, and rank-order stability of daily self-esteem. Latent state-trait analyses revealed that variances in scores of the RGSE can be decomposed into six components: stable self-esteem (40 %), ephemeral (or temporal-state) variance (36 %), stable negative method variance (9 %), stable positive method variance (4 %), specific variance (1 %) and random error variance (10 %). Moreover, latent factors associated with daily self-esteem were associated with measures of depression, implicit self-esteem, and grade point average.
Mitchell, M X
2017-05-01
In the years following World War II, and increasingly during the 1960s and 1970s, professional scientific societies developed internal sub-committees to address the social implications of their scientific expertise (Moore, Disrupting Science: Social Movements, American Scientists, and the Politics of the Military, 1945-1975. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008). This article explores the early years of one such committee, the American Society of Human Genetics' "Social Issues Committee," founded in 1967. Although the committee's name might suggest it was founded to increase the ASHG's public and policy engagement, exploration of the committee's early years reveals a more complicated reality. Affronted by legislators' recent unwillingness to seek the expert advice of human geneticists before adopting widespread neonatal screening programs for phenylketonuria (PKU), and feeling pressed to establish their relevance in an increasingly resource-scarce funding environment, committee members sought to increase the discipline's expert authority. Painfully aware of controversy over abortion rights and haunted by the taint of the discipline's eugenic past, however, the committee proceeded with great caution. Seeking to harness interest in and assert professional control over emerging techniques of genetic diagnosis, the committee strove to protect the society's image by relegating ethical and policy questions about their use to the individual consciences of member scientists. It was not until 1973, after the committee's modest success in organizing support for a retrospective public health study of PKU screening and following the legalization of abortion on demand, that the committee decided to take a more publicly engaged stance.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Borsch, Frederick Houk
2012-01-01
In 1981, Frederick Houk Borsch returned to Princeton University, his alma mater, to serve as dean of the chapel at the Ivy League school. In "Keeping Faith at Princeton," Borsch tells the story of Princeton's journey from its founding in 1746 as a college for Presbyterian ministers to the religiously diverse institution it is today. He…
2010-05-01
F. J. Lermusiaux, “Adaptive modeling, adaptive data assimilation and adaptive sampling,” Physica D, vol. 230, pp. 172–196, 2007 . [9] T. P. Sapsis and...DOI: 10.1016/j.physd.2009.09.017. [10] P. F. J. Lermusiaux, P. Malanotte-Rizzoli, D. Stammer , J. Carton, J. Cummings, and A. M. Moore, “Progress and...Oceanography, vol. 20, pp. 156–167, 2007 . [12] C. Wunsch, The Ocean Circulation Inverse Problem. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996, ch. 3. [13] H
2007-05-01
evaluation of approximations,” tech. rep., Dep. Sistemes Informàtics i Computació, Univ. Politècnica de València (Spain), 2003. [7] D. C. Edwards, C. E...Maryellen L. Giger, scientific collaborator • Lorenzo Pesce, computer programmer 16 C The Hypervolume under the ROC Hypersurface of “Near-Guessing...the simple model we have just described corresponds in the two-class classification task to ROC analysis performed ‘‘per ARTICLE IN PRESS
Book Review for Physics Today Ostriker and Mitton
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mather, John C.
2013-01-01
Can anyone explain to a general audience how astronomers converged on such an astonishing story as the Big Bang, with large doses of Dark Matter and Dark Energy that only astronomers can “see” and most astronomers didn’t want? Might the reader believe the answer? And can the story keep the attention of professional physicists? The answer is yes for “Unraveling the Mysteries of the Invisible Universe” by Jeremiah Ostriker and Simon Mitton (Princeton University Press, 2013). Ostriker, a theorist, is one of the modern pioneers of the subject, and Mitton, a physicist-journalist, is an excellent storyteller as well.
How Navigating Uncertainty Motivates Trust in Medicine.
Imber, Jonathan B
2017-04-01
Three significant factors in the shaping of modern medicine contribute to broad perceptions about trust in the patient-physician relationship: moral, professional, and epidemiological uncertainty. Trusting a physician depends first on trusting a person, then trusting a person's skills and training, and finally trusting the science that underwrites those skills. This essay, in part based on my book, Trusting Doctors: The Decline of Moral Authority in American Medicine (Princeton University Press, 2008), will address the forms of uncertainty that contribute to the nature of difficult encounters in the patient-physician relationship. © 2017 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.
77 FR 64919 - Proposed Establishment of Class E Airspace; Princeton, KY
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-10-24
... Class E Airspace; Princeton, KY AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT. ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM). SUMMARY: This action proposes to establish Class E Airspace at Princeton, KY to... serving the Princeton-Caldwell County Airport. This action would enhance the safety and airspace...
Microwave Quantum Illumination
2016-07-29
Microwave Quantum Illumination Shabir Barzanjeh,1 Saikat Guha,2 Christian Weedbrook,3 David Vitali ,4 Jeffrey H. Shapiro,5 and Stefano Pirandola6...1.0 2 4 6 8 10 cl as si ca l tr an sm it te r (C T ) q u an tu m il lu m in at io n ( Q I)QI CT () w ( ) 0.000 1.540 unstable 1.000...Theory, (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2013). [3] C. Weedbrook, S. Pirandola, R. Garćıa-Patrón, N . J. Cerf, T. C. Ralph, J. H. Shapiro, and S. Lloyd, Rev
1978-01-01
rctary ditching equipment falls inton thc latter category. Equipment of this type cuts a ditch with a Srt-ating cutting head . As the marsh sod is removed...several years if the site is not further altered by dredging. * 89 W W W V W W W W W W W SITE DESIGNATION: WACCAMAW NECK (G-1O) Summary 151. This...Bionomics and embryology of the inland floodwater mosquito . .. .’. Univ. of Illinois Press. 2 11pp. S Jeane, G. S., II, and R. E. Pine. 1975
A robust optimization methodology for preliminary aircraft design
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Prigent, S.; Maréchal, P.; Rondepierre, A.; Druot, T.; Belleville, M.
2016-05-01
This article focuses on a robust optimization of an aircraft preliminary design under operational constraints. According to engineers' know-how, the aircraft preliminary design problem can be modelled as an uncertain optimization problem whose objective (the cost or the fuel consumption) is almost affine, and whose constraints are convex. It is shown that this uncertain optimization problem can be approximated in a conservative manner by an uncertain linear optimization program, which enables the use of the techniques of robust linear programming of Ben-Tal, El Ghaoui, and Nemirovski [Robust Optimization, Princeton University Press, 2009]. This methodology is then applied to two real cases of aircraft design and numerical results are presented.
Cloud Computing: Virtual Clusters, Data Security, and Disaster Recovery
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hwang, Kai
Dr. Kai Hwang is a Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Director of Internet and Cloud Computing Lab at the Univ. of Southern California (USC). He received the Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the Univ. of California, Berkeley. Prior to joining USC, he has taught at Purdue Univ. for many years. He has also served as a visiting Chair Professor at Minnesota, Hong Kong Univ., Zhejiang Univ., and Tsinghua Univ. He has published 8 books and over 210 scientific papers in computer science/engineering.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ruetsche, Laura
The objects of the empirical science known as particle physics are not like objects ordinarily conceived. Physicists' particles can enter states strangely entangled with those of other particles; they can obey statistics which suggest that they lack genidentity; their properties (some think) are created in measurement, or (others think) can only be limned from the symmetries of the theory describing them. 'The implications of contemporary physical theories for the debate on the nature of objects' provides 'the central theme' (p. 4) of Interpreting Bodies, editor Elena Castellani's new collection of essays. Contributions to the volume vary dramatically in vintage (Born's and Reichenbach's are well into middle age; others appear here for the first time); in approach (the collection includes Giuliano Toraldo diFrancia's nine-page history of the object concept from Democritus to d'Espagnat, Peter Mittelstaedt's discussion of the Kantian constitution of quantum objects, and Giulo Peruzzi's explication of the scattering cross section and its role in experimental particle physics); and in intended audience. Lacking the space to treat each contribution in turn, I will focus on those dealing with the problem of the One and the Many.
Minority Pre Co-op Program for High School Graduates.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Union Carbide Corp., Oak Ridge, TN. Nuclear Div.
In a program undertaken by Union Carbide to encourage black students to enter science and engineering studies, five black universities recruited high school graduates. The universities were: Howard Univ., North Carolina A and T State Univ., Southern Univ., Tennessee State Univ., and Tuskegee Institute. Union Carbide provided summer employment for…
Ashra (All-sky Survey High Resolution Air-shower detector)Current Status on Mauna Loa, Hawai`i
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hamilton, John; Fox, R. A.; Sasaki, M.; Asaoka, Y.; Ashra Collaboration
2008-09-01
Now in its third year of on-site activities, Ashra is commencing full testing of its array of Cherenkov and Nitrogen Fluorescence detectors. The All-sky Survey High Resolution Air-shower detector is located on the northern upper slopes of Mauna Loa at the 11,000 ft elevation level. Utilizing a clear view of 80% of the sky and an unobstructed view of Mauna Kea, anglular resolution of 1.2 arcmin, sensitive to the blue to UV light with the use of image intensifier and CMOS technology, Ashra is in a unique position for studying the sources of High Energy Cosmic Ray sources (GRB, etc) as well as potential observations of earth-grazing neutrino interactions. 2004 saw the successful deployment of a prototype detector on Haleakala, with confirmed detection of several GRBs. Since the summer of 2005, steady progress was made in constructing and installation of detectors and their weather-proofed housings. UH-Hilo undergraduate students provided summer interns for this international collaboration between ICRR Univ. Tokyo, Univ. Hawai`i-Hilo, Univ Hawai`i-Manoa, Ibaraki Univ., Toho Univ. Chiba Univ., Kanagawa Univ., Nagoya Univ. & Tokyo Institute of Technology.
Princeton Tries To Explain a Drop in Jewish Enrollment.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gose, Ben
1999-01-01
The proportion of Princeton University (New Jersey) freshmen who identify themselves as Jewish is half what it was in 1973, and the proportion of Jewish Princeton students overall is less than half that of Harvard University (Massachusetts) or Yale University (Connecticut). Some fault recruitment strategy changes; others believe fewer Jewish…
Chaotic dynamics in optimal monetary policy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gomes, O.; Mendes, V. M.; Mendes, D. A.; Sousa Ramos, J.
2007-05-01
There is by now a large consensus in modern monetary policy. This consensus has been built upon a dynamic general equilibrium model of optimal monetary policy as developed by, e.g., Goodfriend and King [ NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1997 edited by B. Bernanke and J. Rotemberg (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1997), pp. 231 282], Clarida et al. [J. Econ. Lit. 37, 1661 (1999)], Svensson [J. Mon. Econ. 43, 607 (1999)] and Woodford [ Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy (Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 2003)]. In this paper we extend the standard optimal monetary policy model by introducing nonlinearity into the Phillips curve. Under the specific form of nonlinearity proposed in our paper (which allows for convexity and concavity and secures closed form solutions), we show that the introduction of a nonlinear Phillips curve into the structure of the standard model in a discrete time and deterministic framework produces radical changes to the major conclusions regarding stability and the efficiency of monetary policy. We emphasize the following main results: (i) instead of a unique fixed point we end up with multiple equilibria; (ii) instead of saddle-path stability, for different sets of parameter values we may have saddle stability, totally unstable equilibria and chaotic attractors; (iii) for certain degrees of convexity and/or concavity of the Phillips curve, where endogenous fluctuations arise, one is able to encounter various results that seem intuitively correct. Firstly, when the Central Bank pays attention essentially to inflation targeting, the inflation rate has a lower mean and is less volatile; secondly, when the degree of price stickiness is high, the inflation rate displays a larger mean and higher volatility (but this is sensitive to the values given to the parameters of the model); and thirdly, the higher the target value of the output gap chosen by the Central Bank, the higher is the inflation rate and its volatility.
Remarks by the President at Princeton University Commencement Address.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Clinton, William
This speech by President William Clinton addresses the 1996 graduating class of Princeton University on the occasion of Princeton's 250th anniversary. After his opening remarks, the President touches on the importance of the graduating seniors' education as well as the importance of education in general to the nation's future. He compares the…
Princeton Retrospectives. Twenty-Fifth-Year Reflections on a College Education.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Heath, Roy
Princeton University graduates of the class of 1954 were interviewed to determine what aspects of their undergraduate education they value and how their undergraduate years may have enriched their lives. The author, a professor of psychology at Princeton from 1950-1954, interviewed 32 of his former advisees 25 years after their graduation. The…
Expanding Equal Opportunity: The Princeton Experience with Financial Aid
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tilghman, Shirley M.
2007-01-01
In this essay, Shirley M. Tilghman discusses the purpose, design, and impact of Princeton University's no-loan financial aid policy, which was enacted in 2001. As the centerpiece of an aid and recruitment strategy that seeks to improve college access despite growing socioeconomic stratification, the policy obliges Princeton to meet all student…
Budgeting and Resource Allocation at Princeton University, Vol. 2.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Herring, Carol P.; And Others
A supplement to a project begun to devise methods of handling budgeting in a more systematic way in the Princeton setting, this final report examines budgeting procedures that have been revised, discusses new procedures that have been implemented, and explains procedures now in use at Princeton. Chapter I provides an overview of the Priorities…
Unperturbed Schelling Segregation in Two or Three Dimensions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Barmpalias, George; Elwes, Richard; Lewis-Pye, Andrew
2016-09-01
Schelling's models of segregation, first described in 1969 (Am Econ Rev 59:488-493, 1969) are among the best known models of self-organising behaviour. Their original purpose was to identify mechanisms of urban racial segregation. But his models form part of a family which arises in statistical mechanics, neural networks, social science, and beyond, where populations of agents interact on networks. Despite extensive study, unperturbed Schelling models have largely resisted rigorous analysis, prior results generally focusing on variants in which noise is introduced into the dynamics, the resulting system being amenable to standard techniques from statistical mechanics or stochastic evolutionary game theory (Young in Individual strategy and social structure: an evolutionary theory of institutions, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1998). A series of recent papers (Brandt et al. in: Proceedings of the 44th annual ACM symposium on theory of computing (STOC 2012), 2012); Barmpalias et al. in: 55th annual IEEE symposium on foundations of computer science, Philadelphia, 2014, J Stat Phys 158:806-852, 2015), has seen the first rigorous analyses of 1-dimensional unperturbed Schelling models, in an asymptotic framework largely unknown in statistical mechanics. Here we provide the first such analysis of 2- and 3-dimensional unperturbed models, establishing most of the phase diagram, and answering a challenge from Brandt et al. in: Proceedings of the 44th annual ACM symposium on theory of computing (STOC 2012), 2012).
Study for Nuclear Structures of 22-35Na Isotopes via Measurements of Reaction Cross Sections
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suzuki, Shinji
2014-09-01
T. Ohtsubo, M. Nagashima, T. Ogura, Y. Shimbara (Grad. Sch. of Sc., Niigata Univ.), M.Takechi, H. Geissel, M. Winkler (GSI), D. Nishimura, T. Sumikama (Dept. of Phys., Tokyo Univ. of Sc.), M. Fukuda, M. Mihara, H. Uenishi (Dept. of Phys., Osaka Univ.), T. Kuboki, T. Suzuki, T. Yamaguchi, H. Furuki, C. S. Lee, K. Sato (Dept. of Phys., Saitama Univ.), A. Ozawa, H. Ohnishi, T. Moriguchi, S. Fukuda, Y. Ishibashi, D. Nagae, R. Nishikiori, T. Niwa (Inst. of Phys., Univ. of Tsukuba), N. Aoi (RCNP), Rui-Jiu Chen, N. Inabe, D. Kameda, T. Kubo, M. Lantz, T. Ohnishi, K. Okumura, H. Sakurai, H. Suzuki, H. Takeda, S. Takeuchi, K. Tanaka, Y. Yanagisawa (RIKEN), De-Qing Fang, Yu-Gang Ma (SINAP), T. Izumikawa (RI Ctr., Niigata Univ.), and S. Momota (Fac. of Engn., Kochi Univ. of Tech.) Reaction cross sections (σR) for 22-35Na isotopes have been measured at around 240 MeV/nucleon. The σR for 22-35Na were measured for the first time. Enhancement in cross sections is clearly observed from the systematics for stable nuclei, for isotopes with large mass numbers. These enhancement can be mainly ascribed to the nuclear deformation. We will discuss the nuclear structure (neutron skin, nuclear shell structure) for neutron-excess Na isotopes. T. Ohtsubo, M. Nagashima, T. Ogura, Y. Shimbara (Grad. Sch. of Sc., Niigata Univ.), M.Takechi, H. Geissel, M. Winkler (GSI), D. Nishimura, T. Sumikama (Dept. of Phys., Tokyo Univ. of Sc.), M. Fukuda, M. Mihara, H. Uenishi (Dept. of Phys., Osaka Univ.), T. Kuboki, T. Suzuki, T. Yamaguchi, H. Furuki, C. S. Lee, K. Sato (Dept. of Phys., Saitama Univ.), A. Ozawa, H. Ohnishi, T. Moriguchi, S. Fukuda, Y. Ishibashi, D. Nagae, R. Nishikiori, T. Niwa (Inst. of Phys., Univ. of Tsukuba), N. Aoi (RCNP), Rui-Jiu Chen, N. Inabe, D. Kameda, T. Kubo, M. Lantz, T. Ohnishi, K. Okumura, H. Sakurai, H. Suzuki, H. Takeda, S. Takeuchi, K. Tanaka, Y. Yanagisawa (RIKEN), De-Qing Fang, Yu-Gang Ma (SINAP), T. Izumikawa (RI Ctr., Niigata Univ.), and S. Momota (Fac. of Engn., Kochi Univ. of Tech.) Reaction cross sections (σR) for 22-35Na isotopes have been measured at around 240 MeV/nucleon. The σR for 22-35Na were measured for the first time. Enhancement in cross sections is clearly observed from the systematics for stable nuclei, for isotopes with large mass numbers. These enhancement can be mainly ascribed to the nuclear deformation. We will discuss the nuclear structure (neutron skin, nuclear shell structure) for neutron-excess Na isotopes. JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 24244024.
Structural Assessment of Knowledge and Skill
1992-08-01
Street San Diego, CA 92152-6800 Chicago, IL 60616 Dr. Menucha Birenbaum Educational Testing Serv. Library, Code 231 Dr. Lorraine 0. Eyde Princeton, NJ...University Dr. Norman Frederiksen Educational Testing Service Rosedale Road Department of Psychology Educational Testing Service Princeton, NJ 08541... Psychology Educational Testing Service Arlington, VA 22207 Carnegie-Mellon University Princeton, NJ 08541 5000 Forbes Avenue Dr. Delwyn Harnisch Pittsburgh
Budgeting and Resource Allocation at Princeton University. Report of a Demonstration Project.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Benacerraf, Paul; And Others
This report summarizes the work done to date on a study of resource allocation in universities. This report specifically is concerned with budgeting and resource allocation at Princeton University. The document consists of 4 sections. The first section deals with the process of budgeting at Princeton as it has evolved over the last 4 years. After…
Philip Vickers Fithian (1747-1776), a Princeton Tutor on a Virginia Plantation.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Parker, Franklin; Parker, Betty J.
This paper narrates the life of Philip Vickers Fithian, a northern tutor on a southern plantation prior to the American Revolution. Fithian's life is described from the time he was born in 1747, through his years at the College of New Jersey, renamed Princeton College in 1896 and later Princeton University, until he graduated in 1772, and until…
Bright THz Instrument and Nonlinear THz Science
2017-10-30
darkness” Princeton International School of Math and Sciences, Princeton, NY, May 12, 2017. 7. “THz: Imaging Beyond Light” Open Readings 2017, 60th...June 19, 2017. 6. “Let light shine out of darkness” Princeton International School of Math and Sciences, Princeton, NY, May...a graduate of Ph.D. in science, math , engineering, or technology fields 0 Number who achieved a 3.5 GPA to 4.0 (4.0 max
Infinite Dimensional Dynamical Systems and their Finite Dimensional Analogues.
1987-01-01
Rolla ____t___e ___o, __.Paul Steen Cornell Univ.Andrew Szeri Cornell Univ. ByEdriss Titi Univ. of Chicago _Distributi-on/ -S. Tsaltas Unvcrsity of...Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853 Edriss Titi University of Chicago Dept. of Mathematics 5734 S. University Ave.Chicago, IL 60637 Spiros Tsaltas Dept
1992-06-01
Geisler, M. H . Haken, Univ. Stuttgar’, Germany. A geometrical formulation P. Sorenson, P. L. Christiansen, Technical Univ., Denmark; J. of phase...locking, L. A. mode inhomogeneously broadened laser dynamics, B. Melnikov, G. N. Tatarkov, Chernyshevsky State Univ., Russia. Meziane, H . Ladjouze, ENSSAT...coupled laser arrays, D. Nichols, H . Winful, Univ. Michigan. We have studied the effect of nonlinear TuC6 Phase singularities in a Fabry-Perot resonator
Navy-ASEE Summer Faculty Research Program. Navy-ASEE Sabbatical Leave Program.
1994-09-01
University Arnall Physical Therapy N. Arizona Univ. I Azimi-Sadjadi Elec. Eng. Colorado St. Univ. Baird Chem. Univ. of Alabama in Huntsville I Bandy Mech...provide the framework for the analysis of data in magneto -optics and on tunneling structures for a number of years. Dr. Bilal M. Ayyub Associate
Home range overlap as a driver of intelligence in primates.
Grueter, Cyril C
2015-04-01
Various socioecological factors have been suggested to influence cognitive capacity in primates, including challenges associated with foraging and dealing with the complexities of social life. Alexander [Alexander, 1989]. Evolution of the human psyche. In: Mellars P, Stringer C, editors. The human revolution: Behavioural and biological perspectives on the origins of modern humans. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p 455-513] proposed an integrative model for the evolution of human cognitive abilities and complex sociality that incorporates competition among coalitions of conspecifics (inter-group conflict) as a major selective pressure. However, one of the premises of this model, i.e., that when confronted with inter-group conflict selection should favor enhanced cognition, has remained empirically untested. Using a comparative approach on species data, I aimed to test the prediction that primate species (n = 104) that face greater inter-group conflict have higher cognitive abilities (indexed by endocranial volume). The degree of inter-group conflict/complexity was approximated via the variable home range overlap among groups. I found a significant relationship between home range overlap and endocranial volume, even after controlling for other predictor variables and covariates such as group size and body mass. I conclude that brain size evolution cannot be attributed exclusively to social factors such as group size, but likely reflects a variety of social and ecological determinants including inter-group conflict which poses cognitive demands on monitoring both the wider social milieu as well as spatial attributes of the habitat. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
1990-10-31
and ZIP Code) Dept. of Civil Fng. & Oper. Research Building 410 Princeton University Bolling AFB, D.C. 20332-6448 ?rinceton, NJ 08544 i. NAME OF FUNDING...Department of Civil Engineering & Operations Research Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08544 31 October 1990 Final Technical Report Approved for public...release; Distribution is unlimited. I Prepared for Air Force Office of Scientific Research Building 410 Boiling AFB, D.C. 20332-6448 PREFACE This work
Lagrangian dynamics for classical, Brownian, and quantum mechanical particles
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pavon, Michele
1996-07-01
In the framework of Nelson's stochastic mechanics [E. Nelson, Dynamical Theories of Brownian Motion (Princeton University, Princeton, 1967); F. Guerra, Phys. Rep. 77, 263 (1981); E. Nelson, Quantum Fluctuations (Princeton University, Princeton, 1985)] we seek to develop the particle counterpart of the hydrodynamic results of M. Pavon [J. Math. Phys. 36, 6774 (1995); Phys. Lett. A 209, 143 (1995)]. In particular, a first form of Hamilton's principle is established. We show that this variational principle leads to the correct equations of motion for the classical particle, the Brownian particle in thermodynamical equilibrium, and the quantum particle. In the latter case, the critical process q satisfies a stochastic Newton law. We then introduce the momentum process p, and show that the pair (q,p) satisfies canonical-like equations.
Cal-Bridge and CAMPARE: Engaging Underrepresented Students in Physics and Astronomy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rudolph, Alexander L.; Cal-Bridge and CAMPARE Teams
2018-01-01
We describe two programs, Cal-Bridge and CAMPARE, with the common mission of increasing participation of groups traditionally underrepresented in astronomy, through summer research opportunities, in the case of CAMPARE, scholarships in the case of Cal-Bridge, and significant mentoring in both programs, creating a national impact on their numbers successfully pursuing a PhD in the field.In 8 years, the CAMPARE program has sent 112 students, >80% from underrepresented groups, to conduct summer research at one of 14 major research institutions throughout the country. Of the CAMPARE scholars who have graduated with a Bachelor’s degree, almost two-thirds (65%) have completed or are pursuing graduate education in physics, astronomy, or a related field, at institutions including UCLA, UC Riverside, UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara, USC, Stanford, Univ. of Arizona, Univ. of Washington, Univ. of Rochester, Michigan State Univ., Georgia Tech, Georgia State Univ., Kent State, Indiana Univ., Univ. of Oregon, Syracuse Univ., Montana State Univ., and the Fisk-Vanderbilt Master’s-to-PhD program.Now entering its fourth year, the Cal-Bridge program is a CSU-UC Bridge program comprised of >140 physics and astronomy faculty from 9 University of California (UC), 15 California State University (CSU), and 30 California Community College (CCC) campuses throughout California. In the first four years, 34 Cal-Bridge Scholars have been selected, including 22 Hispanic, 3 African-American and 13 women students, 10 of whom are from URM groups. Thirty (30) of the 34 Cal-Bridge Scholars are first generation college students. In the last two years, 11 of 13 Cal-Bridge Scholars have begun PhD programs in physics or astronomy at top PhD programs nationally. Three (3) of these 11 scholars have won NSF Graduate Research Fellowships; one more received an Honorable Mention. The next cohort applies this fall.Cal-Bridge provides much deeper mentoring and professional development experiences over the last two years of undergraduate and first year of graduate school to students from this diverse network of higher education institutions. Cal-Bridge Scholars benefit from substantial financial support, intensive, joint mentoring by CSU and UC faculty, professional development workshops, and exposure to research opportunities at the participating UC campuses.
Cal-Bridge and CAMPARE: Engaging Underrepresented Students in Physics and Astronomy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rudolph, Alexander L.; Smecker-Hane, Tammy A.; Cal-Bridge Team; CAMPARE Team
2018-06-01
We describe two programs, Cal-Bridge and CAMPARE, with the common mission of increasing participation of groups traditionally underrepresented in astronomy, through summer research opportunities, in the case of CAMPARE, scholarships in the case of Cal-Bridge, and significant mentoring in both programs, creating a national impact on their numbers successfully pursuing a PhD in the field. In 9 years, the CAMPARE program has sent 150 students, >80% from underrepresented groups, to conduct summer research at one of 14 major research institutions throughout the country. Of the CAMPARE scholars who have graduated with a Bachelor’s degree, almost two-thirds (65%) have completed or are pursuing graduate education in physics, astronomy, or a related field, at institutions including UCLA, UC Riverside, UC Irvine, UC Santa Barbara, USC, Stanford, Univ. of Arizona, Univ. of Washington, Univ. of Rochester, Michigan State Univ., Georgia Tech, Georgia State Univ., Kent State, Indiana Univ., Univ. of Oregon, Syracuse Univ., Montana State Univ., and the Fisk- Vanderbilt Master’s-to-PhD program. Now in its fourth year, the Cal-Bridge program is a CSU-UC Bridge program comprised of physics and astronomy faculty from 9 University of California (UC), 15 California State University (CSU), and more than 30 California Community College (CCC) campuses throughout California. In the first four years, 34 Cal-Bridge Scholars have been selected, including 22 Hispanic, 3 African-American and 13 women students, 10 of whom are from URM groups. Thirty (30) of the 34 Cal-Bridge Scholars are first generation college students. In the last three years, 17 of 21 Cal-Bridge Scholars have begun or been accepted PhD programs in physics or astronomy at top PhD programs nationally. Three (3) of these scholars have won NSF Graduate Research Fellowships; one more received an Honorable Mention. Once selected, Cal-Bridge Scholars benefit from substantial financial support, intensive, joint mentoring by CSU and UC faculty, professional development workshops, and exposure to research opportunities at the participating UC campuses. Funding for this program is provided by NSF-DUE SSTEM Grant #1356133.
Mantle convection and the distribution of geochemical reservoirs in the silicate shell of the Earth
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Walzer, Uwe; Hendel, Roland
2010-05-01
We present a dynamic 3-D spherical-shell model of mantle convection and the evolution of the chemical reservoirs of the Earth`s silicate shell. Chemical differentiation, convection, stirring and thermal evolution constitute an inseparable dynamic system. Our model is based on the solution of the balance equations of mass, momentum, energy, angular momentum, and four sums of the number of atoms of the pairs 238U-206Pb, 235U-207Pb, 232Th-208Pb, and 40K-40Ar. Similar to the present model, the continental crust of the real Earth was not produced entirely at the start of the evolution but developed episodically in batches [1-7]. The details of the continental distribution of the model are largely stochastic, but the spectral properties are quite similar to the present real Earth. The calculated Figures reveal that the modeled present-day mantle has no chemical stratification but we find a marble-cake structure. If we compare the observational results of the present-day proportion of depleted MORB mantle with the model then we find a similar order of magnitude. The MORB source dominates under the lithosphere. In our model, there are nowhere pure unblended reservoirs in the mantle. It is, however, remarkable that, in spite of 4500 Ma of solid-state mantle convection, certain strong concentrations of distributed chemical reservoirs continue to persist in certain volumes, although without sharp abundance boundaries. We deal with the question of predictable and stochastic portions of the phenomena. Although the convective flow patterns and the chemical differentiation of oceanic plateaus are coupled, the evolution of time-dependent Rayleigh number, Rat , is relatively well predictable and the stochastic parts of the Rat(t)-curves are small. Regarding the juvenile growth rates of the total mass of the continents, predictions are possible only in the first epoch of the evolution. Later on, the distribution of the continental-growth episodes is increasingly stochastic. Independently of the varying individual runs, our model shows that the total mass of the present-day continents is not generated in a single process at the beginning of the thermal evolution of the Earth but in episodically distributed processes in the course of geological time. This is in accord with observation. Finally, we present results regarding the numerical method, implementation, scalability and performance. References [1] Condie, K. C., Episodie continental growth models: Afterthoughts and extensions, Tectonophysics, 322 (2000), 153-162. [2] Davidson, J. P. and Arculus, R. J., The significance of Phanerozoic arc magmatism in generating continental crust, in Evolution and Differentiation of the Continental Crust, edited by M. Brown and T. Rushmer (2006), 135-172, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, UK. [3] Hofmann, A. W., Sampling mantle heterogeneity through oceanic basalts: Isotopes and trace elements, in Treatise on Geochemistry, Vol. 2: The Mantle and the Core, edited by R. W. Carlson (2003), 61-101, Elsevier, Amsterdam. [4] Rollinson, H., Crustal generation in the Archean, in Evolution and Differentiation of the Continental Crust, edited by M. Brown and T. Rushmer (2006), 173-230, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, UK: [5] Taylor, S. R. and McLennan, S. M., Planetary Crusts. Their Composition, Origin and Evolution. (2009), 1-378, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, UK. [6] Walzer, U. and Hendel, R., Mantle convection and evolution with growing continents. J. Geophys. Res. 113 (2008), B09405, doi: 10.1029/2007JB005459 [7] http://www.igw.uni-jena.de/geodyn
Princeton University High Energy Physics Research
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Marlow, Daniel R.
This is the Final Report on research conducted by the Princeton Elementary Particles group over the approximately three-year period from May 1, 2012 to April 30, 2015. The goal of our research is to investigate the fundamental constituents of matter, their fields, and their interactions; to understand the properties of space and time; and to study the profound relationships between cosmology and particle physics. During the funding period covered by this report, the group has been organized into a subgroup concentrating on the theory of particles, strings, and cosmology; and four subgroups performing major experiments at laboratories around the world: CERN, Daya Bay, Gran Sasso as well as detector R\\&D on the Princeton campus. Highlights in of this research include the discovery of the Higgs Boson at CERN and the measurement ofmore » $$\\sin^22\\theta_{13}$$ by the Daya Bay experiment. In both cases, Princeton researchers supported by this grant played key roles.« less
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-07-24
.... (now part of Kremers-Urban Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 902 Carnegie Center, Suite 360, Princeton, NJ 08540...-687) and Spasmolin (ANDA 86-655); Sandoz, Inc., 506 Carnegie Center, Suite 400, Princeton, NJ 08540...
Institute for the Study of Human Capabilities
1994-05-31
Catholic Univ. James Reason Univ. of Manchester,UK Earl Hunt Univ. of Washington Barry Kantowitz Battelle Res. Center Colin Drury SUNY at Buffalo, NY Andrew...score variance accounted for were obtained in the elderly subjects by including various measures of auditory processing. 0 I 10I I I MAldling the...frequency could be discriminated. This analysis will now be extended to account for the detailed differences in thresholds3 observed for female (Kewley-Port
Conference on the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (3rd)
1988-09-23
TREATMENT IN PARADOXICAL SLEEP I. Portell-Cortes, DEPRIVATION PLATFORMS IN RATS . Norpdo-Bernal Area do Psicobiologia Dept. de Psicologia do la Salut Univ...of California Irvine, CA 92717 Irvine, CA 92717 Dr. Robert W. Doty Dr. David Easton Center for Brain Research School of Social Sciences Univ. of...Ignacio Morgado-Bernal Dr. Georges Moroz Area de Psicobiologia CNS Development Psicologia do la Salud CIBA-GEIGY Corp. Univ. Autonoma do Barcelona DEV
The Invisibility of Diffeomorphisms
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
De Haro, Sebastian
2017-11-01
I examine the relationship between (d+1)-dimensional Poincaré metrics and d-dimensional conformal manifolds, from both mathematical and physical perspectives. The results have a bearing on several conceptual issues relating to asymptotic symmetries in general relativity and in gauge-gravity duality, as follows: (1: Ambient Construction) I draw from the remarkable work by Fefferman and Graham (Elie Cartan et les Mathématiques d'aujourd'hui, Astérisque, 1985; The Ambient Metric. Annals of Mathematics Studies, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2012) on conformal geometry, in order to prove two propositions and a theorem that characterise which classes of diffeomorphisms qualify as gravity-invisible. I define natural notions of gravity-invisibility (strong, weak, and simpliciter) that apply to the diffeomorphisms of Poincaré metrics in any dimension. (2: Dualities) I apply the notions of invisibility, developed in (1), to gauge-gravity dualities: which, roughly, relate Poincaré metrics in d+1 dimensions to QFTs in d dimensions. I contrast QFT-visible versus QFT-invisible diffeomorphisms: those gravity diffeomorphisms that can, respectively cannot, be seen from the QFT. The QFT-invisible diffeomorphisms are the ones which are relevant to the hole argument in Einstein spaces. The results on dualities are surprising, because the class of QFT-visible diffeomorphisms is larger than expected, and the class of QFT-invisible ones is smaller than expected, or usually believed, i.e. larger than the PBH diffeomorphisms in Imbimbo et al. (Class Quantum Gravity 17(5):1129, 2000, Eq. 2.6). I also give a general derivation of the asymptotic conformal Killing equation, which has not appeared in the literature before.
Gentilucci, Maurizio; Bernardis, Paolo; Crisi, Girolamo; Dalla Volta, Riccardo
2006-07-01
The aim of the present study was to determine whether Broca's area is involved in translating some aspects of arm gesture representations into mouth articulation gestures. In Experiment 1, we applied low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation over Broca's area and over the symmetrical loci of the right hemisphere of participants responding verbally to communicative spoken words, to gestures, or to the simultaneous presentation of the two signals. We performed also sham stimulation over the left stimulation loci. In Experiment 2, we performed the same stimulations as in Experiment 1 to participants responding with words congruent and incongruent with gestures. After sham stimulation voicing parameters were enhanced when responding to communicative spoken words or to gestures as compared to a control condition of word reading. This effect increased when participants responded to the simultaneous presentation of both communicative signals. In contrast, voicing was interfered when the verbal responses were incongruent with gestures. The left stimulation neither induced enhancement on voicing parameters of words congruent with gestures nor interference on words incongruent with gestures. We interpreted the enhancement of the verbal response to gesturing in terms of intention to interact directly. Consequently, we proposed that Broca's area is involved in the process of translating into speech aspects concerning the social intention coded by the gesture. Moreover, we discussed the results in terms of evolution to support the theory [Corballis, M. C. (2002). From hand to mouth: The origins of language. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press] proposing spoken language as evolved from an ancient communication system using arm gestures.
Senior Thesis Research at Princeton.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Prud'homme, Robert K.
1981-01-01
Reviews a senior undergraduate research program in chemical engineering at Princeton University. Includes strengths and requirements for a successful program. Senior thesis research provides creative problem solving experiences for students and is congruent with departmental research objectives. Selected student comments are included. (SK)
Hazardous Waste Cleanup: Wyeth Holdings Corporation in Princeton Junction, New Jersey
BASF, formerly American Cyanamid Corporation (ACC) Agricultural Division, is a 683 acre site, located at the intersection of Quakerbridge Rd and US Route 1 in Princeton Junction, NJ. BASF bought the operations of ACC Agricultural Division from American
2. FORMER DENVER, SOUTH PARK AND PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE OVER ...
2. FORMER DENVER, SOUTH PARK AND PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE OVER CHALK CREEK, NEAR MT. PRINCETON HOT SPRINGS. VIEW UPSTREAM - Denver South Park & Pacific Railroad Bridge, Spanning Chalk Creek, near Mount Princeton Hot Spring, Romley (historical), Chaffee County, CO
1. FORMER DENVER, SOUTH PARK AND PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE OVER ...
1. FORMER DENVER, SOUTH PARK AND PACIFIC RAILROAD BRIDGE OVER CHALK CREEK, NEAR MT. PRINCETON HOT SPRINGS. VIEW DOWNSTREAM - Denver South Park & Pacific Railroad Bridge, Spanning Chalk Creek, near Mount Princeton Hot Spring, Romley (historical), Chaffee County, CO
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Witten, Edward
2015-10-21
The Strings 2014 meeting was held at Princeton University June 23-27, 2014, co-sponsored by Princeton University and the Institute for Advanced Study. The goal of the meeting was to provide a stimulating and up-to-date overview of research in string theory and its relations to other areas of physics and mathematics, ranging from geometry to quantum field theory, condensed matter physics, and more. This brief report lists committee members and speakers but contains no scientific information. Note that the talks at Strings 2014 were videotaped and are available on the conference website: http://physics.princeton.edustrings2014/Talk_titles.shtml.
Princeton University Materials Academy for underrepresented students
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Steinberg, Daniel; Rodriguez Martinez, Sara; Cody, Linda
Summer 2016 gave underrepresented high school students from Trenton New Jersey the opportunity to learn materials science, sustainability and the physics and chemistry of energy storage from Princeton University professors. New efforts to place this curriculum online so that teachers across the United States can teach materials science as a tool to teach ``real'' interdisciplinary science and meet the new Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS). The Princeton University Materials Academy (PUMA) is an education outreach program for underrepresented high school students. It is part of the Princeton Center for Complex Materials (PCCM), a National Science Foundation (NSF) funded Materials Research Engineering and Science Center (MRSEC). PUMA has been serving the community of Trenton New Jersey which is only eight miles from the Princeton University campus. We reached over 250 students from 2003-2016 with many students repeating for multiple years. 100% of our PUMA students have graduated high school and 98% have gone on for college. This is compared with overall Trenton district graduation rate of 48% and a free and reduced lunch of 83%. We discuss initiatives to share the curriculum online to enhance the reach of PCCM' PUMA and to help teachers use materials science to meet NGSS and give their students opportunities to learn interdisciplinary science. MRSEC, NSF (DMR-1420541).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sasaki, M.; Aita, Y.; Aoki, T.; Asaoka, Y.; Browder, T.; Chonan, T.; Dye, S.; Eguchi, M.; Fox, R.; Guillian, G.; Hamilton, J.; Kimura, T.; Kohta, N.; Kuze, H.; Learned, J.; Masuda, M.; Matsuno, S.; Morimoto, Y.; Noda, K.; Ogawa, S.; Okumura, A.; Olsen, S.; Shibuya, H.; Shinomiya, K.; Sugiyama, N.; Yamaguchi, Y.; Yasuda, M.; Varner, G.; Watanabe, Y.; Watanabe, Y.
Ashra (All-sky Survey High Resolution Air-shower detector) is a project to build an unconventional optical telescope complex that images very wide field of view, covering 80% of the sky, yet with the angle pixel resolution of 1.2 arcsin, sensitive to the blue to UV light with the use of image intensifier and CMOS technology. The project primarily aims to observe Cherenkov and fluorescence lights from the lateral and longitudinal developments of very-high energy cosmic rays in the atmosphere. It can also be used to monitor optical transients in the wide field of sky. In 2004 we built prototype telescopes to verify and develop techniques at Haleakala in Hawaii, needed for the development of the full-scale telescopes. Construction of the main detector station has begun at Mauna Loa on the Hawaii Island in the summer of 2005. The pilot observation data have been taken. We will present the project status, and expected scientific impacts on the observational objectives such as optical transients, unidentified TeV gamma- ray and PeV neutrino sources, and the propagation of EeV cosmic rays. The Ashra Collaboration: (a) ICRR, Univ. Tokyo (b) Univ. Hawaii Manoa (c) Univ. Hawaii Hilo (d)Ibaraki Univ. (e) Toho Univ. (f) Chiba Univ. (g) Tokyo Inst. Tech. (h) Nagoya Univ. Y. Aita.^a, T. Aoki^a, Y. Asaoka^a, T. Browder^b, T. Chonan^a, S. Dye^b, M. Eguchi^a, R. Fox^c, G. Guillian^b, J. Hamilton^c, T. Kimura^d, N. Kohta^e, H. Kuze^f, J. Learned^b, M. Masuda^g, S. Matsuno^b, Y. Morimoto^e, K. Noda^a, S. Ogawa^e, A. Okumura^a, S. Olsen^b, M. Sasaki^a, H. Shibuya^e, K. Shinomiya^f, N. Sugiyama^h, Y. Yamaguchi^f, M. Yasuda^g, G. Varner^b, Y. Watanabe^g, Y. Watanabe^e
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2013-04-08
...- Health Research, University of Present [dagger]. California (Davis). Laboratory of Biomedical and Los... Radiobiology and San Francisco..... 1951-1999. Environmental Health, University of California (San Francisco........... New Brunswick..... 1948-1977. Princeton Plasma Physics Princeton......... 1951-Present. Laboratory...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Greene, Jenny; Knapp, Jill
2012-01-01
The Princeton Teaching Initiative at Princeton University is an all-volunteer group formed to teach for-credit college courses in the New Jersey state prison system. The courses are coordinated with the Mercer County Community College (MCCC), which accredits the courses and maintains the students' transcripts. Volunteer professors, postdoctoral…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-02-28
... the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, from, on or about March 17, 2012, until on or about June 10, 2012; the Frist Center for the Visual Arts, Nashville, TN, from on or about June 22, 2012...
10 CFR 820.20 - Purpose and scope.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
...; (5) Princeton University for activities associated with Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory; (6) The... OF ENERGY PROCEDURAL RULES FOR DOE NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES Enforcement Process § 820.20 Purpose and scope... activities specified below: (1) The University of Chicago for activities associated with Argonne National...
Development of Kawai-type multianvil technology using nano-polycrystalline diamond anvils
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Irifune, T.; Kunimoto, T.
2016-12-01
Nano-polycrystalline diamond (NPD) developed at GRC, Ehime Univ., is known to be much harder than conventional sintered polycrystalline diamond (SD), and is potentially important as material for anvils for Kawai-type (6-8 type) multianvil apparatus (KMA), as well as for diamond anvil cell. We synthesized NPD rods with about 8 mm in both diameter and length using a 6000-ton press KMA (BOTCHAN-6000), which are cut by pulsed-laser to form cubes with 6 mm edge length and tested them as anvils for KMA. In situ X-ray observations were made to evaluate the produced pressures and sample images using the "6-6-8 assembly". A combination of semi-fired pyrophyllite gaskets and alumina ceramics pressure medium optimized for the NPD anvils with a truncation (TEL) of 1.0 mm yielded pressures up to 88 GPa at a press load of only 3.4 MN, which is nearly 60% higher than the pressure (56 GPa) reached using SD anvils with the identical cell assembly at the same press load. Moreover, the high X-ray transparency of NPD has enabled us to clearly see the sample image via the anvils, allowing diffraction measurements and observations of the sample shape even if the anvil gap becomes very small under such very high pressures. The use of NPD anvils should lead to new technology for mineral physics studies under the conditions of the Earth's lowermost mantle and possibly those of the core without scarifying the advantages of KMA over DAC.
Relativité générale et gravitation.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Elbaz, E.
Contents: 1. Description de l'univers observable. 2. Lemicro-univers des particules élémentaires. 3. Analyse tensorielle.4. Relativité restreinte. 5. Effet de la gravitation en relativité générale. 6. Équations d'Einstein. 7. Ondes gravitationnelles. 8. Champ de gravitation statique et isotrope. 9. Structures stellaires. 10. Champ de gravitation non statique isotrope. 11. Introduction à la dynamique cosmologique et au modèle standard de l'univers très primitif. 12. Perspectives actuelles.
75 FR 71737 - Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000, as Amended
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-11-24
... 1984-1997. Laboratory for Energy-Related Health Davis 1958-1989; 1991-Present.[dagger] Research.... Environmental Health, University of California (San Francisco). Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory... Physics Laboratory, James Princeton 1951-Present. Forrestal Campus of Princeton University. New Mexico DOE...
New Princeton President Seeks to Allay Faculty's Fears over Style and Budget.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Magner, Denise K.
1989-01-01
Last year's budget-trimming policies of Princeton University's new president confused and angered faculty, and handling of a faculty sexual misconduct case compounded campus discord. This fall has begun more quietly, marked by the president's efforts to emphasize positive movement. (MSE)
Nehra, Ajay; Jackson, Graham; Miner, Martin; Billups, Kevin L.; Burnett, Arthur L.; Buvat, Jacques; Carson, Culley C.; Cunningham, Glenn R.; Ganz, Peter; Goldstein, Irwin; Guay, Andre T.; Hackett, Geoff; Kloner, Robert A.; Kostis, John; Montorsi, Piero; Ramsey, Melinda; Rosen, Raymond; Sadovsky, Richard; Seftel, Allen D.; Shabsigh, Ridwan; Vlachopoulos, Charalambos; Wu, Frederick C.W.
2012-01-01
The Princeton Consensus (Expert Panel) Conference is a multispecialty collaborative tradition dedicated to optimizing sexual function and preserving cardiovascular health. The third Princeton Consensus met November 8 to 10, 2010, and had 2 primary objectives. The first objective focused on the evaluation and management of cardiovascular risk in men with erectile dysfunction (ED) and no known cardiovascular disease (CVD), with particular emphasis on identification of men with ED who may require additional cardiologic work-up. The second objective focused on reevaluation and modification of previous recommendations for evaluation of cardiac risk associated with sexual activity in men with known CVD. The Panel's recommendations build on those developed during the first and second Princeton Consensus Conferences, first emphasizing the use of exercise ability and stress testing to ensure that each man's cardiovascular health is consistent with the physical demands of sexual activity before prescribing treatment for ED, and second highlighting the link between ED and CVD, which may be asymptomatic and may benefit from cardiovascular risk reduction. PMID:22862865
Delin, G.N.; Landon, M.K.; Lamb, J.A.; Anderson, J.L.
1994-01-01
The Minnesota Management Systems Evaluation Area project is part of a multi-scale, inter-agency initiative to evaluate the effects of agricultural management systems on water quality in the midwest corn belt. The research area is located in the Anoka Sand Plain about 5 kilometers southwest of Princeton, Minnesota. The ground-water-quality monitoring network within and immediately surrounding the research area consists of 29 observation wells and 22 multiport wells. Thirteen observation wells are also located outside the research area. The primary objectives of research by the U.S. Geological Survey at the Princeton Management Systems Evaluation Area are to: (1) determine the relation of the spatial and temporal distribution of agricultural chemicals in ground water to recharge, topography, and subsurface heterogeneities; and (2) determine the effects of the modified and prevailing farming systems on ground-water quality. This report presents geologic logs and water-quality data used to characterize the Princeton Management Systems Evaluation Area.
Collet, A M; Piloni, M J; Keszler, A
1993-01-01
At present the "Impact Factor" developed by the Scientific Information Institute (Philadelphia), is an indicator of the quality of the journals in terms of the quality of the papers which are published. The results of odontological research which are presented and discussed at the annual meetings of the DAAIIO are proof of the quality and quantity of scientific production in this area in Argentina. Presentations are undoubtedly numerous. However, their diffusion and qualitative evaluation are of utmost importance. One way to estimate these parameters would be to monitor the ratio between number of presentations and their publication as full papers in journals with a system of referees (Ratio Publ./Pres.). With this aim in mind the presentations at DAAIIO over the 1980-1989 period were considered. Employing the author index of the DAAIIO meetings, we searched for possible publications in the Index Dental and the Index Medicus. The references were compared with the results presented to disregard publications which had not been previously presented at DAAIIO meetings. The data obtained were grouped according to subject area and Research Center. A total of 747 presentations led to 94 publications, the Publ./Pres. Ratio being 1/8 (12.5%). The ratio for each research center was the following: Univ. Buenos Aires 1/7; Natl. Univ. La Plata 1/8; Natl. Univ. Córdoba 1/15. The research groups with the highest publication ratios were Dent. Mat., Natl. Univ. La Plata 1/3; Clinical Pathol., Univ. Bs. As. 1/4; Oral Pathol., Univ. Bs. As. 1/4; Physiol. and Pharmacol., Univ. Bs. As. 1/4; Natl. Univ. Córdoba 1/7. The majority of the publications within 2 years of presentation were in English (69%). These results suggest that an acceptable number of presentations are published, particularly in the area of basic research. We should hope for an increase in the publication/presentation ratio in the future, particularly in the area of applied clinical research since publication would imply technical-scientific quality evaluation of the work by the experts who condition publication.
Quantum Corral Wave-function Engineering
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Correa, Alfredo; Reboredo, Fernando; Balseiro, Carlos
2005-03-01
We present a theoretical method for the design and optimization of quantum corrals[1] with specific electronic properties. Taking advantage that spins are subject to a RKKY interaction that is directly controlled by the scattering of the quantum corral, we design corral structures that reproduce spin Hamiltonians with coupling constants determined a priori[2]. We solve exactly the bi-dimensional scattering problem for each corral configuration within the s-wave approximation[3] and subsequently the geometry of the quantum corral is optimized by means of simulated annealing[4] and genetic algorithms[5]. We demonstrate the possibility of automatic design of structures with complicated target electronic properties[6]. This work was performed under the auspices of the US Department of Energy by the University of California at the LLNL under contract no W-7405-Eng-48. [1] M. F. Crommie, C. P. Lutz and D. M. Eigler, Nature 403, 512 (2000) [2] D. P. DiVincenzo et al., Nature 408, 339 (2000) [3] G. A. Fiete and E. J. Heller, Rev. Mod. Phys. 75, 933 (2003) [4] M. R. A. T. N. Metropolis et al., J. Chem. Phys. 1087 (1953) [5] E. Aarts and J. K. Lenstra, eds. Local search in combinatorial problems (Princeton University Press, 1997) [6] A. A. Correa, F. Reboredo and C. Balseiro, Phys. Rev. B (in press).
Understanding the Current International Order
2016-01-01
the U.S.-led order. In particular, they see democracy promotion as an attempt to weaken them by destabilizing them internally (see Stent , 2015; Hill...2013, pp. 209–231. Stent , Angela E., The Limits of Partnership: U.S.-Russian Relations in the Twenty- First Century, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
Global Governance: The Role of States and International Organizations
2003-10-01
1752002) Ishikawa , Kaoru . Nation Building and Development Assistance in Africa: Different but Egual. New York: St. Martin’s, 1999. (HC 800 .184 1999...C242454 2001) Irwin, Douglas A. Free Trade under Fire. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2002. (HF 1756 .1682002) Ishikawa , Kaoru . Nation Building and
Conveying the Meaning of the Economic Crisis
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Anderson, Luke A.
2010-01-01
In the late summer of 2008, after the 2007-2008 fiscal year's books had closed, the nation's wealthiest universities were confronted with an unfamiliar sight: single-digit endowment returns. Not since 2003 had Harvard University (Cambridge, Massachusetts), Princeton University (Princeton, New Jersey), or Stanford University (Stanford, California)…
Physical and Chemical Processes in Flames
2010-02-15
Results: Use of comprehensively validated reduced chemical kinetic mechanism allows realistic description of methane oxidation chemistry with NOx ...PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544... mechanism reduction; skeletal mechanism ; CO/H2 oxidation; ethylene oxidation; heptane oxidation; directed relation graph; high-pressure combustion
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Flato, J. B.
2007-01-01
Princeton Applied Research Corporation (PAR) was a small electronic instrument company in early 1960s but once they entered electrochemistry they were very successful. Since then they have developed and designed successful instruments with their tremendous knowledge and have made great contribution to the field of analytical chemistry.
Item Construction and Psychometric Models Appropriate for Constructed Responses
1991-08-01
which involve only one attribute per item. This is especially true when we are dealing with constructed-response items, we have to measure much more...Service University of Ilinois Educacional Testing Service Rosedal Road Capign. IL 61801 Princeton. K3 08541 Princeton. N3 08541 Dr. Charles LeiS Dr
History of Higher Education Annual, 1993.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
History of Higher Education, 1993
1993-01-01
This annual compilation examines issues in the shaping and adaptation of the modern university, in five articles. The first article, by Amy Sue Bix, is titled "'Backing into Sponsored Research': Physics and Engineering at Princeton University, 1945-1970." It reviews the process by which Princeton University (New Jersey) made a series of…
2011-02-14
licensed use limited to: UNIV OF HAWAII LIBRARY. Downloaded on June 18,2010 at 22:24:49 UTC from IEEE Xplore . Restrictions apply. KIM et al.: MODIFIED...limited to: UNIV OF HAWAII LIBRARY. Downloaded on June 18,2010 at 22:24:49 UTC from IEEE Xplore . Restrictions apply. 404 IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON...licensed use limited to: UNIV OF HAWAII LIBRARY. Downloaded on June 18,2010 at 22:24:49 UTC from IEEE Xplore . Restrictions apply. KIM et al
Lucas, Philippe
2009-07-01
This paper is a sociological examination of policies and practices in Health Canada's Marihuana Medical Access Division (MMAD) that presume the illicit intentions and inherent "guilt" of medical cannabis users, hampering safe access to a medicine to which many are legally entitled, and raising doubts about this federal programme's overall effectiveness and constitutional legitimacy. Beginning with a brief historical overview of Canada's federal medical cannabis programme, this paper examines the failure of the MMAD to meet the needs of many sick and suffering Canadians through Hunt's [Hunt, A. (1999). Governing morals: A social history of moral regulation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press] work on moral regulation and Wodak's [Wodak, A. (2007). Ethics and drug policy. Psychiatry, 6(2), 59-62] critique of "deontological" drug policy strategies. I then cite Tupper's [Tupper, K. W. (2007). The globalization of ayahuasca: Harm reduction or benefit maximization? International Journal of Drug Policy, doi:10.1016/j.drugpo.2006.11.001] argument that shifting to a generative metaphor that constructs certain entheogenic substances as potentially useful "tools" rather than regulating them through inherently moralistic prohibitionist policies would better serve public health, and incorporate Young's [Young, I. M. (1990). Justice and the politics of difference. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press] theories of domination and oppression to examine the rise of community-base medical cannabis dispensaries as "new social movements". First-hand accounts by medical cannabis patients, federally funded studies, and internal Health Canada communication and documents suggest that current federal policies and practices are blocking safe access to this herbal medicine. The community-based dispensary model of medical cannabis access is a patient-centered "new social movement" that mitigates the stigmatization and moral regulation of their member-clients by creating opportunities for engagement, empowerment and joint knowledge creation. In light of ongoing Charter challenges and patient criticism, the survival of this federal programme will depend on the government's ability to shift away from policies based on the oppression and moral regulation, and towards consequentialist policies that balance harm reduction and benefit maximization. The effectiveness of such an approach is exemplified by the success of the community-based dispensary model which is currently producing more peer-reviewed research and supplying medical cannabis to a far greater number of patients than Health Canada's Marihuana Medical Access Division.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Princeton Univ., NJ. Mid-Career Fellowship Program.
This collection contains nine essays, written by fellows in Princeton University's Mid-Career Fellowship Program, on contemporary issues facing community colleges. The essays included are "Language Minority Crossover Students: A Program to Address a New Challenge at Bergen Community College" (Brian Altano); "Retention Strategies for…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-08
... exhibition ``Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe'' imported from abroad for temporary... exhibit objects at The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, MD, from on or about October 14, 2012, until on or about January 21, 2013; at the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, from on or about February...
Plasma Physics Lab and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor, 1989
None
2018-01-16
From the Princeton University Archives: Promotional video about the Plasma Physics Lab and the new Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR), with footage of the interior, machines, and scientists at work. This film is discussed in the audiovisual blog of the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, which holds the archives of Princeton University.
Power and Influence: Global Dynamics in the 21st Century
2011-10-01
A93 2010) Bardhan , Pranab K. Awakening Giants, Feet of Clay: Assessing the Economic Rise of China and India. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2010. (HC...45. Lei, David. " Outsourcing and China’s Rising Economic Power." Orbis 51, no. 1 (January 2007): 21-39. Monvoisin, Virginie and Louis-Philippe
RiboDB Database: A Comprehensive Resource for Prokaryotic Systematics.
Jauffrit, Frédéric; Penel, Simon; Delmotte, Stéphane; Rey, Carine; de Vienne, Damien M; Gouy, Manolo; Charrier, Jean-Philippe; Flandrois, Jean-Pierre; Brochier-Armanet, Céline
2016-08-01
Ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) are increasingly used as an alternative to ribosomal rRNA for prokaryotic systematics. However, their routine use is difficult because r-proteins are often not or wrongly annotated in complete genome sequences, and there is currently no dedicated exhaustive database of r-proteins. RiboDB aims at fulfilling this gap. This weekly updated comprehensive database allows the fast and easy retrieval of r-protein sequences from publicly available complete prokaryotic genome sequences. The current version of RiboDB contains 90 r-proteins from 3,750 prokaryotic complete genomes encompassing 38 phyla/major classes and 1,759 different species. RiboDB is accessible at http://ribodb.univ-lyon1.fr and through ACNUC interfaces. © The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Phylogenetic approach to the evolution of color term systems
Haynie, Hannah J.
2016-01-01
The naming of colors has long been a topic of interest in the study of human culture and cognition. Color term research has asked diverse questions about thought and communication, but no previous research has used an evolutionary framework. We show that there is broad support for the most influential theory of color term development (that most strongly represented by Berlin and Kay [Berlin B, Kay P (1969) (Univ of California Press, Berkeley, CA)]); however, we find extensive evidence for the loss (as well as gain) of color terms. We find alternative trajectories of color term evolution beyond those considered in the standard theories. These results not only refine our knowledge of how humans lexicalize the color space and how the systems change over time; they illustrate the promise of phylogenetic methods within the domain of cognitive science, and they show how language change interacts with human perception. PMID:27849594
miRNAFold: a web server for fast miRNA precursor prediction in genomes.
Tav, Christophe; Tempel, Sébastien; Poligny, Laurent; Tahi, Fariza
2016-07-08
Computational methods are required for prediction of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), which are involved in many biological processes, especially at post-transcriptional level. Among these ncRNAs, miRNAs have been largely studied and biologists need efficient and fast tools for their identification. In particular, ab initio methods are usually required when predicting novel miRNAs. Here we present a web server dedicated for miRNA precursors identification at a large scale in genomes. It is based on an algorithm called miRNAFold that allows predicting miRNA hairpin structures quickly with high sensitivity. miRNAFold is implemented as a web server with an intuitive and user-friendly interface, as well as a standalone version. The web server is freely available at: http://EvryRNA.ibisc.univ-evry.fr/miRNAFold. © The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
Dynamic crack propagation in a 2D elastic body: The out-of-plane case
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nicaise, Serge; Sandig, Anna-Margarete
2007-05-01
Already in 1920 Griffith has formulated an energy balance criterion for quasistatic crack propagation in brittle elastic materials. Nowadays, a generalized energy balance law is used in mechanics [F. Erdogan, Crack propagation theories, in: H. Liebowitz (Ed.), Fracture, vol. 2, Academic Press, New York, 1968, pp. 498-586; L.B. Freund, Dynamic Fracture Mechanics, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1990; D. Gross, Bruchmechanik, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1996] in order to predict how a running crack will grow. We discuss this situation in a rigorous mathematical way for the out-of-plane state. This model is described by two coupled equations in the reference configuration: a two-dimensional scalar wave equation for the displacement fields in a cracked bounded domain and an ordinary differential equation for the crack position derived from the energy balance law. We handle both equations separately, assuming at first that the crack position is known. Then the weak and strong solvability of the wave equation will be studied and the crack tip singularities will be derived under the assumption that the crack is straight and moves tangentially. Using the energy balance law and the crack tip behavior of the displacement fields we finally arrive at an ordinary differential equation for the motion of the crack tip.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Alekseenko, Elena; Kuznetsov, Konstantin; Roux, Bernard
2016-04-01
Wind stress on the free surface is the main driving force behind the circulation of the upper part of the ocean, which in hydrodynamic models are usually defined in terms of the coefficient of surface tension (Zhang et al., 2009, Davies et al., 2003). Moreover, wave motion impacts local currents and changes sea level, impacts the transport and the stratification of the entire water column. Influence of surface waves at the bottom currents is particularly pronounced in the shallow coastal systems. However, existing methods of parameterization of the surface tension have significant limits, especially in strong wind waves (Young et al., 2001, Jones et al., 2004) due to the difficulties of measuring the characteristics of surface waves in stormy conditions. Thus, the formula for calculating the coefficient of surface tension in our day is the actual problem in modeling fluid dynamics, particularly in the context of strong surface waves. In the hydrodynamic models usually a coefficient of surface tension is calculated once at the beginning of computation as a constant that depends on the averaged wind waves characteristic. Usually cases of strongly nonlinear wind waves are not taken into account, what significantly reduces the accuracy of the calculation of the flow structures and further calculation of the other processes in water basins, such as the spread of suspended matter and pollutants. Thus, wave motion influencing the pressure on the free surface and at the bottom must be considered in hydrodynamic models particularly in shallow coastal systems. A method of reconstruction of a free-surface drag coefficient based on the measured in-situ bottom pressure fluctuations is developed and applied in a three-dimensional hydrodynamic model MARS3D, developed by the French laboratory of IFREMER (IFREMER - French Research Institute for Marine Dynamics). MARS3D solves the Navier-Stokes equations for incompressible fluid in the Boussinesq approximation and with the hydrostatic assumption (Lazure and Dumas, 2008, Blumberg et al., 1986). Precisely, we introduce a formulation of the surface drag coefficient as a logarithmic function of the sea surface roughness (Zhang et al., 2009), which in turn can be predicted from the height and steepness of the waves (Taylor and Yelland, 2000), measured by the bottom pressure sensors. Using numerous field data, Taylor and Yelland (2000) showed that the surface drag coefficient values in lakes and sheltered waters are typically significantly higher than is observed in the open ocean. In particular, the effect of limited water depth is very significant in the case of the strong wind forcing. Wind waves propagating into shoaling water begin to be limited by bottom friction and become "younger". This kind of approach is used to predict a more relevant surface drag coefficient for the coastal areas of the Mediterranean Berre lagoon (France) for which experimental data of pressure measurements under storm conditions are available (Paquier, 2014). This is important to better understand the development problematics of the nearshore submerged aquatic vegetation (Alekseenko et al., 2013). *This work is supported by grant of Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR) n°16-35-00526 and by the French Water Agency (Agence de l'Eau-RMC - convention n°2010-0042). References 1. E. Alekseenko E., Roux B., Sukhinov A., Kotarba R., Fougere D.: Near shoreline hydrodynamics in a Mediterranean lagoon. Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics, 20, 189-198, 2013. 2. Blumberg A.F. and Mellor G.L.: A description of a Tree-Dimensional Coastal Ocean Circulation Model, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Program, Princeton Univ., Princeton, New Jersey, 1-16, 1986. 3. Davies A., Xing M., Jiuxing I.: Processes influencing wind-induced current profiles in near coastal stratified regions. Continental Shelf Research 23 (14-15): 1379-1400, 2003. 4. Jones, I.S.F. and Toba Y. (Eds.): Wind Stress over the Ocean. Cambridge Univ. Press, 307pp, 2001. 5. Lazure P. and Dumas F.: An external-internal mode coupling for a 3D hydrodynamical model for applications at regional scale (MARS). Adv. Wat. Res. 31: 233-250, 2008. 6. Paquier A-E.: - Interactions de la dynamique hydro-sédimentaire avec les herbiers de phanérogames, Étang de Berre ; PhD thesis Aix-Marseille University; 27 Nov. 2014. 7. Taylor P. and Yelland M.: The Dependence of Sea Surface Roughness on the Height and Steepness of the Waves, Physical Oceanography, 2000. 8. Young I.R., Banner M.L., Donelan M.A., Babanin A.V., Melville W.K., Veron F., and McCormic C.: An Integrated Study of the Wind Wave Source Term Balance in Finite Depth Water, J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol. 22: 814-831, 2004. 9. Zhang H, Sannasiraj S.A., and Chan E.S.: Wind Wave Effects on Hydrodynamic Modeling of Ocean Circulation in the South China Sea, The Open Civil Engineering Journal, 3, 48-61, 2009.
Transverse Compression Response of a Multi-Ply Kevlar Vest
2004-09-01
S BAZHENOV KOSYGIN STREET 4 117 977 MOSCOW RUSSIA 1 UNIV POLITECNICA MADRID B PARGA-LANDA ARQUITECTURA CONSTRUC ETSI NAVALES...28040 MADRID SPAIN 1 UNIV POLITECNICA MADRID F HERNANDEZ-OLIVARES CONSTRUC TEC ARQUITEC ETS ARQUITECTURA AV JUAN DE HERRERA 4
Program Spotlight: UPR and MD Anderson Partnership Welcomes Its First Graduates
CRCHD joins the PIs and Diversity Training co-leaders of the Univ. of Puerto Rico and the Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center U54 Partnership for Excellence in Cancer Research in congratulating its first graduates.
1988-02-01
Japan. -- ,, mnm mmmm m m mil II m mlmmmm PREFACE A It is reported that by using the Nd glass laser, experiments of beam-target interaction are carried...Beam 8. 14.00-14.30 T. Ishimoto and T. Kato (Waseda Univ.) Electron Current Effect on Stability of Plasma Channel 9. 14.30-15.00 S. Kawata, M ...Matsumoto and Y. Masubuchi (Tech. Univ. Nagaoka) Numerical Simulation in LIB ICF 10. 15.00-15.30 J. M . Perlado (Univ. Politec. Madrid) Simulation Code for ICF
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Princeton Univ., NJ. Mid-Career Fellowship Program.
This collection includes essays on contemporary issues facing community colleges written by fellows in Princeton University's Mid-Career Fellowship Program. The following essays are provided: (1) "A Human Development Workshop on Cultural Identity for International Students," by Cecilia Castro-Abad; (2) "Generating Moral Dialogue on a College…
Postmodern Warfare: Beyond the Horizon
2013-06-01
202. 27 Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions, 195. 28 Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions, 86. 98 Scotsmen. Tellingly, Scots recently won an...Huntington notes the power of leadership as he highlights Leonard Wood’s role as a proponent of discussing obligations before rights. Fittingly, Wood saw...identity is based upon 66 Leonard Wood , The Military Obligation of Citizenship (Princeton: Princeton UP
Correction to ``Outstanding Student Paper Awards''
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
2008-10-01
The name of one of the recipients of an Outstanding Student Paper Award for Atmospheric Sciences at the 2008 Joint Assembly was misspelled in the 23 September issue (Eos, 89(39), 2008). Yuanyuan Fang, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J., received the award for Estimating the episodic contribution of pollutant export from the United States in summer 2004. Eos regrets the error.
Michael Walzer's Politics, in Theory and Practice
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Williams, Jeffrey J.
2012-01-01
Before all the talk about "public intellectuals," Michael Walzer was one. For 50 years, he has gone back and forth between positions at Princeton and Harvard Universities and then at the Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton, New Jersey, where he is now emeritus. His writings appear regularly in "Dissent" magazine, which he has co-edited for…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Levenstein, Jessica
2013-01-01
The author started in the Ph.D. program in comparative literature at Princeton in 1992, a year after she graduated from college. She fell in love with mythology and the classical traditions and find herself teaching literature. In the remainder of her time at Princeton, she precepted for four or five more classes, got the chance to join the…
Settlement Ends Dispute between Princeton and Donors' Heirs
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Masterson, Kathryn; Gose, Ben
2009-01-01
This article reports that Princeton University has settled a long-running dispute with the heirs of a major donor by agreeing to pay $50-million to the heirs' foundation and approximately the same amount for their legal fees. The case has been closely watched as a test of how strictly institutions must adhere to donors' wishes. The settlement…
Princeton Plans Major Increase in Aid for Middle- and Low-Income Students.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gose, Ben
1998-01-01
Princeton University (New Jersey) is planning to replace loans with grants for students with annual family incomes under $40,000, and will stop considering the value of the family's home in determining need for most families with incomes under $90,000. The move will likely give the institution a competitive advantage in attracting low- and…
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Philippe, Sebastien
A system that can compare physical objects while potentially protecting sensitive information about the objects themselves has been demonstrated experimentally at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). This work, by researchers at Princeton University and PPPL, marks an initial confirmation of the application of a powerful cryptographic technique in the physical world. Graduate student Sébastien Philippe discusses the experiment.
Final Report: High Energy Physics Program (HEP), Physics Department, Princeton University
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Callan, Curtis G.; Gubser, Steven S.; Marlow, Daniel R.
The activities of the Princeton Elementary particles group funded through Department of Energy Grant# DEFG02-91 ER40671 during the period October 1, 1991 through January 31, 2013 are summarized. These activities include experiments performed at Brookhaven National Lab; the CERN Lab in Geneva, Switzerland; Fermilab; KEK in Tsukuba City, Japan; the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center; as well as extensive experimental and the- oretical studies conducted on the campus of Princeton University. Funded senior personnel include: Curtis Callan, Stephen Gubser, Valerie Halyo, Daniel Marlow, Kirk McDonald, Pe- ter Meyers, James Olsen, Pierre Pirou e, Eric Prebys, A.J. Stewart Smith, Frank Shoemaker (deceased),more » Paul Steinhardt, David Stickland, Christopher Tully, and Liantao Wang.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Manfroid, J.
2009-06-01
L'ESA en route vers les origines de l'univers; Record de distance; Blob primordial; Novae; Expansion de l'univers; Plat ou pas?; L'eau sur Mars; Bombardement massif; M87; CoRoT; EX Lupi; Première pour ALMA; Kohoutek 4-55; Arp 194
Earth History databases and visualization - the TimeScale Creator system
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ogg, James; Lugowski, Adam; Gradstein, Felix
2010-05-01
The "TimeScale Creator" team (www.tscreator.org) and the Subcommission on Stratigraphic Information (stratigraphy.science.purdue.edu) of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (www.stratigraphy.org) has worked with numerous geoscientists and geological surveys to prepare reference datasets for global and regional stratigraphy. All events are currently calibrated to Geologic Time Scale 2004 (Gradstein et al., 2004, Cambridge Univ. Press) and Concise Geologic Time Scale (Ogg et al., 2008, Cambridge Univ. Press); but the array of intercalibrations enable dynamic adjustment to future numerical age scales and interpolation methods. The main "global" database contains over 25,000 events/zones from paleontology, geomagnetics, sea-level and sequence stratigraphy, igneous provinces, bolide impacts, plus several stable isotope curves and image sets. Several regional datasets are provided in conjunction with geological surveys, with numerical ages interpolated using a similar flexible inter-calibration procedure. For example, a joint program with Geoscience Australia has compiled an extensive Australian regional biostratigraphy and a full array of basin lithologic columns with each formation linked to public lexicons of all Proterozoic through Phanerozoic basins - nearly 500 columns of over 9,000 data lines plus hot-curser links to oil-gas reference wells. Other datapacks include New Zealand biostratigraphy and basin transects (ca. 200 columns), Russian biostratigraphy, British Isles regional stratigraphy, Gulf of Mexico biostratigraphy and lithostratigraphy, high-resolution Neogene stable isotope curves and ice-core data, human cultural episodes, and Circum-Arctic stratigraphy sets. The growing library of datasets is designed for viewing and chart-making in the free "TimeScale Creator" JAVA package. This visualization system produces a screen display of the user-selected time-span and the selected columns of geologic time scale information. The user can change the vertical-scale, column widths, fonts, colors, titles, ordering, range chart options and many other features. Mouse-activated pop-ups provide additional information on columns and events; including links to external Internet sites. The graphics can be saved as SVG (scalable vector graphics) or PDF files for direct import into Adobe Illustrator or other common drafting software. Users can load additional regional datapacks, and create and upload their own datasets. The "Pro" version has additional dataset-creation tools, output options and the ability to edit and re-save merged datasets. The databases and visualization package are envisioned as a convenient reference tool, chart-production assistant, and a window into the geologic history of our planet.
1987-04-27
foundation for MCAD, - ECAD , and CIM applications. The existing product runs under 4.2 BSD UNIX’** on SUN 3T s workstations, and will soon be available...on Digital Equipment’s VMSM operating system. Potential UNIVERS applications include Government-sponsored ECAD design applications (for example, the
Plain-Woven, 600-Denier Kevlar KM2 Fabric Under Quasistatic, Uniaxial Tension
2005-03-01
KOSYGIN STREET 4 117 977 MOSCOW RUSSIA 1 UNIV POLITECNICA MADRID B PARGA-LANDA ARQUITECTURA CONSTRUC ETSI NAVALES 28040...MADRID SPAIN 1 UNIV POLITECNICA MADRID F HERNANDEZ-OLIVARES CONSTRUC TEC ARQUITEC ETS ARQUITECTURA AV JUAN DE HERRERA 4 28040 MADRID
Optimal Learning for Efficient Experimentation in Nanotechnology and Biochemistry
2015-12-22
AFRL-AFOSR-VA-TR-2016-0018 Optimal Learning for Efficient Experimentation in Nanotechnology , Biochemistry Warren Powell TRUSTEES OF PRINCETON...3. DATES COVERED (From - To) 01-07-2012 to 30-09-2015 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Optimal Learning for Efficient Experimentation in Nanotechnology and...in Nanotechnology and Biochemistry Principal Investigators: Warren B. Powell Princeton University Department of Operations Research and
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1990-1991
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1991-01-01
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University is a program that emphasizes graduate and undergraduate student research. The program proceeded along six avenues during the past year: microburst hazards to aircraft, intelligent failure tolerant control, computer-aided heuristics for piloted flight, stochastic robustness of flight control systems, neural networks for flight control, and computer-aided control system design.
After $74-Million and Counting, Frank Gehry's Library Opens at Princeton
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Carlson, Scott
2008-01-01
In putting up its new, Frank Gehry-designed Lewis Library, Princeton University endured its share of challenges. It constructed models of the building to give the subcontractors a chance to practice. It fired a contractor halfway through the job when the building was past due. It learned that some subcontractors were trying to bribe their way onto…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Henthorne, Eileen
1995-01-01
Describes a project at the Princeton University libraries that converted the pre-1981 public card catalog, using digital imaging and optical character recognition technology, to fully tagged and indexed records of text in MARC format that are available on an online database and will be added to the online catalog. (LRW)
Language Abstractions for Software-Defined Networks
2012-01-01
Academy Christopher Monsanto Princeton University Mark Reitblatt Cornell University Jennifer Rexford Princeton University Alec Story Cornell...Transactions on Networking, 17(4), August 2009. [3] Nate Foster, Rob Harrison, Michael J. Freedman, Christopher Monsanto , Jennifer Rexford, Alec Story...networks. SIGCOMM CCR, 38(2):69–74, 2008. [7] Christopher Monsanto , Nate Foster, Rob Harrison, and David Walker. A compiler and run-time system for
The Princeton Review: Word Smart--Building an Educated Vocabulary. Revised Edition.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Robinson, Adam; And Others
Based on the idea that knowing which words to use and how to use them are keys to an individual's getting the most from his or her mind, this book aims to improve people's vocabularies. To find out which words should be known, research into the vocabularies of educated adults was conducted by "The Princeton Review." Newspapers from…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Balabkins, Xenia P.; And Others
This collection contains essays on contemporary issues facing community colleges written by fellows in Princeton University's Mid-Career Fellowship Program. The essays are as follows: "Is Middlesex County College Accomplishing Its Mission?" (Xenia P. Balabkins); "The Coming of Age of Women's Studies: Attention Must be Paid" (Lynne M. DeCicco);…
Line Crack Subject to Antiplane Shear.
1978-07-01
34" (Xj)a( fx -xI) (2. 4) a(lx-xl)= a exp[- ($/a)2 (x’-x)-(x’-x)] , where S is a constant, a is the lattice parameter, and a0 is determined by the...94720 Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey 08540 Prof. J.R.Rice Division of Engineering Dr. S.L. Koh Brown University School of Aero., Astro
A Preliminary Report on the Status of Women at Princeton University.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
National Organization for Women, Princeton, NJ. Central New Jersey Chapter.
Women are under-represented at all levels of the Princeton faculty (3.27%) and are most noticeably absent from the highest levels. Fifty-five percent of the men and 11.5% of the women are in the top two professorial ranks. Eighty percent of the men, in contrast to 40% of the women, hold regular faculty positions. The "visiting" faculty…
European Science Notes, volume 40, number 2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shaffer, L. E.
1986-02-01
ESN is a monthly publication with brief articles on recent developments in European scientific research. Its partial contents are: Biotechnology Research at GBF, and at the Inst. of Technical Chemistry, Univ. of Hanover, West Germany; 7th European Immunology Congress; Biotechnia '85 - First International Congress for Biotechnology; Acoustic Cavitation Generated by Clinical Ultrasound; Advances in Chemical Reaction Dynamics; Geophysics Research in Israel; Fiber Composite Research at Paisley College of Technology, Scotland; A review of International Research on the Physical Metallurgy of Welding; Silicon Metallurgy at the Helsinki Technical Univ.; A Conference on Guided Optical Structures and Their Applications; Optoelectronics Research at Oxford Univ.; and Fractal Conferences in Europe.
/UC Berkeley Kyle Dawson Professor University of Utah Rahman Amanullah Postdoc Stockholm Univ Marek Kowalski Professor University of Bonn Mamoru Doi Professor Univ. of Tokyo Yutaka Ihara Graduate University of Stockholm University of Oxford European Southern Observatory University of Tokyo Space
Raman Sidescattering in Laser-Produced Plasmas.
1984-12-27
MENYUK AND N. M. EL-SIRAGY Labomtyjb Plasma and Fusion Energy Studies -~ University of Maryland College Park, MD 20 742 LnW. M. MANHEIMER2 Plasma...NOTATION *Laboratory for Plasma and Fusion Energy Studies, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 **Permanent Address: Physics Dept., Univ. of Tanta
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Rui, Hualan; Vollmer, B.; Teng, W.; Beaudoing, H.; Rodell, M.; Silberstein, D.
2015-01-01
GLDAS-2.0 data have been reprocessed with updated Princeton meteorological forcing data within the Land Information System (LIS) Version 7, and temporal coverage have been extended to 1948-2012.Global Land Data Assimilation System Version 2 (GLDAS-2) has two components: GLDAS-2.0: entirely forced with the Princeton meteorological forcing data GLDAS-2.1: forced with atmospheric analysis and observation-based data after 2001In order to create more climatologically consistent data sets, NASA GSFC's Hydrological Sciences Laboratory (HSL) has recently reprocessed the GLDAS-2.0, by using updated Princeton meteorological forcing data within the LIS Version 7.GLDAS-2.0 data and data services are provided at NASA GES DISC Hydrology Data and Information Services Center (HDISC), in collaboration with HSL.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Grey, J.
1977-01-01
Reports submitted to the conference encompass: administration and law relating to inhabited space facilities and colonies; space manufacturing and processing; organization and construction of space habitats and management of space colony farms; winning and acquisition of lunar and asteroidal materials for sustaining autonomous space colonies. Attention is given to trajectories between earth, low earth orbit, earth-moon libration points (specifically L5), circumlunar parking orbits, and trajectories in translunar space; effects of low gravity and zero gravity on human physiology and on materials processing; architecture and landscaping for space colonies; closed ecosystems of space colonies. Varieties of human cultures and value hierarchies around the earth are examined for broader perspectives on the social organization of space colonies.
The CBT Decade: Teaching for Flexibility and Adaptability.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Billett, Stephen; McKavanagh, Charlie; Beven, Fred; Angus, Lawrence; Seddon, Terri; Gough, John; Hayes, Sharon; Robertson, Ian
A 1998 study conducted by researchers from the Centre For Learning and Work Research at Griffith Univ. and The Studies of Work, Education and Training, at Monash Univ. sought to evaluate the contributions of competency-based training (CBT) and assessment to Australian vocational education and training. "Introduction" (Stephen Billet,…
Optimal Simulations by Butterfly Networks: Extended Abstract,
1987-11-01
Typescript , Univ. of Massachusetts; submitted for nublication. 1_2.2 Ll, - W 12. ifliU 1.8 UI1.25 . l i I 61 MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST CHART NATIONAL...1987): An optimal mapping of the FFT algorithm onto the tlypercube architecture. Typescript , Univ. of Massachusetts; submitted for publication. (HR I
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory: Annual report, October 1, 1986--September 30, 1987
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Not Available
1987-01-01
This report contains papers on the following topics: Principle Parameters Achieved in Experimental Devices (FY87); Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor; Princeton Beta Experiment-Modification; S-1 Spheromak; Current-Drive Experiment; X-Ray Laser Studies; Theoretical Division; Tokamak Modeling; Compact Ignition Tokamak; Engineering Department; Project Planning and Safety Office; Quality Assurance and Reliability; Administrative Operations; and PPPL Patent Invention Disclosures (FY87).
Physical and Chemical Processes in Flames
2010-02-15
7. "An efficient reduced mechanism for methane oxidation with NOx chemistry ," by T. F. Lu and C. K. Law, Paper No. C17, Fifth US Combustion Meeting... Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544 9. SPONSORING I MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR...TERMS Laminar flame speeds; ignition temperatures; extinction limits; mechanism reduction; skeletal mechanism ; CO/H2 oxidation; ethy lene oxidation
2011-01-03
NUMBER W911NF-08-1-0044 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR( S ) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER Robert H. Austin 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK...UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME( S ) AND ADDRESS(ES) The Trustees of Princeton University 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER...ORPA 4 New South Building PO Box 36 Princeton, NJ 08544-0036 9. SPONSORING / MONITORING AGENCY NAME( S ) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10
Friction Drag Reduction Using Superhydrophobic Surface in High Reynolds Number Turbulent Flow
2017-12-25
high Reynolds numbers by using the large towing tank available Naval Academy in Annapolis, in collaboration with Professor Michael...NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 12. DISTRIBUTION/ AVAILABILITY STATEMENT 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT 15. SUBJECT TERMS 16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION... High Reynolds Number Turbulent Flow Smits, Alexander J Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544 N/A Office of Naval Research 875 N. Randolph Street
Exterior LED Lighting Projects at Princeton University
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Davis, Robert G.; Evans, William; Murphy, Arthur T.
For this report, PNNL / the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) studied a series of past exterior lighting projects at Princeton, in order to document Princeton’s experiences with solid-state lighting (SSL) and the lessons learned along the way, and to show how their approach to SSL projects evolved as their own learning expanded and as the products available improved in performance and sophistication.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rabb, Theodore, K., Comp.
This collection focusing on Issues of Education at Community Colleges presents eleven essays by fellows in the mid-career fellowship program at Princeton University: (1) "Teaching the Methodology of Science: The Utilization of Microbial Model Systems for Biometric Analyses" by Joseph A. Adamo; (2) "Two Modes of Mathematics Instruction" by Simon I.…
Bipotential continuum models for granular mechanics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Goddard, Joe
2014-03-01
Most currently popular continuum models for granular media are special cases of a generalized Maxwell fluid model, which describes the evolution of stress and internal variables such as granular particle fraction and fabric,in terms of imposed strain rate. It is shown how such models can be obtained from two scalar potentials, a standard elastic free energy and a ``dissipation potential'' given rigorously by the mathematical theory of Edelen. This allows for a relatively easy derivation of properly invariant continuum models for granular media and fluid-particle suspensions within a thermodynamically consistent framework. The resulting continuum models encompass all the prominent regimes of granular flow, ranging from the quasi-static to rapidly sheared, and are readily extended to include higher-gradient or Cosserat effects. Models involving stress diffusion, such as that proposed recently by Kamrin and Koval (PRL 108 178301), provide an alternative approach that is mentioned in passing. This paper provides a brief overview of a forthcoming review articles by the speaker (The Princeton Companion to Applied Mathematics, and Appl. Mech. Rev.,in the press, 2013).
Stueckelberg and Molecular Physics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lacki, Jan
The first period of E. C. G. Stueckelberg's scientific career was marked by important contributions he made to molecular physics.1 After publishing his thesis in 1927 in Basel [1] Stueckelberg joined the prestigious Palmer Physical Laboratory in Princeton where he worked under the guidance of Karl Taylor Compton, brother of Arthur Holly Compton. Stueckelberg owed this position devoted several papers to problems of molecular physics. Stueckelberg had the benefit at Princeton of exchanges with other gifted members of the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Philip M. Morse and E. U. Condon among others.3 to a recommendation by A. Sommerfeld.2 In this stimulating environment, he devoted several papers to problems of molecular physics. Stueckelberg had the benefit at Princeton of exchanges with other gifted members of the Palmer Physical Laboratory, Philip M. Morse and E. U. Condon among others.3
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cranwell, Michele R.; Kolodinsky, Jane M.; Donnelly, Catherine W.; Downing, Donald L.; Padilla-Zakour, Olga I.
2005-01-01
The Northeast Center for Food Entrepreneurship (NECFE) is a collaborative effort between Cornell Univ. and the Univ. of Vermont. NECFE uses a multi-institutional and regional collaboration approach, with specific expertise and necessary facilities and resources, to provide technical assistance and education for businesses in the food industry. The…
64. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
64. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, March, 1905. MILNER DAM. WATER FLOODING OVER SPILLWAY FOR FIRST TIME. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
SUBCHRONIC ENDOTOXIN INHALATION CAUSES CHRONIC AIRWAY DISEASE IN ENDOTOXIN-SENSITIVE BUT NOT ENDOTOXIN-RESISTANT MICE. D. M. Brass, J. D. Savov, *S. H. Gavett, ?C. George, D. A. Schwartz. Duke Univ Medical Center Durham, NC, *U.S. E.P.A. Research Triangle Park, NC, ?Univ of Iowa,...
Serum Antibody Biomarkers for ASD
2013-10-01
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Dwight German, Ph.D. CONTRACTING ORGANIZATION: Univ of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas TX 75390...REPORT DATE: TYPE OF REPORT: Annual Report PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command...7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) Univ. of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas TX 75390 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT
ARSENICALS INHIBIT THIOREDOXIN REDUCTASE ACTIVITY IN CULTURED RAT HEPATOCYTES
ARSENICALS INHIBIT THIOREDOXIN REDUCTASE ACTIVITY IN CULTURED RAT HEPATOCYTES.
S. Lin1, L. M. Del Razo1, M. Styblo1, C. Wang2, W. R. Cullen2, and D.J. Thomas3. 1Univ. North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC; 2Univ. British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 3National Health and En...
76. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
76. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. DISASSEMBLING CRANE TOWER FROM SOUTH ISLAND SPILLWAY. REMOVING CABLE TOWER. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
Bent-core fiber structure: Experimental and theoretical studies of fiber stability
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bailey, C.; Gartland, E.; Jakli, A.
2007-03-01
Recent studies have shown that bent core liquid crystals in the B7 and B2 phases can form stable freestanding fibers with a so called ``jelly-roll'' layer configuration, which means that the smectic layers would be arranged in concentric cylindrical shells. This configuration shows layer curvature is necessary for fiber stability. Classically this effect would destabilize the fiber configuration because of the energy cost of layer distortions and surface tension. We propose a model that can predict fiber stability in the experimentally observed range of a few micrometers, by assuming that layer curvature can be stabilized by including a term dealing with the linear divergence of the polarization direction if the polarization is allowed to have a component normal to the smectic layers. We show that this term can stabilize the fiber configuration if its strength is larger than the surface tension. We also propose an entropic model to explain the strength of this term by considering steric effects. Finally we will take results from this model and apply them to better understand experimental findings of bent-core fibers. Financial support by NSF FRG under contract DMS-0456221. Prof. Daniel Phillips, Particia Bauman and Jie Shen at Purdue Univ., Prof. Maria Carme Calderer at Univ. of Minnesota, and Prof. Jonathan Selinger at Kent State Univ. Liou Qiu and Dr. O.D. Lavrentovich, Characterization Facilities, Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State Univ. Julie Kim and Dr. Quan Li, Chemical Synthesis Facilities, Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State Univ.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Binetruy, Pierre
2009-09-17
Et si la lumière au bout du tunnel du LHC était cosmique ? En d’autres termes, qu’est-ce que le LHC peut nous apporter dans la connaissance de l’Univers ? Car la montée en énergie des accélérateurs de particules nous permet de mieux appréhender l’univers primordial, chaud et dense. Mais dans quel sens dit-on que le LHC reproduit des conditions proches du Big bang ? Quelles informations nous apporte-t-il sur le contenu de l’Univers ? La matière noire est-elle détectable au LHC ? L’énergie noire ? Pourquoi l’antimatière accumulée au CERN est-elle si rare dans l’Univers ? Et si le CERNmore » a bâti sa réputation sur l’exploration des forces faibles et fortes qui opèrent au sein des atomes et de leurs noyaux, est-ce que le LHC peut nous apporter des informations sur la force gravitationnelle qui gouverne l’évolution cosmique ? Depuis une trentaine d’années, notre compréhension de l’univers dans ses plus grandes dimensions et l’appréhension de son comportement aux plus petites distances sont intimement liées : en quoi le LHC va-t-il tester expérimentalement cette vision unifiée ? Tout public, entrée libre / Réservations au +41 (0)22 767 76 76« less
Studies of High-Frequency Seismic Wave Propagation.
1991-03-29
William J. Best Prof. F. A. Dahlen 907 Westwood Drive Geological and Geophysical Sciences Vienna, VA 22180 Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544...California A Division of Maxwell Laboratory Berkeley, CA 94720 P.O. Box 1620 La Jolla, CA 92038-1620 2 Prof. William Menke Prof. Charles G. Sammis...University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 Dr. William Wortman Mission Research Corporation 8560 Cinderbed Rd. Suite # 700 Newington, VA 22122 Prof. Francis T. Wu
Roots of Russian Irregular Warfare
2016-12-01
ADDRESS(ES) N /A 10. SPONSORING / MONITORING AGENCY REPORT NUMBER 11. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES The views expressed in this thesis are those of the author...Annual Address to the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation,” 2005. 99 J. N . Westwood, Endurance and Endeavour: Russian History, 1812–1992 (New...Vladimir N . Brovkin, Behind the Front Lines of the Civil War: Political Parties and Social Movements in Russia, 1918–1922 (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
Sebastien Philippe Discusses the Zero-Knowledge Protocol
Philippe, Sebastien
2018-06-12
A system that can compare physical objects while potentially protecting sensitive information about the objects themselves has been demonstrated experimentally at the U.S. Department of Energyâs (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). This work, by researchers at Princeton University and PPPL, marks an initial confirmation of the application of a powerful cryptographic technique in the physical world. Graduate student Sébastien Philippe discusses the experiment.
Building the Bridge from War to Peace: Defining Interagency Roles in Rebuilding a Nation
2009-11-01
Politics of Strategic Assessment. Princeton: Princeton UP, 2008. (JF 195 .B76 2008) Carafano, James Jay. Private Sector , Public Wars: Contractors in... Private Security Companies in Iraq." Third World Quarterly 26.4-5 (June 2005): 777-96. Erdmann, Martin, Ambassador. "A Comprehensive Approach to Modern... Sectoral Comparisons. Washington: World Bank, Conflict Prevention & Reconstruction, Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development Network, 2005
The Science on Saturday Program at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bretz, N.; Lamarche, P.; Lagin, L.; Ritter, C.; Carroll, D. L.
1996-11-01
The Science on Saturday Program at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory consists of a series of Saturday morning lectures on various topics in science by scientists, engineers, educators, and others with an interesting story. This program has been in existence for over twelve years and has been advertised to and primarily aimed at the high school level. Topics ranging from superconductivity to computer animation and gorilla conservation to pharmaceutical design have been covered. Lecturers from the staff of Princeton, Rutgers, AT and T, Bristol Meyers Squibb, and many others have participated. Speakers have ranged from Nobel prize winners, astronauts, industrialists, educators, engineers, and science writers. Typically, there are eight to ten lectures starting in January. A mailing list has been compiled for schools, science teachers, libraries, and museums in the Princeton area. For the past two years AT and T has sponsored buses for Trenton area students to come to these lectures and an effort has been made to publicize the program to these students. The series has been very popular, frequently overfilling the 300 seat PPPL auditorium. As a result, the lectures are videotaped and broadcast to a large screen TV for remote viewing. Lecturers are encouraged to interact with the audience and ample time is provided for questions.
Stochastic mechanics of reciprocal diffusions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Levy, Bernard C.; Krener, Arthur J.
1996-02-01
The dynamics and kinematics of reciprocal diffusions were examined in a previous paper [J. Math. Phys. 34, 1846 (1993)], where it was shown that reciprocal diffusions admit a chain of conservation laws, which close after the first two laws for two disjoint subclasses of reciprocal diffusions, the Markov and quantum diffusions. For the case of quantum diffusions, the conservation laws are equivalent to Schrödinger's equation. The Markov diffusions were employed by Schrödinger [Sitzungsber. Preuss. Akad. Wiss. Phys. Math Kl. 144 (1931); Ann. Inst. H. Poincaré 2, 269 (1932)], Nelson [Dynamical Theories of Brownian Motion (Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 1967); Quantum Fluctuations (Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 1985)], and other researchers to develop stochastic formulations of quantum mechanics, called stochastic mechanics. We propose here an alternative version of stochastic mechanics based on quantum diffusions. A procedure is presented for constructing the quantum diffusion associated to a given wave function. It is shown that quantum diffusions satisfy the uncertainty principle, and have a locality property, whereby given two dynamically uncoupled but statistically correlated particles, the marginal statistics of each particle depend only on the local fields to which the particle is subjected. However, like Wigner's joint probability distribution for the position and momentum of a particle, the finite joint probability densities of quantum diffusions may take negative values.
Galileo Press Conference from JPL. Parts 1 and 2
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1992-01-01
This two-tape Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) video production presents a Dec. 8, 1992 press conference held at JPL to discuss the final Galileo spacecraft encounter with Earth before beginning its journey to Jupiter. The main theme of the conference was centered on the significance of the 2nd and final Earth/Moon flyby as being the spacecraft's last planetary encounter in the solar system before reaching Jupiter, as well as final flight preparations prior to its final journey. Each person of the five member panel was introduced by Robert MacMillan (JPL Public Information Mgr.) before giving brief presentations including slides and viewgraphs covering their area of expertise regarding Galileo's current status and future plans. After the presentations, the media was given an opportunity to ask questions of the panel regarding the mission. Mr. Wesley Huntress (Dir. of Solar System Exploration (NASA)), William J. ONeill (Galileo Project Manager), Neal E. Ausman, Jr. (Galileo Mission Director), Dr. Torrence V. Johnson (Galileo Project Scientist) and Dr. Ronald Greeley (Member, Imaging Team, Colorado St. Univ.) made up the panel and discussed topics including: Galileo's interplanetary trajectory; project status and performance review; instrument calibration activities; mission timelines; lunar observation and imaging; and general lunar science. Also included in the last three minutes of the video are simulations and images of the 2nd Galileo/Moon encounter.
Galileo photometry of asteroid 243 Ida
Helfenstein, P.; Veverka, J.; Thomas, P.C.; Simonelli, D.P.; Klaasen, K.; Johnson, T.V.; Fanale, F.; Granahan, J.; McEwen, A.S.; Belton, M.; Chapman, C.
1996-01-01
Galileo imaging observations over phase angles 19.5?? to 109.8?? are combined with near-opposition Earth-based data to derive the photometric properties of Ida. To first order these properties are uniform over the surface and well modeled at ?? = 0.55 ??m by Hapke parameters ????0 = 0.22, h = 0.020, B0 = 1.5, g = -0.33, and ?? = 18?? with corresponding geometric albedo p = 0.21??0.030.01 and Bond albedo AB = 0.081??0.0170.008. Ida's photometric properties are more similar to those of "average S-asteroids" (P. Helfenstein and J. Veverka 1989, Asteroids II, Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson) than are those of 951 Gaspra. Two primary color units are identified on Ida: Terrain A exhibits a spectrum with relatively shallower 1-??m absorption and a relatively steeper red spectral slope than average Ida, while Terrain B has a deeper 1-??m absorption and a less steep red slope. The average photometric properties of Ida and Terrain A are similar while those of Terrain B differ mostly in having a slightly higher value of ????0 (0.22 versus 0.21), suggesting that Terrain B consists of slightly brighter, more transparent regolith particles. Galileo observations of Ida's satellite Dactyl over phase angles 19.5?? to 47.6?? suggest photometric characteristics similar to those of Ida, the major difference being Dactyl's slightly lower albedo (0.20 compared to 0.21). ?? 1990 Academic Press, Inc.
On the role of the current loss in radio pulsar evolution
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Beskin, V. S.; Nokhrina, E. E.
2007-04-01
The aim of this article is to draw attention to the importance of the electric current loss in the energy output of radio pulsars. We remind that even the losses attributed to the magneto-dipole radiation of a pulsar in vacuum can be written as a result of an Ampere force action of the electric currents flowing over the neutron star surface (see the books of Michel (Theory of Neutron Star Magnetosphere. University of Chicago Press (1991)) and of Beskin, Gurevich and Istomin (Physics of the Pulsar Magnetosphere. Cambridge Univ. Press (1993)). It is this force that is responsible for the transfer of angular momentum of a neutron star to an outgoing magneto-dipole wave. If a pulsar is surrounded by plasma, and there is no longitudinal current in its magnetosphere, there is no energy loss. It is the longitudinal current closing within the pulsar polar cap that exerts the retardation torque acting on the neutron star. This torque can be determined if the structure of longitudinal current is known. Here we remind of the solution by Beskin, Gurevich and Istomin (ed. cit.) and discuss the validity of such an assumption. The behavior of the recently observed “part-time job” pulsar B1931+24 can be naturally explained within the model of current loss while the magneto-dipole model faces difficulties.
Why do Scale-Free Networks Emerge in Nature? From Gradient Networks to Transport Efficiency
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Toroczkai, Zoltan
2004-03-01
It has recently been recognized [1,2,3] that a large number of complex networks are scale-free (having a power-law degree distribution). Examples include citation networks [4], the internet [5], the world-wide-web [6], cellular metabolic networks [7], protein interaction networks [8], the sex-web [9] and alliance networks in the U.S. biotechnology industry [10]. The existence of scale-free networks in such diverse systems suggests that there is a simple underlying common reason for their development. Here, we propose that scale-free networks emerge because they ensure efficient transport of some entity. We show that for flows generated by gradients of a scalar "potential'' distributed on a network, non scale-free networks, e.g., random graphs [11], will become maximally congested, while scale-free networks will ensure efficient transport in the large network size limit. [1] R. Albert and A.-L. Barabási, Rev.Mod.Phys. 74, 47 (2002). [2] M.E.J. Newman, SIAM Rev. 45, 167 (2003). [3] S.N. Dorogovtsev and J.F.F. Mendes, Evolution of Networks: From Biological Nets to the Internet and WWW, Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 2003. [4] S. Redner, Eur.Phys.J. B, 4, 131 (1998). [5] M. Faloutsos, P. Faloutsos and C. Faloutsos Comp.Comm.Rev. 29, 251 (1999). [6] R. Albert, H. Jeong, and A.L. Barabási, Nature 401, 130 (1999). [7] H. Jeong et.al. Nature 407, 651 (2000). [8] H. Jeong, S. Mason, A.-L. Barabási and Z. N. Oltvai, Nature 411, 41 (2001). [9] F. Liljeros et. al. Nature 411 907 (2000). [10] W. W. Powell, D. R. White, K. W. Koput and J. Owen-Smith Am.J.Soc. in press. [11] B. Bollobás, Random Graphs, Second Edition, Cambridge University Press (2001).
52. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
52. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, March, 1905. MILNER TUNNEL CLOSURE GATES AND GROUP. GROUP ON GATE PLATFORM JUST BEFORE LOWERING GATES. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
41. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
41. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, March, 1905. NORTH DAM OF MILNER DAM; DOWNSTREAM AFTER TUNNEL CLOSURE; SILT BERM COMING THROUGH DAM. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
84. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
84. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. ROCK CREEK SIPHON, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF KIMBERLY, IDAHO; WEST VIEW OF SIPHON PIPE. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
85. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
85. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. ROCK CREEK SIPHON, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF KIMBERLY, IDAHO; EAST VIEW OF SIPHON PIPE. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
83. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
83. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. DRY CREEK GATES, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF MURTAUGH, IDAHO; GATES FROM THE LOWER SIDE. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
Simple Shear Response of a Hyperelastic Dielectric Media Revisited
2014-09-01
of continua. 2nd ed. New York: Krieger ; 1980. 2. Ani W, Maugin GA. Basic equations for shocks in nonlinear electroelastic materials. J Acoust. Soc...US ARMY ARDEC E BAKER 3 (PDF) US ARMY RSRCH OFC R ANTHENIEN J MYERS D STEPP 1 (PDF) UNIV OF MD COLLEGE PARK P CHUNG 4 (PDF) JOHNS HOPKINS UNIV L
73. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
73. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, March, 1905. SILT FILTERING 'THROUGH NORTH DAM; NORTH DAM FROM DOWNSTREAM SHOWING DIRT FILL FILTERING THROUGH DAM. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
The Shock and Vibration Digest. Volume 16, Number 2
1984-02-01
84-365 Forced Nonlinear Oacilationi of an Autoparametric Syitem - Part 1: Periodic Reqwnaes H. Hatwal,A.K. Mallik ,and A. Ghosh Univ. of Calgary...Hatwal, A.K. Mallik , and A. Ghosh Univ. of Calgary, 2500 University Dr., N.W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4, J. Appl. Mech., Trans. ASME, 50 (3
A Needs Assessment for the Introduction of a Food Science Program at the Univ. of Guyana
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Morrison, Donna
2012-01-01
This research describes the outcome of a needs assessment to determine whether the Univ. of Guyana should introduce a Food Science program. The research design utilized interviews and questionnaires to large manufacturing organizations and agroprocessors to determine if the required skills are available for the manufacturing process. Results…
58. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
58. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection) C.R. Savage, Photographer, March, 1905. UPPER FACE OF MILNER DAM, SOUTH DAM UPPER FILL AND SPILLWAY GATES ACROSS SOUTH ISLAND. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
ROTC as an Indicator of Civil-Military Relations
2017-05-25
learning I have gained from the group . Finally, thanks most of all to my wife and best friend, Dr. Melody Marchman Schade for lighting the way along an...schools ended their support for ROTC. The history of ROTC is best understood in four discrete phases: Pre-Formal (1819- 1915), Formal (1916-1963...two cadets in 2015 with a staff of four commissioned officers and one senior noncommissioned officer. “Princeton Army ROTC,” Princeton University
Investigation of Air Transportation Technology at Princeton University, 1989-1990
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1990-01-01
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University proceeded along six avenues during the past year: microburst hazards to aircraft; machine-intelligent, fault tolerant flight control; computer aided heuristics for piloted flight; stochastic robustness for flight control systems; neural networks for flight control; and computer aided control system design. These topics are briefly discussed, and an annotated bibliography of publications that appeared between January 1989 and June 1990 is given.
Propagation of Regional Seismic Phases in Western Europe
1991-03-08
William J. Best Prof. F. A. Dahlen 907 Westwood Drive Geological and Geophysical Sciences Vienna, VA 22180 Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544-0636 Dr...California A Division of Maxwell Laboratory Berkeley, CA 94720 P.O. Box 1620 La Jolla, CA 92038-1620 2 Prof. William Menke Prof. Charles G. Sammis Lamont...Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 Dr. William Wortman Mission Research Corporation 8560 Cinderbed Rd. Suite # 700 Newington, VA 22122 Prof. Francis T. Wu
GATEWAY Report Brief: Exterior Lighting at Princeton University
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
None, None
Summary of GATEWAY report focuses on four exterior solid-state lighting projects that have been completed at Princeton since 2008, when the University adopted a comprehensive sustainability plan. Through these initial projects – which include a parking garage, a pedestrian path, and two parking lot installations – the school’s facilities engineering staff learned important lessons about SSL technology and gained experience in dealing with the rapidly changing landscape of lighting manufacturers and their suppliers.
GATEWAY Demonstrations: Exterior LED Lighting Projects at Princeton University
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Davis, Robert G.; Evans, WIlliam E.; Murphy, Arthur
This report focuses on four exterior solid-state lighting projects that have been completed at Princeton since 2008, when the University adopted a comprehensive sustainability plan. Through these initial projects – which include a parking garage, a pedestrian path, and two parking lot installations – the school’s facilities engineering staff learned important lessons about SSL technology and gained experience in dealing with the rapidly changing landscape of lighting manufacturers and their suppliers.
Gopherus agassizii (desert tortoise). Burrow collapse
Loughran, Caleb L.; Ennen, Joshua; Lovich, Jeffrey E.
2011-01-01
In the deserts of the southwestern U.S., burrows are utilized by the Desert Tortoise to escape environmental extremes (reviewed by Ernst and Lovich 2009. Turtles of the United States and Canada. 2nd ed. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore, Maryland. 827 pp.). However, the potential for mortality through burrow collapse and entrapment is poorly documented. Nicholson and Humphreys (1981. Proceedings of the Desert Tortoise Council, pp. 163−194) suggested that collapse due to livestock trampling may cause mortality. In addition, Lovich et al. (2011. Chelon. Cons. Biol. 10[1]:124–129) documented a Desert Tortoise that used a steel culvert as a burrow surrogate. The culvert filled completely with sediment following a significant rain event, entombing the animal and ultimately resulting in its death. We note that this mortality was associated with an anthropogenic structure; because tortoises are prodigious diggers, one might hypothesize that they have the ability to dig out of collapsed natural burrows in most situations. Circumstances described here presented us with an opportunity to test this hypothesis.
82. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
82. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. DRY CREEK HEADGATES, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF MURTAUGH, IDAHO; CHECK GATES ACROSS THE MAIN CANAL BELOW DRY CREEK. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
87. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
87. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. ROCK CREEK SIPHON, LOW LINE CANAL, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF KIMBERLY, IDAHO; UPPER END OF THE SIPHON. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
81. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
81. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. DRY CREEK DAM, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF MURTAUGH, IDAHO; DRIVING SHEET PILING TO SHUT OFF SEEPAGE. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
86. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver ...
86. Photocopy of Photograph (original located in Univ. of Denver collection). C.R. Savage, Photographer, date unknown. ROCK CREEK SIPHON, TWIN FALLS COUNTY, SOUTH OF KIMBERLY, IDAHO; MEN WORKING ON THE EAST END OF THE SIPHON. - Milner Dam & Main Canal: Twin Falls Canal Company, On Snake River, 11 miles West of city of Burley, Idaho, Twin Falls, Twin Falls County, ID
Proficiency Scaling Based on Conditional Probability Functions for Attributes
1993-10-01
so we provide you with your diagnosed cognitive state on the right most side of the above table. we recommend that you practice word problems and...pay more attention to the meaning of principles, theorems and properties. You should also follow the instructions more carefully. 48 II. A report for a...Princeton NJ 08541-0001 PO Box 16268 Princeton NJ 08541 Alexandria VA 22302-0268 Mr Hsin -hung Li Dr Ratna Nandakumar University of Illinois Dr James R
2010-12-02
Theory Defined 48 Doctrine 48 Interwar Doctrine a Historical Perspective 52 Adaptive Campaigning 53 Carl von Clausewitz 53 Comparative Analysis of...order effects that may be traced through an understanding of the environment. Carl von Clausewitz suggested using history as a tool, to provide a lens...Cworks/Works.htm (accessed 10/2, 2010). 6 Carl von Clausewitz, On War, trans. Ed. Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton: Princeton University
1990-06-01
3 NAVSWC TR 90-176 Most marine fouling invertebrates have a larval or pseudolarval form that is released into the water and although they possess...90-176 REFERENCES (Cont.) 22. Linder, E., "The Attachment of Macrofouling Invertebrates ," in Costlow, J. D. and Tipper, R. C., Eds, Marine ...associated with marine macrofouling ( marine mussels and hydroids) in seawater piping systems on an AEGIS cruiser (USS PRINCETON CG 59). The presence of
Patterns of spiral wave attenuation by low-frequency periodic planar fronts
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
de la Casa, Miguel A.; de la Rubia, F. Javier; Ivanov, Plamen Ch.
2007-03-01
There is evidence that spiral waves and their breakup underlie mechanisms related to a wide spectrum of phenomena ranging from spatially extended chemical reactions to fatal cardiac arrhythmias [A. T. Winfree, The Geometry of Biological Time (Springer-Verlag, New York, 2001); J. Schutze, O. Steinbock, and S. C. Muller, Nature 356, 45 (1992); S. Sawai, P. A. Thomason, and E. C. Cox, Nature 433, 323 (2005); L. Glass and M. C. Mackey, From Clocks to Chaos: The Rhythms of Life (Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1988); R. A. Gray et al., Science 270, 1222 (1995); F. X. Witkowski et al., Nature 392, 78 (1998)]. Once initiated, spiral waves cannot be suppressed by periodic planar fronts, since the domains of the spiral waves grow at the expense of the fronts [A. N. Zaikin and A. M. Zhabotinsky, Nature 225, 535 (1970); A. T. Stamp, G. V. Osipov, and J. J. Collins, Chaos 12, 931 (2002); I. Aranson, H. Levine, and L. Tsimring, Phys. Rev. Lett. 76, 1170 (1996); K. J. Lee, Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 2907 (1997); F. Xie, Z. Qu, J. N. Weiss, and A. Garfinkel, Phys. Rev. E 59, 2203 (1999)]. Here, we show that introducing periodic planar waves with long excitation duration and a period longer than the rotational period of the spiral can lead to spiral attenuation. The attenuation is not due to spiral drift and occurs periodically over cycles of several fronts, forming a variety of complex spatiotemporal patterns, which fall into two distinct general classes. Further, we find that these attenuation patterns only occur at specific phases of the descending fronts relative to the rotational phase of the spiral. We demonstrate these dynamics of phase-dependent spiral attenuation by performing numerical simulations of wave propagation in the excitable medium of myocardial cells. The effect of phase-dependent spiral attenuation we observe can lead to a general approach to spiral control in physical and biological systems with relevance for medical applications.
High resolution reversible color images on photonic crystal substrates.
Kang, Pilgyu; Ogunbo, Samuel O; Erickson, David
2011-08-16
When light is incident on a crystalline structure with appropriate periodicity, some colors will be preferentially reflected (Joannopoulos, J. D.; Meade, R. D.; Winn, J. N. Photonic crystals: molding the flow of light; Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ, 1995; p ix, 137 pp). These photonic crystals and the structural color they generate represent an interesting method for creating reflective displays and drawing devices, since they can achieve a continuous color response and do not require back lighting (Joannopoulos, J. D.; Villeneuve, P. R.; Fan, S. H. Photonic crystals: Putting a new twist on light. Nature 1997, 386, 143-149; Graham-Rowe, D. Tunable structural colour. Nat. Photonics 2009, 3, 551-553.; Arsenault, A. C.; Puzzo, D. P.; Manners, I.; Ozin, G. A. Photonic-crystal full-colour displays. Nat. Photonics 2007, 1, 468-472; Walish, J. J.; Kang, Y.; Mickiewicz, R. A.; Thomas, E. L. Bioinspired Electrochemically Tunable Block Copolymer Full Color Pixels. Adv. Mater.2009, 21, 3078). Here we demonstrate a technique for creating erasable, high-resolution, color images using otherwise transparent inks on self-assembled photonic crystal substrates (Fudouzi, H.; Xia, Y. N. Colloidal crystals with tunable colors and their use as photonic papers. Langmuir 2003, 19, 9653-9660). Using inkjet printing, we show the ability to infuse fine droplets of silicone oils into the crystal, locally swelling it and changing the reflected color (Sirringhaus, H.; Kawase, T.; Friend, R. H.; Shimoda, T.; Inbasekaran, M.; Wu, W.; Woo, E. P. High-resolution inkjet printing of all-polymer transistor circuits. Science 2000, 290, 2123-2126). Multicolor images with resolutions as high as 200 μm are obtained from oils of different molecular weights with the lighter oils being able to penetrate deeper, yielding larger red shifts. Erasing of images is done simply by adding a low vapor pressure oil which dissolves the image, returning the substrate to its original state.
Involving scientists in public and pre-college education at Princeton University
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Steinberg, D. J.
2011-12-01
The Princeton Center for Complex Materials (PCCM) is a National Science Foundation (NSF) funded Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC). As a MRSEC, it is part of the PCCM's mission to inspire and educate school children, teachers and the public about STEM and materials science. Research shows that it is critical to excite students at a young age and maintain that excitement, and without that these students are two to three times less likely to have any interest in science and engineering and pursue science careers as adults. We conduct over a dozen different education programs at Princeton University, in which scientists and engineers are directly involved with students, teachers and the public. As an ongoing MRSEC education and outreach program, we have developed many successful educational partnerships to increase our impact. The scientists and engineers who participate in our programs are leading experts in their research field and excellent communicators to their peers. They are not experts in precollege pedagogy or in communication to the public. Scientists often require some preparation in order to have the greatest chance of success. The amount and type of professional development required for these scientists to succeed in education programs depends on many factors. These include the age of the audience, the type of interaction, and the time involved. Also different researchers require different amount of help, advice, and training. Multiple education programs that involve Princeton University researchers will be discussed here. We will focus on what has worked best when preparing scientists and engineers for involvement in education programs. The Princeton University Materials Academy (PUMA) is a three week total immersion in science for minority high school students involving many faculty and their research groups. Our Making Stuff day reaches 100's of middle school students in which faculty interact directly with students and teachers at activity tables give auditorium presentations. Teacher development programs and holiday lectures will be highlighted as well.
TNT Testbed for Self-Organizing Tactical Networking and Collaboration
2009-06-01
Univ. of Bundeswehr - Munich Carnegie Mellon Univ. of Florida Case Virginia Tech JHU/APL WPI MIT WVHTF NDU UM, Columbia, UCSD, UCCS UC...interdicting small craft possessing nuclear radiation threat. One goal is to test the applicability of using a wireless network for data sharing ...interdiction and data sharing between boarding parties conducted in three geographically distributed locations. Each MIO experiment appears to
Macromolecule Mass Spectrometry: Citation Mining of User Documents
2003-11-14
MCLUCKEY SA PURDUE UNIV USA 541 MANN M UNIV SO DENMARK DENMARK 450 BIEMANN K MIT USA 343 CHOWDHURY SK SANOFI WINTHROP INC USA 302 COVEY TR SCIEX LTD CANADA...glycopeptid 0.7, residu 0.7) (36) Cluster 8 (proteom 10.8, technolog 5.8, protein 5.7, genom 5.5, function 2.7, advanc 1.5, vaccin 1.2, new 1.1, biolog 1.1
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1986
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1988-01-01
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton proceeded along four avenues: Guidance and control strategies for penetration of microbursts and wind shear; Application of artificial intelligence in flight control systems; Computer aided control system design; and Effects of control saturation on closed loop stability and response of open loop unstable aircraft. Areas of investigation relate to guidance and control of commercial transports as well as general aviation aircraft. Interaction between the flight crew and automatic systems is a subject of prime concern.
Mode and Intermediate Waters in Earth System Models
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gnanadesikan, Anand; Sarmiento, Jorge L.
This report describes work done as part of a joint Princeton-Johns Hopkins project to look at the impact of mode and intermediate waters in Earth System Models. The Johns Hopkins portion of this work focussed on the role of lateral mixing in ventilating such waters, with important implications for hypoxia, the uptake of anthropogenic carbon, the dynamics of El Nino and carbon pumps. The Johns Hopkins group also collaborated with the Princeton Group to help develop a watermass diagnostics framework.
1991-09-01
William J. Best Prof. F. A. Dahlen 907 Westwood Drive Geological and Geophysical Sciences Vienna, VA 22180 Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544...Laboratory 2 Taft Court, Suite 203 P.O. Box 1620 Rockville, MD 20850 La Jolla, CA 92038-1620 Prof. William Menke Prof. Paul G. Richards Lamont-Doherty...Wallace Departm_-ent of Geosciences Building #77 University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 Dr. William Wortman Mission Research Corporation 8560 Cinderbed
Progress on the occulter experiment at Princeton
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cady, Eric; Balasubramanian, Kunjithapatham; Carr, Michael; Dickie, Matthew; Echternach, Pierre; Groff, Tyler; Kasdin, Jeremy; Laftchiev, Christian; McElwain, Michael; Sirbu, Dan; Vanderbei, Robert; White, Victor
2009-08-01
An occulter is used in conjunction with a separate telescope to suppress the light of a distant star. To demonstrate the performance of this system, we are building an occulter experiment in the laboratory at Princeton. This experiment will use an etched silicon mask as the occulter, with some modifications to try to improve the performance. The occulter is illuminated by a diverging laser beam to reduce the aberrations from the optics before the occulter. We present the progress of this experiment and expectations for future work.
1975-07-17
Impact Thomas B. McDonough Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton. Inc. Princeton, New Jersey ...32460 [whi Naval Surface Weapons Center Dahigren Laboratory PASI UK , L. Code DG-40 Naval Sea Systems Comond Dah~gren, VA 22448 SEA -03513 (703...perturbation upwa h veLoci- tieas -inued by -the constant u-velocitv panels. ’?he axial an side force coponents, 6F and LFy, are then ca, u.,, -- -f
Comments on the Development of Computational Mathematics in Czechoslovakia and in the USSR.
1987-03-01
ACT (COusduMe an reverse .eld NE 4040604W SWi 1410011 6F 660" ambe The talk is an Invited lecture at Ale Conference on the History of Scientific and...Numeric Computations, May 13-15, 1987, Princeton, New Jersey. It present soon basic subjective observations about the history of numerical methods in...invited lecture at ACH Conference on the History of Scientific and Numeric Computations, May 13’-15, 1987, Princeton, New Jersey. It present some basic
1983-06-01
34Molecular Collision Processes in the Presence of Picosecond Laser Pulses ," H. W. Lee and T. F. George, 3. Phys. Chem., 83, 928 (1979). "High- Energy ...which is present in the hydrogen analog. Pulsed laser photolysis of ClN3 at the e~cimer wavelengths of 193 and 249 nm produced the photofragment, NCI...Department of Chemical AFOSR-82-0302 Engineering Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544 Picosecond Laser Studies of Richard R. Cavanagh Energy Transfer in
Evaluation of an LED Retrofit Project at Princeton University's Carl Icahn Laboratory
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Davis, Robert; Murphy, Arthur; Perrin, Tess
At Princeton University’s Carl Icahn Laboratory, DOE’s Commercial Buildings Integration Program documented the implementation of LED retrofit products for recessed troffers, linear cove lighting, and downlights – as part of Princeton’s first building-wide interior LED project. The conversion to LED enables more extensive use of lighting controls to tailor the lighting to the task and limit the operating hours based on occupancy, and the estimated energy savings including controls is 62% compared to the incumbent system.
Anticipating Installation Natural Resource Climate Change Concerns: The Data
2013-10-15
period of development (1 to 2 decades) include: 1. CM2.1 (GFDL model — NOAA Princeton) 2. E-H and E-R ( NASA GISS) 3. HadGEM1 (Hadley UKMO) 4. CGCM3...sixth GCM, the Australian CSIRO model, to increase the sample. Thus the adopted GCMs include: 1. GFDL model (NOAA Princeton) 6. GISS Model e ( NASA ...Sciences La- boratory ( USDA 2012) created data that would be useful to the related threshold project. This US Forest Service date were similar to those of
Labor Supply of Wives with Husbands Employed Either Full Time or Part Time.
1980-02-01
Nantcy. Ka ,serg David. ’ New Technology and Naval Forces view, Vol. 30. No. 40. Jul 1977) "’Public Drug Treatmonfl adid Addict Crime." Jun in ihr South...husbands, the costs incidental to the wife’s workinq are money costs -- for suitable babysitters , for example. Evidence for this is the larqer absolute value...The Economics of Labor Force Particiioatlon. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Pr e ss, 1969.7 Cailn, Glen. Mar ried Women in the Labor
None
2017-12-09
Et si la lumière au bout du tunnel du LHC était cosmique ? En dâautres termes, quâest-ce que le LHC peut nous apporter dans la connaissance de lâUnivers ? Car la montée en énergie des accélérateurs de particules nous permet de mieux appréhender lâunivers primordial, chaud et dense. Mais dans quel sens dit-on que le LHC reproduit des conditions proches du Big bang ? Quelles informations nous apporte-t-il sur le contenu de lâUnivers ? La matière noire est-elle détectable au LHC ? Lâénergie noire ? Pourquoi lâantimatière accumulée au CERN est-elle si rare dans lâUnivers ? Et si le CERN a bâti sa réputation sur lâexploration des forces faibles et fortes qui opèrent au sein des atomes et de leurs noyaux, est-ce que le LHC peut nous apporter des informations sur la force gravitationnelle qui gouverne lâévolution cosmique ? Depuis une trentaine dâannées, notre compréhension de lâunivers dans ses plus grandes dimensions et lâappréhension de son comportement aux plus petites distances sont intimement liées : en quoi le LHC va-t-il tester expérimentalement cette vision unifiée ? Tout public, entrée libre / Réservations au +41 (0)22 767 76 76
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Clark, Stephanie; McCurdy, Alan; Roy, Sharon; Smith, Denise
2006-01-01
Thirty-two recent graduates from the joint food science program of Washington State Univ. (WSU) and The Univ. of Idaho (UI) and 12 of their employers participated in a survey study to assess food science program outcomes. The objective of this study was to assess the joint curriculum in its ability to prepare undergraduate students for critical…
1989-04-01
addresu Microalgal Riotechnology Lab., The Jacob Blaustein inst. for Desert Res., Sede Boqer Campus, Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev -Beer Sheeva, Israel...Blaustein Inst. for Desert Res., Sede Boqer Campus, Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev -Beer Sheeva, Israel 84990. Transposons Tnl, Tn5, TnO, Tn9 and TnlO were
European Scientific Notes. Volume 36, Number 11.
1982-11-30
and polyisocyanides appear to by S. Piccarolo (Univ. of Palermo , Italy) of the be unique in their behavior in solution, thermal expansion of...of solvent down polyethylenes was investigated by D. Curto an activity gradient coupled with time- (Univ. of Palermo , Italy). When the rheo- dependent...ambitious in Paris. Projects are projected to start in program for a number of reasons, which were 1983 in Pakistan, India, Colombia , and Saudi discussed
Army Sustainment. Volume 43, Issue 6, November-December 2011
2011-12-01
challenges. The first challenge was being noti- fied before the CAR that the BSA would need to move to shorten the lines of communication ( LOC ) while the...aDMiniStration froM Saint leo univerSity, an M.S. in SeconDary eDucation froM olD DoMinion univerSity, anD a ph.D. in eDucation aDMin- iStration anD leaDerShip
All-in-one 3D printed microscopy chamber for multidimensional imaging, the UniverSlide.
Alessandri, Kevin; Andrique, Laetitia; Feyeux, Maxime; Bikfalvi, Andreas; Nassoy, Pierre; Recher, Gaëlle
2017-02-10
While live 3D high resolution microscopy techniques are developing rapidly, their use for biological applications is partially hampered by practical difficulties such as the lack of a versatile sample chamber. Here, we propose the design of a multi-usage observation chamber adapted for live 3D bio-imaging. We show the usefulness and practicality of this chamber, which we named the UniverSlide, for live imaging of two case examples, namely multicellular systems encapsulated in sub-millimeter hydrogel shells and zebrafish larvae. We also demonstrate its versatility and compatibility with all microscopy devices by using upright or inverted microscope configurations after loading the UniverSlide with fixed or living samples. Further, the device is applicable for medium/high throughput screening and automatized multi-position image acquisition, providing a constraint-free but stable and parallelized immobilization of the samples. The frame of the UniverSlide is fabricated using a stereolithography 3D printer, has the size of a microscopy slide, is autoclavable and sealed with a removable lid, which makes it suitable for use in a controlled culture environment. We describe in details how to build this chamber and we provide all the files necessary to print the different pieces in the lab.
All-in-one 3D printed microscopy chamber for multidimensional imaging, the UniverSlide
Alessandri, Kevin; Andrique, Laetitia; Feyeux, Maxime; Bikfalvi, Andreas; Nassoy, Pierre; Recher, Gaëlle
2017-01-01
While live 3D high resolution microscopy techniques are developing rapidly, their use for biological applications is partially hampered by practical difficulties such as the lack of a versatile sample chamber. Here, we propose the design of a multi-usage observation chamber adapted for live 3D bio-imaging. We show the usefulness and practicality of this chamber, which we named the UniverSlide, for live imaging of two case examples, namely multicellular systems encapsulated in sub-millimeter hydrogel shells and zebrafish larvae. We also demonstrate its versatility and compatibility with all microscopy devices by using upright or inverted microscope configurations after loading the UniverSlide with fixed or living samples. Further, the device is applicable for medium/high throughput screening and automatized multi-position image acquisition, providing a constraint-free but stable and parallelized immobilization of the samples. The frame of the UniverSlide is fabricated using a stereolithography 3D printer, has the size of a microscopy slide, is autoclavable and sealed with a removable lid, which makes it suitable for use in a controlled culture environment. We describe in details how to build this chamber and we provide all the files necessary to print the different pieces in the lab. PMID:28186188
All-in-one 3D printed microscopy chamber for multidimensional imaging, the UniverSlide
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Alessandri, Kevin; Andrique, Laetitia; Feyeux, Maxime; Bikfalvi, Andreas; Nassoy, Pierre; Recher, Gaëlle
2017-02-01
While live 3D high resolution microscopy techniques are developing rapidly, their use for biological applications is partially hampered by practical difficulties such as the lack of a versatile sample chamber. Here, we propose the design of a multi-usage observation chamber adapted for live 3D bio-imaging. We show the usefulness and practicality of this chamber, which we named the UniverSlide, for live imaging of two case examples, namely multicellular systems encapsulated in sub-millimeter hydrogel shells and zebrafish larvae. We also demonstrate its versatility and compatibility with all microscopy devices by using upright or inverted microscope configurations after loading the UniverSlide with fixed or living samples. Further, the device is applicable for medium/high throughput screening and automatized multi-position image acquisition, providing a constraint-free but stable and parallelized immobilization of the samples. The frame of the UniverSlide is fabricated using a stereolithography 3D printer, has the size of a microscopy slide, is autoclavable and sealed with a removable lid, which makes it suitable for use in a controlled culture environment. We describe in details how to build this chamber and we provide all the files necessary to print the different pieces in the lab.
Global geometry of non-planar 3-body motions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Salehani, Mahdi Khajeh
2011-12-01
The aim of this paper is to study the global geometry of non-planar 3-body motions in the realms of equivariant Differential Geometry and Geometric Mechanics. This work was intended as an attempt at bringing together these two areas, in which geometric methods play the major role, in the study of the 3-body problem. It is shown that the Euler equations of a three-body system with non-planar motion introduce non-holonomic constraints into the Lagrangian formulation of mechanics. Applying the method of undetermined Lagrange multipliers to study the dynamics of three-body motions reduced to the level of moduli space {bar{M}} subject to the non-holonomic constraints yields the generalized Euler-Lagrange equations of non-planar three-body motions in {bar{M}} . As an application of the derived dynamical equations in the level of {bar{M}} , we completely settle the question posed by A. Wintner in his book [The analytical foundations of Celestial Mechanics, Sections 394-396, 435 and 436. Princeton University Press (1941)] on classifying the constant inclination solutions of the three-body problem.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Landsberg, H. E.
It was a pleasure to learn, from a recent (May 4) issue of Eos, of the formation of a permanent Committee on History of Geophysics. There is a dire need for reference material, books, and articles on geophysical history.Let me recommend to them that they take a good look at the Dictionary of the History of Science (W.F. Bynum, E.J. Browne, Roy Porter (Eds.), Princeton University Press, 494 pp., 1981). What follows is not a book review, although it may appear so. It is meant to be a challenge to place geophysics on the map in historical context. In this book, hydrology is dealt with in one sentence under the heading ‘cycle,’ geomagnetism under ‘declination and dip,’ and its history ends with Edward Sabine. Seismology appears under earthquakes. No important seismologist is mentioned. In the biographical index, Wiechert is included only for a contribution to physics. Where are Sir Harold Jeffreys, Galitzin, Gutenberg, Mohorovičić, Lehman, and many others? Meteorology ends with V. Bjerknes and Solberg; Köppen, Richardson, Rossby, and other notables [of] the last century do not seem to exist.
GIANT API: an application programming interface for functional genomics.
Roberts, Andrew M; Wong, Aaron K; Fisk, Ian; Troyanskaya, Olga G
2016-07-08
GIANT API provides biomedical researchers programmatic access to tissue-specific and global networks in humans and model organisms, and associated tools, which includes functional re-prioritization of existing genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. Using tissue-specific interaction networks, researchers are able to predict relationships between genes specific to a tissue or cell lineage, identify the changing roles of genes across tissues and uncover disease-gene associations. Additionally, GIANT API enables computational tools like NetWAS, which leverages tissue-specific networks for re-prioritization of GWAS results. The web services covered by the API include 144 tissue-specific functional gene networks in human, global functional networks for human and six common model organisms and the NetWAS method. GIANT API conforms to the REST architecture, which makes it stateless, cacheable and highly scalable. It can be used by a diverse range of clients including web browsers, command terminals, programming languages and standalone apps for data analysis and visualization. The API is freely available for use at http://giant-api.princeton.edu. © The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
Food Quality and Energy Usage in Foodservice Systems: Convective Thermal Processing of Turkey Rolls
1987-01-28
Quality Dr. M.l. Cremer Ohio State Univ. Wisconsin Enerqy Usaqe Microbioloqical Quality Nutritional Quality Dr. M. E. Matthews Univ. of Wisconsin...Engineering Center, Natick, MA. Special appreciation is extended to the followinq members of the NC-120 Regional Research Committee for their leadership ... Cremer , M.L. 1986. Sensory quality of turkey rolls roasted and held in an institutional convection oven with and without chilled storaqe. J. Food
On the Learning of Distractors during Controlled and Automatic Processing.
1980-02-04
function of semantic, graphic and syntactic orienting tasks. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1973, 12, 471-480. LaBerge , D. Attention...and the measurement of perceptual learning. Memory and Cognition, 1973, 1, 268-278. LaBerge , D. Acquisition of automatic processing in perceptual and...Univ A. Stevens , Holt Beranek & Newman, Cambridge, 1A D. Stone, SUY, Albany P. Suppes, Stanford Uuiv H. Swaminathan, Univ of Massachusetts K. Tatsuoka
Kubiak, Mateusz; Łenski, Włodzimierz; Szal, Bogdan
2018-01-01
We extend the results of Xh. Z. Krasniqi (Acta Comment. Univ. Tartu Math. 17:89-101, 2013) and the authors (Acta Comment. Univ. Tartu Math. 13:11-24, 2009; Proc. Est. Acad. Sci. 67:50-60, 2018) to the case when considered function is [Formula: see text]-periodic and the measure of approximation depends on r -differences of the entries of the considered matrices.
Measuring the Performance and Intelligence of Systems: Proceedings of the 2001 PerMIS Workshop
2001-09-04
35 1.1 Interval Mathematics for Analysis of Multiresolutional Systems V. Kreinovich, Univ. of Texas, R. Alo, Univ. of Houston-Downtown...the possible combinations. In non-deterministic real- time systems , the problem is compounded by the uncertainty in the execution times of various...multiresolutional, multiscale ) in their essence because of multiresolutional character of the meaning of words [Rieger, 01]. In integrating systems , the presence of a
An Integrated Suite of Text and Data Mining Tools - Phase II
2005-08-30
Riverside, CA, USA Mazda Motor Corp, Jpn Univ of Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Ger Navy Center for Applied Research in Artificial Intelligence Univ of...with Georgia Tech Research Corporation developed a desktop text-mining software tool named TechOASIS (known commercially as VantagePoint). By the...of this dataset and groups the Corporate Source items that co-occur with the found items. He decides he is only interested in the institutions
Computational and Psychophysical Study of Human Vision Using Neural Networks
1989-04-28
Dept. of Molecular 800 North Quincy Street, Arlington, VA and Cell Biology , c/o Stanley/Donner ASU, 22217-5000 Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA 94720...20301-3080 Bldg. 1171/1 Newport, RI 02841 Dr. Gary Aston-Jones New York University Cdr. Robert C. Carter USN Department of Biology Naval Research...Howard, Jr. Department of Psychology Dr. Donald A. Glaser Human Performance Lab Univ of California Catholic University Dept of Molecular Biology
Applications of Human Performance Models to System Design: Defense Research Series. Volume 2
1989-01-01
definition of display-ccntrol task demands. For first use, derivation is manual. For initial aplication , the sources of data for estimating task...describing human operator control of slowly responding complex systems. Delft (The Netherlands) Delft Univ. Tech., 235 pp., Ph.D. Thesis . Kok, J.J. and...Netherlands), Delft Univ. Tech., 157 pp., Ph.D. Thesis . van Lunteren, A. and Stassen, H.G. (1967). Investigations on the charac- teristics of the
A Compilation of Necessary Elements for a Local Government Continuity of Operations Plan
2006-09-01
Community Resilience in the World Trade Center Attack (Newark: Univ. of Delaware, 2003), 4. 11 Subsequently, New York City developed a COOP after... Community Resilience , 4. 27 New York City Emergency Response Task Force, Enhancing New York City’s Emergency Preparedness A Report to Mayor Michael R...Elements of Community Resilience in the World Trade Center Attack. Disaster Research Center, Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE, 2004. Walton, Matt S
Preliminary analysis of cross beam data from the Gun Barrel Hill site
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Sandborn, V. A.; Bice, A. R.; Cliff, W. C.; Hablutzel, B. C.
1974-01-01
Preliminary evaluation of cross beam data taken at the Gun Barrell Hill test site of ESSA is presented. The evaluation is made using the analog Princeton Time Correlator. A study of the frequency band width limitations of the Princeton Time Correlator is made. Based on the band width limitations, it is possible to demonstrate that nearly identical correlation is obtained for frequencies from .01 to 3.9 hertz. Difficulty is encountered in that maximums in the correlation curves do not occur at zero time lag for zero beam separations.
Fabrication and Characteristics of Free Standing Shaped Pupil Masks for TPF-Coronagraph
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Balasubramanian, Kunjithapatham; Echternach, Pierre M.; Dickie, Matthew R.; Muller, Richard E.; White, Victor E.; Hoppe, Daniel J.; Shaklan, Stuart B.; Belikov, Ruslan; Kasdin, N. Jeremy; Vanderbei, Robert J.;
2006-01-01
Direct imaging and characterization of exo-solar terrestrial planets require coronagraphic instruments capable of suppressing star light to 10-10. Pupil shaping masks have been proposed and designed1 at Princeton University to accomplish such a goal. Based on Princeton designs, free standing (without a substrate) silicon masks have been fabricated with lithographic and deep etching techniques. In this paper, we discuss the fabrication of such masks and present their physical and optical characteristics in relevance to their performance over the visible to near IR bandwidth.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1976-01-01
Papers are presented on first and second generation supersonic transports, the Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research Program, wide-body subsonic transports and vertical and short takeoff and landing transports. Aspects of aircraft design are examined including the airframe, propulsion and electronics. Government regulation, cost/benefit analysis of research and development, airline economics and aircraft financing are also considered. The environmental impact of air transportation is discussed with emphasis on atmospheric emissions (including stratospheric pollution) and noise pollution. Individual items are announced in this issue.
They are smaller, but these systems produce mighty reports.
Botvin, Judith D
2004-01-01
The first place winner, Commonwealth Health Corporation, Bowling Green, Ky., has a successful cost-saving story. Designed in-house, with donated printing, it cost a mere 54 cents per unit. Little Company of Mary Hospital, Evergreen Park, Ill., wins second place with a publication that enlisted the help of many personnel. University Health Care System, Augusta, Ga., third place winner, uses dramatic graphics to observe its 185th anniversary. Princeton HealthCare System, Princeton, N.J., receives special recognition for the clarity and effectiveness of its four-page report.
1991-06-24
return to the discussion of the role of fundamental research in technology , and the different ways of viewing academic research programs in the context...something more complicated that becomes a system or with a general field of technology . In trying to put together a map, let us look at this graph of...for new’ ideas, and especially for new experimental diagnostics capabilities. It is ironic that technological advances in a number of fields like
Solid Propellant Ignition and Other Unsteady Combustion Phenomena Induced by Radiation
1976-11-01
CAVENY AND M. SUMMERFIELD -I! NOVEMBER 1976 • U. S. ARMY RESEARCH OFFICE GRANTS DA-ARO- D -31-124-71-G51 - DA-ARO- D -31-124-71-G184 DA-ARO- D -31-124-71...G109 DAHCO4-74-G-0125 DAHCO4-75-G-0124 DAAG29-76-G-0270 DEPARTMENT OF AEROSPACE AND MECHANICAL SCIENCES PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY D D ...DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY POSITION, UNLESS SO DESIGNATED BY OTHER AUTHORIZED DOCUMENTS. ".1 .4 d - • -1 SECURITY CLASSIF.CATION OF THIS PAGE (Ien
Larson, S.J.; Capel, P.D.; VanderLoop, A.G.
1996-01-01
Laboratory and quality assurance procedures for the analysis of ground-water samples for herbicides at the Management Systems Evaluation Area near Princeton, Minnesota are described. The target herbicides include atrazine, de-ethylatrazine, de-isopropylatrazine, metribuzin, alachlor, 2,6-diethylaniline, and metolachlor. The analytical techniques used are solid-phase extraction, and analysis by gas chromatography with mass-selective detection. Descriptions of cleaning procedures, preparation of standard solutions, isolation of analytes from water, sample transfer methods, instrumental analysis, and data analysis are included.
1980-12-01
Cards. Each activation of the XXXX Subprogram (XXXX=SAVE, LIBR, DISP, UNIV, SEXT , or ALLO) is associated with a certain group of DATA Cards which we...run Figure 40. The structure of the SIRIUS Data Card Package. AAAA, BBBB, .... ZZZZ replace any of SAVE, LIBR, DISP, UNIV, SEXT , ALLO. -95- The...in respect to constraining the fitted parameters. For M6ssbauer spectra containing several sextets the SEXT subprogram can be recommended. The ALLO
Space Astronomy Update: Stars Under Construction
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1995-01-01
A discussion of the images obtained by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is featured on this video. The discussion panel consists of Dr. Jeff Hester (Arizona State Univ.), Dr. Jon Morse (Space Telescope Science Inst.), Dr. Chris Burrows (European Space Agency), Dr. Bruce Margon (Univ. of Washington), and host Don Savage (Goddard Space Flight Center). A variety of graphics and explanations are provided for the images of star formations and other astronomical features that were viewed by the HST.
Tiger Team Assessment of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Not Available
1991-03-01
This report documents the Tiger Team Assessment of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) conducted from February 11 to March 12, 1991. The PPPL is operated for the US Department of Energy (DOE) by Princeton University. The assessment was conducted under the auspices of the Headquarters, DOE, Office of Special Projects which is under the Assistant Secretary for Environment, Safety and Health. Activities of the Tiger Team Assessment resulted in identification of compliance findings or concerns and noteworthy practices and an analysis as to the root causes for noncompliance. The PPPL Tiger Team Assessment is one component of a larger,more » comprehensive DOE Tiger Team Assessment program for DOE facilities that will eventually encompass over 100 of the Department's operating facilities. The objective of the initiative is to provide the Secretary with information on the compliance status of DOE facilities with regard to ES H requirements; root causes for noncompliances; adequacy of DOE and contractor ES H management programs; response actions to address the identified problems areas; and DOE-wide ES H compliance trends and root causes.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Robo-AO observed cool subdwarf companions (Ziegler+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ziegler, C.; Law, N. M.; Baranec, C.; Riddle, R. L.; Fuchs, J. T.
2017-09-01
We selected targets from the 564 spectral type F- through M-subdwarf candidates studied by Marshall (2007, J/AJ/134/778). These targets were selected from the New Luyten Two-Tenths catalog (NLTT; Luyten, 1979nlcs.book.....L; Luyten & Hughes 1980, Proper-Motion Survey with the Forty-Eight Inch Schmidt Telescope LV First Supplement to the NLTT Catalogue (Minneapolis, MN: Univ. Minnesota Press)) of high proper motion stars (>0.18 arcsec/yr) using a reduced proper motion diagram (RPM). Of the 552 subdwarfs confirmed by Marshall, a randomly selected sample of 348 G-, K-, and M-subdwarfs were observed by Robo-AO when available between other high priority surveys. We obtained high-angular-resolution images of the 348 subdwarfs during 32 separate nights of observations between 2012 September 3 and 2013 August 21 (UT). The observations were performed using the Robo-AO laser adaptive optics system (Riddle et al. 2012SPIE.8447E..2OR; Baranec et al. 2013, J. Visualized Exp. 72 e50021; 2014ApJ...790L...8B) mounted on the Palomar 60 inch telescope. (1 data file).
Atomic Rearrangements in Electron Attachment to Laser-Excited Molecules^*
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pinnaduwage, Lal; McCorkle, Dennis
1996-10-01
We report the observation of extensive atomic rearrangements in dissociative electron attachment to triethylamine " (Pinnaduwage and McCorkle, Chem.Phys. Lett. (in press, 1996))" and benzene laser excited to energies above their ionization thresholds. Large signal of "rearranged" negative ions, such as C_3^- (which is observed in both cases), were observed. This is in contrast to negative-ion formation via electron attachment to molecules in their ground states, where "rearranged" negative ions are comparatively weak and have been observed only occasionally. However, formation of "rearranged" positive ions is of common occurrence in the ionization of polyatomic molecules; it is possible that the formation of "rearranged" positive ions in the ionization processes, and the formation of such negative ions via electron attachment to excited states located close to the ionization threshold, are related. * Work supported by the LDRD Program of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, managed by Lockheed Martin Energy Research Corp. for the US Department of Energy under contract number DE-AC05-96OR22464, and by the National Science Foundation under contract CHE-93113949 with the Univ. of Tenn., Knoxville.
1986-06-01
planning, trout in the Lemhi River, Idaho . The and acquisition of interests in ecological requirements of the two streams threatened with adverse devel...and its effects on insects and fish. B. C., Inst. of Fish., Vancouver. Univ. Idaho Coop. Fish. Res. Unit Bull. 17. Completion Rep. Proj. Anderson, H.W...J. Morris, ed. Symposium, Idaho . Coll. of Forestry, Wildl., ForesT Land Uses and Stream and Range Sciences, Univ. of Idaho , Environment. Oregon State
The Power of Comparative Physiology: Evolution, Integration and Applied
2003-03-01
A.G. Ramirez , A. Cordero, R. Anguilla rostrata, a system to study the Bloise and S. Priori. Univ. of Guadalajara- response to environmental changes...Oliveira’, Carlos Artusro Navas’: ’Biouciences Institute. University of Sio Lane, Huntington Beach, CA 92647-3524 Paulo, Rua do Matao, Ic 14, 321, Sia...Mai3o. Tray. 14, no.321. Sin Paulo, So Paulo 05508-900 Brazil Institute, Univ of Sao Paulo, Rua do Matio, Or 14, N321, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo 05011-001
2008-12-21
celled Nitinol has recently become possiblevia a (newly discovered by Profs. D. Grummon at Michigan State Univ. and J.Shaw at Univ. of Michigan...transient-liquid reactive brazing system for creating robust metallurgical Nitinol Nitinol bonds. With this technique, prototype sparse cellularhoneycomb...Brian.Berg@bsci.com Nitinol has become a frequently used medical implant material despite its notorious complexity; especiallywith respect to fatigue [1
Thermal Conductivity of Ten Selected Binary Alloy Systems.
1975-05-01
of Commercial Metals and Alloys. IL Aluminmnns," J. Appt. Pys., .1(3), 496-503, 1960. 58. Mikryukov , V . E . and Karagpyan, A. 0., "Thermal and...74, 1900. 136. Mikryukov , V . E ., "Thermal and Electrical Properties of Copper Alloys," Moscow Univ. Vest. Ser. Mat. Mekh. Astron. Fiz. Khim., 12(2... Mikryukov , V . E ., "Thermal and Electrical Properties of Copper Alloys, "Moscow Univ. Vest. Ser. Mat. Mekh. Astron. Fis. Ehim., 12(3), 57-64, 195?. 145
Adaptive Incentive Controls for Stackelberg Games with Unknown Cost Functionals.
1984-01-01
APR EZT:: F I AN 73S e OsL:-: UNCLASSI?:-- Q4~.’~- .A.., 6, *~*i i~~*~~*.- U ADAPTIVE INCENTIVE CONTROLS FOR STACKELBERG GAMES WITH UNKNOWN COST...AD-A161 885 ADAPTIVE INCENTIVE CONTROLS FOR STACKELBERG GAMES WITH i/1 UNKNOWN COST FUNCTIONALSCU) ILLINOIS UNIV AT URBANA DECISION AND CONTROL LAB T...ORGANIZATION 6b. OFFICE SYMBOL 7.. NAME OF MONITORING ORGANIZATION CoriaeLcenef~pda~ Joint Services Electronics Program Laboratory, Univ. of Illinois N/A
1991-06-01
Amgerst, MA 01002 Facultad De Ciencias Exactas Y Naturales Pabellon 1 - C Universitaria Dissado, Leonard N4 Buenos Aires 1428 Kings College Argentina...Laboratories 6 Universitatstrasse 2nd Floor B-2 Zurich Switzerland CH-8092 Rochester NY 14652-3208 Diebold, Michael P. Dunham, Stephen Dupont De Nemours...Laboratoire De Chimie Moleculaire Univ. of Paris-Sud URAAU CNRS Laboratoire De Chimie Theorique Univ. De Nice, Parc Vairose Batiment 490 Nice France 06034
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1984
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1987-01-01
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University, a program emphasizing graduate and undergraduate student research, proceeded along four avenues during 1984: (1) guidance and control strategies for penetration of microbursts and wind shear; (2) application of artificial intelligence in flight control systems; (3) effects of control saturation on closed loop stability; and (4) response of open loop unstable aircraft. Areas of investigation relate to guidance and control of commercial transports as well as to general aviation aircraft. Interaction between the flight crew and automatic systems is a subject of principle concern. These areas of investigation are briefly discussed.
Variational processes and stochastic versions of mechanics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zambrini, J. C.
1986-09-01
The dynamical structure of any reasonable stochastic version of classical mechanics is investigated, including the version created by Nelson [E. Nelson, Quantum Fluctuations (Princeton U.P., Princeton, NJ, 1985); Phys. Rev. 150, 1079 (1966)] for the description of quantum phenomena. Two different theories result from this common structure. One of them is the imaginary time version of Nelson's theory, whose existence was unknown, and yields a radically new probabilistic interpretation of the heat equation. The existence and uniqueness of all the involved stochastic processes is shown under conditions suggested by the variational approach of Yasue [K. Yasue, J. Math. Phys. 22, 1010 (1981)].
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Annual Site Environmental Report for Calendar Year 1998
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
V. Finley
2000-03-06
The results of the 1998 environmental surveillance and monitoring program for the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) are presented and discussed. The purpose of this report is to provide the US Department of Energy and the public with information on the level of radioactive and non-radioactive pollutants, if any, that are added to the environment as a result of PPPL's operations. The report also summarizes environmental initiatives, assessments, and programs that were undertaken in 1998. One significant initiative is the Integrated Safety Management (ISM) program that embraces environment, safety, and health principles as one.
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1992-1993
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1994-01-01
The Air Transportation Research Program at Princeton University proceeded along five avenues during the past year: (1) Flight Control System Robustness; (2) Microburst Hazards to Aircraft; (3) Wind Rotor Hazards to Aircraft; (4) Intelligent Aircraft/Airspace Systems; and (5) Aerospace Optical Communications. This research resulted in a number of publications, including theses, archival papers, and conference papers. An annotated bibliography of publications that appeared between June 1992 and June 1993 is included. The research that these papers describe was supported in whole or in part by the Joint University Program, including work that was completed prior to the reporting period.
1974-10-01
of the fact that we want to get information to pilots which will create a meaningful mental picture for the pilot, we still teach classical high and...universities and other flight safety groups ) I that porbapq bove R creat deal of safety technology nvailable in order that we c.’n nssRil..tp mtn,,ifacturers to...Dr. David Kehlman, who directs the project at Kansas, is with us and I am sure he will be glad to talk abuut the airplanc with you. In thiR program
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Park, Jong -Kyu
The 20th workshop on magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) stability control took place November 22–24, 2015, in Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), following the American Physical Society—Division of Plasma Physics annual meeting on November 16–20 in Savannah, GA. The purpose of this workshop is to stimulate in depth discussion and motivate future research in the areas of MHD stability physics and control of magnetically confined plasmas. Furthermore, the workshop was organized jointly by Auburn University, Columbia University, General Atomics, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the Los Alamos National Laboratory, and under the auspices of the US/Japan Collaboration.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wieser, Patti; Hopkins, David
The DOE Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) collaborates to develop fusion as a safe, clean and abundant energy source for the future. This video discusses PPPL's research and development on plasma, the fourth state of matter. In this simulation of plasma turbulence inside PPPL's National Spherical Torus Experiment, the colorful strings represent higher and lower electron density in turbulent plasma as it circles around a donut-shaped fusion reactor; red and orange are higher density. This image is among those featured in the slide show, "Plasmas are Hot and Fusion is Cool," a production of PPPL and the Princeton University Broadcastmore » Center.« less
Health physics measurement of Princeton Tokamaks, 1977-1987.
Stencel, J R; Gilbert, J D; Couch, J G; Griesbach, O A; Fennimore, J J; Greco, J M
1989-06-01
The Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) began fusion experiments in 1951. In the early years, the major health physics concerns were associated with x radiation produced by energetic electrons in the plasma. Within the past year, neutron and 3H production from 2H-2H (represented hereafter as D-D) reactions has increased significantly on the larger fusion devices. Tritium retention noted in graphite tiles underscores the significance of material selection in present and future 3H-fueled fusion devices. This paper reports on operational health physics radiation measurements made on various PPPL machines over the past 10 y.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Virginia Finley; Sheneman, Robert S.; Levine, Jerry D.
Contained in the following report are data for radioactivity in the environment collected and analyzed by Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory’s Princeton Environmental, Analytical, and Radiological Laboratory (PEARL). The PEARL is located on-site and is certified for analyzing radiological and non-radiological parameters through the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection’s Laboratory Certification Program, Certification Number 12471. Non-radiological surface and ground water samples are analyzed by NJDEP certified subcontractor laboratories – QC, Inc. and Accutest Laboratory. To the best of our knowledge, these data, as contained in the “Annual Site Environmental Report for 2011,” are documented and certified to be correct.
Nuclear and ionic charge distribution experiment on ISEE-1 and ISEE-3
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gloeckler, G.; Ipavich, F. M.; Galvin, A. B.
1987-01-01
The experimental work carried out under this contract is a continuation of that originally performed under Contracts NAS5-20062 and NAS5-26739. The data analyzed are from the Max-Planck Institut/Univ. of Maryland experiment on ISEE-1 and ISEE-3. Each spacecraft experiment consists of a nearly identical set of three sensors (designated the ULECA, ULEWAT, and ULEZEQ sensors) designed to measure the energy spectra and composition of suprathermal and energetic ions over a broad energy range (less than 3 keV/e to more than 20 MeV/nucleon). Since the launch of ISEE's 2 and 3, the MPI/Univ. of Maryland experiments have generally performed as expected except for a partial failure of the ULEWAT sensor on ISEE-1 in August 1978. A number of scientific studies have either been completed, initiated or are at various stages of completion. A brief summary of Primary Results is given, followed by a more detailed summary of the major accomplishments at the Univ. of Maryland.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Muraki, Koji; Takeyama, Shojiro
2011-12-01
This volume contains invited and contributed papers from the 19th International Conference on the Application of High Magnetic Fields in Semiconductor Physics and Nanotechnology (HMF-19) held in Fukuoka, Japan, from 1-6 August 2010. This conference was mainly sponsored by the Tokyo University-'Horiba International fund', which was donated by Dr Masao Horiba, the founder of Horiba Ltd. The scientific program of HMF-19 consisted of 37 invited talks, 24 contributed talks, and 83 posters, which is available from the conference homepage http://www.hmf19.iis.u-tokyo.ac.jp/index.html. Each manuscript submitted for publication in this volume has been independently reviewed. The Editor is very grateful to all the reviewers for their quick responses and helpful reports and to all the authors for their submissions and patience for the delay in the editorial process. Finally, the Editor would like to express his sincere gratitude to all the individuals involved in the conference organization and all the attendees, who made this conference so successful. Koji Muraki Conference photograph Committees Chair Conference chairS Takeyama(ISSP-UT) Conference secretary T Machida (IIS-UT) Program chair K Muraki (NTT) Local organizing chair K Oto (Chiba Univ.) Advisory Committee International Domestic L Brey (ES) T Ando (TIT) Z H Chen (CN) Y Hirayama (Tohoku Univ.) S Das Sarma (US) G Kido (NIMS) L Eaves (GB) N Miura (JP) J P Eisenstein (US) J Nitta (Tohoku Univ.) K Ensslin (CH) T Takamasu (NIMS) J Furdyna (US) G M Gusev (BR) I Kukushkin (RU) Z D Kvon (RU) G Landwehr (DE) J C Maan (NL) A H MacDonald (US) N F Oliveira Jr (BR) A Pinczuk (US) J C Portal (FR) A Sachrajda (CA) M K Sanyal(IN) R Stepniewski(PL) Program Committee Chair: K Muraki(NTT) International Domestic G Bauer (AU) H Ajiki (Osaka Univ.) G Boebinger (US) H Aoki (Hongo, UT) S Ivanov (RU) K Nomura (RIKEN) K von Klitzing (DE) T Okamoto (Hongo, UT) R Nicholas (GB) T Osada (ISSP-UT ) M Potemski (FR) N Studart (BR) U Zeitler (NL) Local Organizing Committee Chair: K Oto(Chiba Univ.) Y H Matsuda (ISSP-UT) H Yokoi (Kumamoto Univ.) M Itoh (IIS-UT) M Noda (ISSP-UT) H Sawabe (ISSP-UT) Sponsors Horiba International Conference (Dr Masao Horiba's Donation) The University of Tokyo Fukuoka City The Institute for Solid State Physics, The University of Tokyo The Global Center of Excellence for Physical Sciences Frontier, The University of Tokyo
Gammon, John; Morgan-Samuel, Heulwen
2005-05-01
The overall aim of this intervention study was to investigate, and measure quantitatively, the psychological effects of structured student tutorial support, on undergraduate students' level of stress, self-esteem and cognitive coping. A quantitative research approach was adopted using a quasi-experimental design (post-test only, non-equivalent control group design) in order to ascertain whether there were any significant differences between the experimental conditions (n=25) and a control group (n=25). The independent variable was structured student tutorial support and the dependent variables were student stress, self-esteem and cognitive coping. A total of 50 subjects were randomly assigned to either the experimental or control group. Quantitative data were collected using: the Student Nurse Stress Index (Jones, M.C., Johnston, D.W., 1997a. The derivation of a 22 item Student Nurse Stress Index, using exploratory, confirmatory and multi-sample confirmatory factor analytic techniques. In: Paper Presented at the Annual Nursing Research Conference, 18-20th April, University of Wales, Swansea; Jones, M. C. Johnston, D.W., 1999. Derivation of a brief Student Nurse Stress Index. Work and Stress 13(2), 162-181), the Self Esteem Scale (Rosenberg, M., 1965. Society and the Adolesent Self Image. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ) and a Linear Analogue Coping Scale (Gammon, J., 1998. Analysis of the stressful effects of hospitalisation and source isolation on coping and psychological constructs. International Journal of Nursing Practice 4(2), 84-97). The methods of data analysis were the application of the t-test and descriptive statistics. The results indicated a significantly lower level of stress in the experimental group (t=-3.85, p=0.001) and a significantly higher self esteem (t=4.11, p=0.001). Results also suggested that students who were provided with structured tutorial support perceived they coped more effectively with their studies (t=4.65, p=0.001). The study concluded that structured tutorial support was an influential variable in reducing student stress, promoting self-esteem and facilitating more effective coping, suggests further interventional research is needed to evaluate this further.
Improvements and applications of COBRA-TF for stand-alone and coupled LWR safety analyses
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Avramova, M.; Cuervo, D.; Ivanov, K.
2006-07-01
The advanced thermal-hydraulic subchannel code COBRA-TF has been recently improved and applied for stand-alone and coupled LWR core calculations at the Pennsylvania State Univ. in cooperation with AREVA NP GmbH (Germany)) and the Technical Univ. of Madrid. To enable COBRA-TF for academic and industrial applications including safety margins evaluations and LWR core design analyses, the code programming, numerics, and basic models were revised and substantially improved. The code has undergone through an extensive validation, verification, and qualification program. (authors)
Univers: The construction of an internet-wide descriptive naming system
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bowman, C. Mic
1990-01-01
Descriptive naming systems allow clients to identify a set of objects by description. Described here is the construction of a descriptive naming system, called Univers, based on a model in which clients provide both an object description and some meta-information. The meta-information describes beliefs about the query and the naming system. Specifically, it is an ordering on a set of perfect world approximations, and it describes the preferred methods for accommodating imperfect information. The description is then resolved in a way that respects the preferred approximations.
Aircraft Attitude Awareness Workshop Proceedings
1987-04-01
MO Mr. Paul Summers, McDonnel Douglas Corp, St Louis, MO Dr. Stanley ROSCO, New Mexico State Univ. and ILLIANA Aviation Sciences Ltd, Las Cruces...CFB Cold Lake Alberta, Canada Dr. Stanley N. Roscoe New Mexico State Univ. b Las Cruces, NM Illiana Aviation Sciences Dr. Robert ti. Taylor...Enable w i n p a n t o m J f n t J l n own & LA whfle f l y l n s formnation o Reduce Cockpit Sorkload o Aid Recogni t ion o f L‘r.ex?ected
2009-09-13
University of Singapore) Olivier Adam (NAMC, Univ. of Paris , France) Len Thomas (Univ St Andrews, Scotland; convenor of the DE workshop...Hervé, Paris Sébastien 90 3 - The Continuous Development for Passive Acoustic Monitoring in Offshore Commercial Industry A. Cucknell and N. Clark...encourage researchers to work on a common dataset, to focus on the same problems, to find original solutions, and to present and compare them at the
Special Issue on the 20th Workshop on MHD Stability Control
Park, Jong -Kyu
2016-11-08
The 20th workshop on magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) stability control took place November 22–24, 2015, in Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), following the American Physical Society—Division of Plasma Physics annual meeting on November 16–20 in Savannah, GA. The purpose of this workshop is to stimulate in depth discussion and motivate future research in the areas of MHD stability physics and control of magnetically confined plasmas. Furthermore, the workshop was organized jointly by Auburn University, Columbia University, General Atomics, Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the Los Alamos National Laboratory, and under the auspices of the US/Japan Collaboration.
gpuPOM: a GPU-based Princeton Ocean Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xu, S.; Huang, X.; Zhang, Y.; Fu, H.; Oey, L.-Y.; Xu, F.; Yang, G.
2014-11-01
Rapid advances in the performance of the graphics processing unit (GPU) have made the GPU a compelling solution for a series of scientific applications. However, most existing GPU acceleration works for climate models are doing partial code porting for certain hot spots, and can only achieve limited speedup for the entire model. In this work, we take the mpiPOM (a parallel version of the Princeton Ocean Model) as our starting point, design and implement a GPU-based Princeton Ocean Model. By carefully considering the architectural features of the state-of-the-art GPU devices, we rewrite the full mpiPOM model from the original Fortran version into a new Compute Unified Device Architecture C (CUDA-C) version. We take several accelerating methods to further improve the performance of gpuPOM, including optimizing memory access in a single GPU, overlapping communication and boundary operations among multiple GPUs, and overlapping input/output (I/O) between the hybrid Central Processing Unit (CPU) and the GPU. Our experimental results indicate that the performance of the gpuPOM on a workstation containing 4 GPUs is comparable to a powerful cluster with 408 CPU cores and it reduces the energy consumption by 6.8 times.
Light, Imaging, Vision: An interdisciplinary undergraduate course
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nelson, Philip
Students in physical and life science, and in engineering, need to know about the physics and biology of light. In the 21st century, it has become increasingly clear that the quantum nature of light is essential both for the latest imaging modalities and even to advance our knowledge of fundamental processes, such as photosynthesis and human vision. But many optics courses remain rooted in classical physics, with photons as an afterthought. I'll describe a new undergraduate course, for students in several science and engineering majors, that takes students from the rudiments of probability theory to modern methods like fluorescence imaging and Förster resonance energy transfer. After a digression into color vision, students then see how the Feynman principle explains the apparently wavelike phenomena associated to light, including applications like diffraction limit, subdiffraction imaging, total internal reflection and TIRF microscopy. Then we see how scientists documented the single-quantum sensitivity of the eye seven decades earlier than `ought' to have been possible, and finally close with the remarkable signaling cascade that delivers such outstanding performance. A new textbook embodying this course will be published by Princeton University Press in Spring 2017. Partially supported by the United States National Science Foundation under Grant PHY-1601894.
The Seismotectonic Map of Africa
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Meghraoui, Mustapha
2015-04-01
We present the Seismotectonic Map of Africa based on a geological, geophysical and geodetic database including the instrumental seismicity and re-appraisal of large historical events with harmonization and homogenization of earthquake parameters in catalogues. Although the seismotectonic framework and mapping of the African continent is a difficult task, several previous and ongoing projects provide a wealth of data and outstanding results. The database of large and moderate earthquakes in different geological domains includes the coseismic and Quaternary faulting that reveals the complex nature of the active tectonics in Africa. The map also benefits from previous works on local and regional seismotectonic maps that needed to be integrated with the lithospheric and upper mantle structures from tomographic anisotropy and gravity anomaly into a continental framework. The synthesis of earthquake and volcanic studies with the analysis of long-term (late Quaternary) and short-term (last decades and centuries) active deformation observed with geodetic and other approaches presented along with the seismotectonic map serves as a basis for hazard calculations and the reduction of seismic risks. The map may also be very useful in the assessment of seismic hazard and mitigation of earthquake risk for significant infrastructures and their implications in the socio-economic impact in Africa. In addition, the constant population increase and infrastructure growth in the continent that exacerbate the earthquake risk justify the necessity for a continuous updating of the seismotectonic map. The database and related map are prepared in the framework of the IGC Project-601 "Seismotectonics and Seismic Hazards in Africa" of UNESCO-IUGS, funded by the Swedish International Development Agency and UNESCO-Nairobi for a period of 4 years (2011 - 2014), extended to 2016. * Mustapha Meghraoui (Coordinator) EOST - IPG Strasbourg CNRS-UMR 7516 m.meghraoui@unistra.fr corresponding author. Paulina Amponsah (AECG, Accra), Abdelhakim Ayadi (CRAAG, Algiers), Atalay Ayele (Univ. Addis Ababa), Ateba Bekoa (Bueah Univ. Yaounde), Abdunnur Bensuleman (Tripoli Univ.), Damien Delvaux (MRAC-Tervuren); Mohamed El Gabry (NRIAG, Cairo), Rui-Manuel Fernandes (Beira Univ.) ; Vunganai Midzi & Magda Roos (CGS, Pretoria), Youssef Timoulali (Univ. Mohamed V, Rabat). Website: http://eost.u-strasbg.fr/igcp601/index.html
Centre d'Observacio de l'Univers: first year of activities
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ribas, S. J.
2011-11-01
The Centre d'Observacio de l'Univers is one of the parts of the Parc Astronomic Montsec (PAM). PAM is an initiative of the Catalan government, through the Consorci del Montsec (Montsec Consortium), to take advantage of the capabilities and potential of the Montsec region to develop scientific research, training, and outreach activities, particularly in the field of astronomy. The choice of the Montsec mountains to install the PAM was motivated by the magnificent conditions for observing the sky at night; the sky above Montsec is the best (natural sky free of light pollution) in Catalonia for astronomical observations. The PAM has two main parts: the Observatori Astronomic del Montsec (OAdM) and the Centre d'Observacio del'Univers (COU). The OAdM is a professional observatory with an 80 cm catadioptric telescope (Joan Oro Telescope). The COU is a large multipurpose center which is intended to become an educational benchmark for teaching and communicate astronomy and other sciences in Catalonia. Since the opening more than 50000 visitors went to this center to enjoy science with Montsec dark skies and an special natural environment.
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1991-1992
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1993-01-01
The Air Transportation Research Program at Princeton University proceeded along six avenues during the past year: (1) intelligent flight control; (2) computer-aided control system design; (3) neural networks for flight control; (4) stochastic robustness of flight control systems; (5) microburst hazards to aircraft; and (6) fundamental dynamics of atmospheric flight. This research has resulted in a number of publications, including archival papers and conference papers. An annotated bibliography of publications that appeared between June 1991 and June 1992 appears at the end of this report. The research that these papers describe was supported in whole or in part by the Joint University Program, including work that was completed prior to the reporting period.
Twists and turns: a scientific journey.
Tilghman, Shirley M
2014-01-01
In this perspective I look back on the twists and turns that influenced the direction of my scientific career over the past 40 years. From my early ambition to be a chemist to my training in Philadelphia and Bethesda as a molecular biologist, I benefited enormously from generous and valuable mentoring. In my independent career in Philadelphia and Princeton, I was motivated by a keen interest in the changes in gene expression that direct the development of the mammalian embryo and inspired by the creativity and energy of my students, fellows, and research staff. After twelve years as President of Princeton University, I have happily returned to the faculty of the Department of Molecular Biology.
Finite-β Split-weight Gyrokinetic Particle Simulation of Microinstabilities
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jenkins, Thomas G.; Lee, W. W.; Lewandowski, J. L. V.
2003-10-01
The finite-β split-weight gyrokinetic particle simulation scheme [1] has been implemented in two-dimensional slab geometry for the purpose of studying the effects of high temperature electrons on microinstabilities. Drift wave instabilities and ion temperature gradient modes are studied in both shearless slab and sheared slab geometries. The linear and nonlinear evolution of these modes, as well as the physics of microtearing, is compared with the results of Reynders [2] and Cummings [3]. [1] W. W. Lee, J. L. V. Lewandowski, T. S. Hahm, and Z. Lin, Phys. Plasmas 8, 4435 (2001). [2] J. V. W. Reynders, Ph.D. thesis, Princeton University (1992). [3] J. C. Cummings, Ph.D. thesis, Princeton University (1995).
1983-07-15
RD- R136 626 CONFERENCE ON STOCHASTIC PROCESSES AND THEIR APPLICATIONS (12TH> JULY 11 15 1983 ITHACA NEW YORK(U) CORNELL UNIV ITHACA NY 15 JUL 83...oscillator phase Instability" 2t53 - 3s15 p.m. M.N. GOPALAN, Indian Institute of Technoloy, Bombay "Cost benefit analysis of systems subject to inspection...p.m. W. KLIEDANN, Univ. Bremen, Fed. Rep. Germany "Controllability of stochastic systems 8sO0 - lOsO0 p.m. RECEPTION Johnson Art Museum ’q % , t
1992-03-01
Synchrotron Radiation Facility, France. A novel method for depositing large size multilayers is de - GRAND ROOM scribed. A plasma produced by distributed...explained by the uphill diffusion of metal Univ. Paris, France. The Born approximation is applied to de - atoms. (p. 27) scribe the diffractive properties of...D. G. TuAl Roughness evolution in films and multilayer struc- Steams, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The de - tuns, M. G. Lagally, Univ
Development of Mercury dust monitor (MDM) using piezo-electric sensor on boad BepiColombo spacecraft
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nogami, K.; Mercury Dust Team
BepiColombo spacecraft K.Nogami(1), S.Sasaki(2), T.Miyachi(3), H.Ohashi(4), M.Fujii(5), H.Shibata(6), T.Iwai(7), A.Fujiwara(8), H.Yano(8), S.Minami(9), S.Takechi(9), T.Ohnishi(9), R.Srama(10) and E.Grün(10) (1) Dokkyo Medical Univ., Japan, (2) National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Japan, (3) Waseda Univ., Japan, (4) Tokyo Univ. Marine Science and Technology, Japan, (5) FAM Science Co. Ltd., Japan, (6) Kyoto Univ., Japan, (7) Univ. of Tokyo, Japan, (8) ISAS, JAXA, Japan, (9) Osaka City University, Japan, (10) Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Germany (nogami@dokkyomed.ac.jp / +81-282-87-2116 ) BepiColombo" project is the first large-sized Europe-Japan joint mission to provide the best understanding of Mercury to date. It consists of two individual orbiters: the Mercury Planetary Orbiter (MPO), that will map the planet, and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter (MMO), that will investigate its magnetosphere. It will be launched in 2013. We will have a chance to put the dust monitor (MDM) on the MMO. This project is intended to reveal the dust environment near Mercury. The scientific interests are to investigate the flux and the variations of interplanetary meteoroid complex inside 1 AU. The Mercury dust monitor is a light-weight, heat resistant (˜300°C) piezoelectric ceramic (PZT) which will be installed on the side panel of the BepiColombo MMO spacecraft. Solar radiation near Mercury is ten times greater than near Earth, but the PZT sensor will endure this severe condition. The momentum, crude incoming direction and impact velocity of the cosmic dusts, with masses > 10-15 g are derived from the impact signal from the monitor. This dust monitor is composed of 4 flat PZT plate, 5cm x 5cm and 1mm thick each, and total sensitive area is almost 100 cm2 . The impact signals are processed by a digital circuit with about several 10 MHz A/D converters. From the rise time of the signals, we can know rough speed of the impact particles and also can separate the real impact signals from the noises. The weight of this PZT monitor is about 0.2 kg, and the weight of this circuit, include box and connector is about 0.4 kg and nominal power is less than 3W. Total weight of MDM system will be less than 0.6 kg. The calibration experiments of this system are made using Van de Graaff microparticle accelerators at HIT, Univ. of Tokyo in Japan ( silver or carbon particles, max speed ˜ 10 km/s ), and at MPI-K in Germany ( carbon, iron and silver particles, max speed ˜ 70 km/s ).
Huang, Terry T-K; Nansel, Tonja R; Belsheim, Allen R; Morrison, John A
2008-02-01
To estimate the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of pediatric metabolic syndrome (MetS) components (obesity, fasting glucose, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein, and blood pressure) at various cutoff points in relation to adult MetS. Data from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Lipid Research Clinics Princeton Prevalence Study (1973-1976) and the Princeton Follow-up Study (2000-2004) were used to calculate sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values for each component at a given cutoff point and for aggregates of components. Individual pediatric components alone showed low to moderate sensitivity, high specificity, and moderate predictive values in relation to adult MetS. When all 5 pediatric MetS components were considered, the presence of at least 1 abnormality had higher sensitivity for adult MetS than individual components alone. When multiple abnormalities were mandatory for MetS, positive predictive value was high and sensitivity was low. Childhood body mass alone showed neither high sensitivity nor high positive predictive value for adult MetS. Considering multiple metabolic variables in childhood can improve the predictive usefulness for adult MetS, compared with each component or body mass alone. MetS variables may be useful for identifying some children who are at risk for prevention interventions.
Charlotte Moore Sitterly: A Life of Spectroscopy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rubin, Vera C.
2010-01-01
Dr. Charlotte Moore Sitterly was a scientist in an era when it was rare for a woman to have the opportunity to devote her life to forefront science. Following her graduation from Swarthmore College in 1920, she accepted a position at Princeton University as an assistant to Henry Norris Russell. In 1925 she started a study of the solar spectrum. She could then not know that she would devote much of her scientific career to gathering basic atomic data that are invaluable to the scientific community, even today. In 1931 she obtained a PhD degree at U. California, Berkeley, and returned to Princeton as a staff member of the Princeton University Observatory. In 1945 she moved to the National Bureau of Science (NBS), to supervise preparation of the widely used tables of atomic energy levels. Following the successful lunching (1946) of a V2 rocket to obtain the ultra violet spectrum of the sun, Moore started working with Richard Tousey and his group at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). Ultimately, they extended the solar spectrum down to 2200 angstroms. She continued her affiliations with NBS and NRL until her death in 1990. Charlotte Moore was rare scientist who devoted her career to obtaining accurate numbers, thus enabling the scientific community to open her tables and know that the data are accurate.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rubin, Vera C.
2010-07-01
Charlotte Moore Sitterly was a scientist in an era when it was rare for a woman to have the opportunity to devote her life to forefront science. Following her graduation from Swarthmore College in 1920, she accepted a position at Princeton University as an assistant to Henry Norris Russell. In 1925 she started a study of the solar spectrum. She could then not know that she would devote much of her scientific career to gathering basic atomic data that are invaluable to the scientific community, even today. In 1931 she obtained a Ph.D. degree at the University of California, Berkeley, and returned to Princeton as a staff member of the Princeton University Observatory. In 1945 Moore moved to the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), to supervise preparation of the widely-used tables of atomic energy levels. Following the successful launching (1946) of a V2 rocket to obtain the ultraviolet spectrum of the Sun, she started working also with Richard Tousey and his group at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). Ultimately, they extended the solar spectrum down to 2200 angstroms. She continued her affiliations with both the NBS and the NRL until her death in 1990. Charlotte Moore was a rare scientist who devoted her career to obtaining accurate numbers, thus enabling the scientific community to open her tables and know that the data are reliable.
Evaluation of an LED Retrofit Project at Princeton University’s Carl Icahn Laboratory
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Davis, Robert G.; Murphy, Arthur L.; Perrin, Tess E.
The LED lighting retrofit at the Carl Icahn Laboratory of the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics was the first building-wide interior LED project at Princeton University, following the University’s experiences from several years of exterior and small-scale interior LED implementation projects. The project addressed three luminaire types – recessed 2x2 troffers, cove and other luminaires using linear T8 fluorescent lamps, and CFL downlights - which combined accounted for over 564,000 kWh of annual energy, over 90% of the lighting energy used in the facility. The Princeton Facilities Engineering staff used a thorough process of evaluating product alternatives before selecting anmore » acceptable LED retrofit solution for each luminaire type. Overall, 815 2x2 luminaires, 550 linear fluorescent luminaires, and 240 downlights were converted to LED as part of this project. Based solely on the reductions in wattage in converting from the incumbent fluorescent lamps to LED retrofit kits, the annual energy savings from the project was over 190,000 kWh, a savings of 37%. An additional 125,000 kWh of energy savings is expected from the implementation of occupancy and task-tuning control solutions, which will bring the total savings for the project to 62%.« less
Nonlinear magnetoacoustic wave propagation with chemical reactions
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Margulies, Timothy Scott
2002-11-01
The magnetoacoustic problem with an application to sound wave propagation through electrically conducting fluids such as the ocean in the Earth's magnetic field, liquid metals, or plasmas has been addressed taking into account several simultaneous chemical reactions. Using continuum balance equations for the total mass, linear momentum, energy; as well as Maxwell's electrodynamic equations, a nonlinear beam equation has been developed to generalize the Khokhlov-Zabolotskaya-Kuznetsov (KZK) equation for a fluid with linear viscosity but nonlinear and diffraction effects. Thermodynamic parameters are used and not tailored to only an adiabatic fluid case. The chemical kinetic equations build on a relaxing media approach presented, for example, by K. Naugolnukh and L. Ostrovsky [Nonlinear Wave Processes in Acoustics (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1998)] for a linearized single reaction and thermodynamic pressure equation of state. Approximations for large and small relaxation times and for magnetohydrodynamic parameters [Korsunskii, Sov. Phys. Acoust. 36 (1990)] are examined. Additionally, Cattaneo's equation for heat conduction and its generalization for a memory process rather than a Fourier's law are taken into account. It was introduced for the heat flux depends on the temperature gradient at an earlier time to generate heat pulses of finite speed.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Schopf, J. W.
1994-01-01
Over the past quarter century, detailed genus- and species-level similarities in cellular morphology between described taxa of Precambrian microfossils and extant cyanobacteria have been noted and regarded as biologically and taxonomically significant by numerous workers world-wide. Such similarities are particularly well documented for members of the Oscillatoriaceae and Chroococcaceae, the two most abundant and widespread Precambrian cyanobacterial families. For species of two additional families, the Entophysalidaceae and Pleurocapsaceae, species-level morphologic similarities are supported by in-depth fossil-modern comparisons of environment, taphonomy, development, and behavior. Morphologically and probably physiologically as well, such cyanobacterial "living fossils" have exhibited an extraordinarily slow (hypobradytelic) rate of evolutionary change, evidently a result of the broad ecologic tolerance characteristic of many members of the group and a striking example of G. G. Simpson's [Simpson, G.G. (1944) Tempo and Mode in Evolution (Columbia Univ. Press, New York)] "rule of the survival of the relatively unspecialized." In both tempo and mode of evolution, much of the Precambrian history of life--that dominated by microscopic cyanobacteria and related prokaryotes--appears to have differed markedly from the more recent Phanerozoic evolution megascopic, horotelic, adaptationally specialized eukaryotes.
On understanding idiomatic language: The salience hypothesis assessed by ERPs.
Laurent, Jean-Paul; Denhières, Guy; Passerieux, Christine; Iakimova, Galina; Hardy-Baylé, Marie-Christine
2006-01-12
Giora's [Giora, R., 1997. Understanding figurative and literal language: the Graded Salience Hypothesis. Cogn. Linguist. 7 (1), 183-206; Giora, R., 2003. On Our Mind: Salience Context and Figurative Language. Oxford Univ. Press, New York] Graded Salience Hypothesis states that more salient meanings-coded meanings foremost on our mind due to conventionality, frequency, familiarity, or prototypicality-are accessed faster than and reach sufficient levels of activation before less salient ones. This research addresses predictions derived from this model by examining the salience of familiar and predictable idioms, presented out of context. ERPs recorded from 30 subjects involved in reading and lexical decision tasks to (strongly/weakly) salient idioms and (figurative/literal) targets indicate that N400 amplitude was smaller for the last word of the strongly salient idioms than for the weakly salient idioms. Moreover, N400 amplitude of probes related to the salient meaning of strongly salient idioms was smaller than those of the 3 other conditions. In addition, response times to salient interpretations (the idiomatic meanings of highly salient idioms and the literal interpretations of less salient idioms) were shorter compared to the other conditions. These findings support Giora's Graded Salience Hypothesis. They show that salient meanings are accessed automatically, regardless of figurativity.
Nitration of naphthalene and remarks on the mechanism of electrophilic aromatic nitration.
Olah, G A; Narang, S C; Olah, J A
1981-06-01
Naphthalene was nitrated with a variety of nitrating agents. Comparison of data with Perrin's electrochemical nitration [Perrin, C. L. (1977) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 99, 5516-5518] shows that nitration of naphthalene gives an alpha-nitronaphthalene to beta-nitronaphthalene ratio that varies between 9 and 29 and is thus not constant. Perrin's data, therefore, are considered to be inconclusive evidence for the proposed one-electron transfer mechanism for the nitration of naphthalene and other reactive aromatics. Moodie and Schoefield [Hoggett, J. G., Moodie, R. B., Penton, J. R. & Schoefield, K. (1971) Nitration and Aromatic Reactivity (Cambridge Univ. Press, London)], as well as Perrin, independently concluded that, in the general scheme of nitration of reactive aromatics, there is the necessity to introduce into the classical Ingold mechanism an additional step involving a distinct intermediate preceding the formation of the Wheland intermediate (sigma complexes). This view coincides with our two-step mechanistic picture [Kuhn, S. J. & Olah, G. A. (1961) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 83, 4564-4571] of the nitronium salt nitration of aromatic hydrocarbons (including benzene and toluene), in which low substrate selectivity but high positional selectivity was found, indicating the independence of substrate from positional selectivity.
Nitration of naphthalene and remarks on the mechanism of electrophilic aromatic nitration*
Olah, George A.; Narang, Subhash C.; Olah, Judith A.
1981-01-01
Naphthalene was nitrated with a variety of nitrating agents. Comparison of data with Perrin's electrochemical nitration [Perrin, C. L. (1977) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 99, 5516-5518] shows that nitration of naphthalene gives an α-nitronaphthalene to β-nitronaphthalene ratio that varies between 9 and 29 and is thus not constant. Perrin's data, therefore, are considered to be inconclusive evidence for the proposed one-electron transfer mechanism for the nitration of naphthalene and other reactive aromatics. Moodie and Schoefield [Hoggett, J. G., Moodie, R. B., Penton, J. R. & Schoefield, K. (1971) Nitration and Aromatic Reactivity (Cambridge Univ. Press, London)], as well as Perrin, independently concluded that, in the general scheme of nitration of reactive aromatics, there is the necessity to introduce into the classical Ingold mechanism an additional step involving a distinct intermediate preceding the formation of the Wheland intermediate (σ complexes). This view coincides with our two-step mechanistic picture [Kuhn, S. J. & Olah, G. A. (1961) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 83, 4564-4571] of the nitronium salt nitration of aromatic hydrocarbons (including benzene and toluene), in which low substrate selectivity but high positional selectivity was found, indicating the independence of substrate from positional selectivity. PMID:16593026
1998-06-08
A color image of the Tyrrhena Patera Region of Mars; north toward top. The scene shows a central circular depression surrounded by circular fractures and highly dissected horizontal sheets. A patera (Latin for shallow dish or saucer) is a volcano of broad areal extent with little vertical relief. This image is a composite of Viking medium-resolution images in black and white and low-resolution images in color. The image extends from latitude 17 degrees S. to 25 degrees S. and from longitude 250 degrees to 260 degrees; Mercator projection. Tyrrhena Patera has a 12-km-diameter caldera at its center surrounded by a 45-km-diameter fracture ring. Around the fracture ring, the terrain is highly eroded forming ragged outward-facing cliffs, as though successive flat-lying layers had been eroded back. Cut into the sequence are several flat-floored channels that extend outward as far as 200 km from the center of the volcano. The structure may be composed of highly erodible ash layers and the channels may be fluvial, with the release of water being triggered by volcanic activity (Carr, 1981, The surface of Mars, Yale Univ. Press, New Haven, 232 p.). http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00421
Khoury, George A; Smadbeck, James; Kieslich, Chris A; Koskosidis, Alexandra J; Guzman, Yannis A; Tamamis, Phanourios; Floudas, Christodoulos A
2017-06-01
Protein structure refinement is the challenging problem of operating on any protein structure prediction to improve its accuracy with respect to the native structure in a blind fashion. Although many approaches have been developed and tested during the last four CASP experiments, a majority of the methods continue to degrade models rather than improve them. Princeton_TIGRESS (Khoury et al., Proteins 2014;82:794-814) was developed previously and utilizes separate sampling and selection stages involving Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics simulations and classification using an SVM predictor. The initial implementation was shown to consistently refine protein structures 76% of the time in our own internal benchmarking on CASP 7-10 targets. In this work, we improved the sampling and selection stages and tested the method in blind predictions during CASP11. We added a decomposition of physics-based and hybrid energy functions, as well as a coordinate-free representation of the protein structure through distance-binning Cα-Cα distances to capture fine-grained movements. We performed parameter estimation to optimize the adjustable SVM parameters to maximize precision while balancing sensitivity and specificity across all cross-validated data sets, finding enrichment in our ability to select models from the populations of similar decoys generated for targets in CASPs 7-10. The MD stage was enhanced such that larger structures could be further refined. Among refinement methods that are currently implemented as web-servers, Princeton_TIGRESS 2.0 demonstrated the most consistent and most substantial net refinement in blind predictions during CASP11. The enhanced refinement protocol Princeton_TIGRESS 2.0 is freely available as a web server at http://atlas.engr.tamu.edu/refinement/. Proteins 2017; 85:1078-1098. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Artificially Structured Semiconductors to Model Novel Quantum Phenomena
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pinczuk, Aron; Wind, Shalom J.
Award Period: September 1st, 2013 through February 15th, 2017 Submitted to the USDOE Office of Basic Energy Sciences By Aron Pinczuk and Shalom J. Wind Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics Columbia University New York, NY 10027 January 2017 Award # DE-SC0010695 ABSTRACT Research in this project seeks to design, create and study a class of tunable artificial quantum structures in order to extend the range and scope of new and exciting physical phenomena and to explore the potential for new applications. Advanced nanofabrication was used to create an external potential landscape that acts as a lattice of confinementmore » sites for electrons (and/or holes) in a two-dimensional electron gas in a high perfection semiconductor in such a manner that quantum interactions between different sites dictate the significant physics. Our current focus is on ‘artificial graphene’ (AG) in which a set of quantum dots (or sites) are patterned in a honeycomb lattice. The combination of leading edge nanofabrication with ultra-pure semiconductor materials in this project extends the frontier for small period, low-disorder AG systems, enabling the exploration of graphene physics in a semiconductor platform. TECHNICAL DESCRIPTION Contemporary condensed matter science has entered an era of discovery of new low-dimensional materials, such as graphene and other atomically thin materials, that exhibit exciting new physical phenomena that were previously inaccessible. Concurrent with the discovery and development of these new materials are impressive advancements in nanofabrication, which offer an ever-expanding toolbox for creating a myriad of high quality patterns at nanoscale dimensions. This project started about four years ago. Among its major achievements are the realizations of very small period artificial lattices with honeycomb topology in GaAs quantum wells. In our most recent work the periods of the ‘artificial graphene’ (AG) lattices extend down to 40 nm. These small periods are about three times smaller than previously reported in GaAs quantum wells. This milestone establishes a new state-of-the-art in fields of research and nanofabrication. In experiments using optical scattering methods we uncovered evidence that free electrons in the small period AG lattices display novel features that arise from the symmetry of the honeycomb lattice. These achievements create semiconductor platforms for explorations of novel states and effects that offer opportunities to create quasiparticles with tunable character. The quest for the discovery of novel quantum physics by nanofabrication of ‘artificial structures’ in semiconductor quantum structures overlaps with the development of quantum simulators. Nanopatterns were created at Columbia University by the group of co-PI Shalom Wind using a 100keV e-beam nanolithography instrument (along with associated processing) that is part of the Columbia Nano Initiative. Optical experiments were carried out in the group of PI Aron Pinczuk. GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells(QWs) of world-class perfection that serve as electron hosts are the starting material grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) by our partners Dr. Loren Pfeiffer (Princeton Univ.) and Prof. Michael Manfra (Purdue Univ.). The inductively coupled plasma reactive ion etching (ICP-RIE) was carried out at the PRISM Micro/Nano Fabrication Laboratory of Princeton University. Dr. Vittorio Pellegrini (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Genoa, Italy) has contributed critical insight on this research. Two graduate students in this project Sheng Wang and Diego Scarabelli, graduated in the summer/fall of 2016. Dr. Yuliya Kuznetsova has been a postdoc in the group. The current work is led by Dr. Lingjie Du, a postdoctoral scientist that joined the group of the PI on October 15th, 2016. Since the start of this project we have focused primarily on developing protocols towards the fabrication of the artificial lattices and in the implementation of characterization methods to identify the new electron states that are created. A major milestone has been the realization of the Dirac cones that emerge in honeycomb lattices. In the next phases of this project, and as we achieve milestones, we wish to expand our experimental platform so that we will be better positioned to access emergent novel quantum behavior and phases of electrons in artificial lattices designed and fabricated with ‘exquisite’ precision. The AG lattices with greatly reduced disorder from nano-processing that we have already created demonstrate that we are poised for the next stage exploration of graphene physics and applications in semiconductor quantum structures.« less
The Princeton equipment on board. [Copernicus satellite borne telescope-spectrometer
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Drake, J. F.
1974-01-01
The Princeton telescope-spectrometer on the Copernicus satellite scans stellar spectra between 950 and 1450 A in second order with a resolution of about 0.05 A. The resolution in first order, between 1650 and 3000 A, is twice that in second order. The equipment may be used down to a nominal limit of 5th magnitude with the photometric precision in second order limited only by the statistics of photon counts. At 1100 A, a rate of 1,000 per 14 sec is obtained on an unreddened B 1 star with a visual magnitude of 5.0. In the first order, phototube noise from cosmic rays limits observations to stars brighter than visual magnitude 3.0 in general.
AmeriFlux US-UMB Univ. of Mich. Biological Station
Curtis, Peter [Ohio State University; Gough, Christopher [Virginia Commonwealth University
2016-01-01
This is the AmeriFlux version of the carbon flux data for the site US-UMB Univ. of Mich. Biological Station. Site Description - The UMBS site is located within a protected forest owned by the University of Michigan. Arboreal composition of the forest consists of mid-aged northern hardwoods, conifer understory, aspen, and old growth hemlock. Logging of local white pines began in 1879. In successive years, several other species were harvested. Logging was discontinued in 1980 when the land became protected under the private ownership of the University of Michigan. Patchy low- to high-intensity wildfires occurred yearly from 1880 - 1920, essentially burning the entire region.
Mineralogy of Interplanetary Dust Particles from the Comet Giacobini-Zinner Dust Stream Collections
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Nakamura-Messenger, K.; Messenger, S.; Westphal, A. J.; Palma, R. L.
2015-01-01
The Draconoid meteor shower, originating from comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner, is a low-velocity Earth-crossing dust stream that had a peak anticipated flux on Oct. 8, 2012. In response to this prediction, NASA performed dedicated stratospheric dust collections to target interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) from this comet stream on Oct 15-17, 2012 [3]. Twelve dust particles from this targeted collection were allocated to our coordinated analysis team for studies of noble gas (Univ. Minnesota, Minnesota State Univ.), SXRF and Fe-XANES (SSL Berkeley) and mineralogy/isotopes (JSC). Here we report a mineralogical study of 3 IDPs from the Draconoid collection..
The geographical distribution of grey wolves (Canis lupus) in China: a systematic review.
Wang, Lu; Ma, Ya-Ping; Zhou, Qi-Jun; Zhang, Ya-Ping; Savolaimen, Peter; Wang, Guo-Dong
2016-11-18
The grey wolf ( Canis lupus ) is one of the most widely distributed terrestrial mammals, and its distribution and ecology in Europe and North America are largely well described. However, the distribution of grey wolf in southern China is still highly controversial. Several well-known western literatures stated that there are no grey wolves in southern China, while the presence of grey wolf across China has been indicated in A Guide to the Mammals of China , published by Princeton University Press. It is essential to solve this discrepancy since dogs may have originated from grey wolfs in southern China. Therefore, we systematically investigated Chinese literatures about wild animal surveys and identified more than 100 articles and books that included information of the distribution of grey wolves in China. We also surveyed the collections of three Chinese natural museums and found 26 grey wolf skins specimens collected across China. Moreover, we investigated the fossil records of wolf in China and identified 25 archaeological sites with wolf remains including south China. In conclusion, with the comprehensive summary of Chinese literatures, museum specimens and fossil records, we demonstrate that grey wolves does distribute across all parts of the Chinese mainland, including the most southern parts of China.
The geographical distribution of grey wolves (Canis lupus) in China: a systematic review
WANG, Lu; MA, Ya-Ping; ZHOU, Qi-Jun; ZHANG, Ya-Ping; SAVOLAINEN, Peter; WANG, Guo-Dong
2016-01-01
The grey wolf (Canis lupus) is one of the most widely distributed terrestrial mammals, and its distribution and ecology in Europe and North America are largely well described. However, the distribution of grey wolf in southern China is still highly controversial. Several well-known western literatures stated that there are no grey wolves in southern China, while the presence of grey wolf across China has been indicated in A Guide to the Mammals of China, published by Princeton University Press. It is essential to solve this discrepancy since dogs may have originated from grey wolfs in southern China. Therefore, we systematically investigated Chinese literatures about wild animal surveys and identified more than 100 articles and books that included information of the distribution of grey wolves in China. We also surveyed the collections of three Chinese natural museums and found 26 grey wolf skins specimens collected across China. Moreover, we investigated the fossil records of wolf in China and identified 25 archaeological sites with wolf remains including south China. In conclusion, with the comprehensive summary of Chinese literatures, museum specimens and fossil records, we demonstrate that grey wolves does distribute across all parts of the Chinese mainland, including the most southern parts of China. PMID:28105796
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Naibert, T. J.; Geissman, J. W.
2007-12-01
Latest Cretaceous development of the Sevier fold and thrust belt in SW Montana overlapped spatially with silicic magmatism. In the fold thrust belt, large volumes of magma were emplaced well east of the main magmatic arc, now exposed as the Idaho Batholith. Hypothesized mechanisms for emplacement of magma within the overthrust belt often involve magma ascent along shallow, west-dipping faults. The ~ 74 Ma (K-Ar method) Philipsburg Batholith is a 122 km2 tabular granodiorite emplaced into deformed Precambrian Belt Supergroup through Cretaceous strata. The Philipsburg Batholith lies in the upper plate of the Georgetown- Princeton Thrust, NW of Anaconda, Montana and cross-cuts two other previously mapped faults. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) measurements of 122 sites from the Philipsburg Batholith define magnetic foliations and/or lineations to test magma ascent along the Georgetown-Princeton Thrust. AMS fabrics in the Philipsburg Batholith, dominantly defined by magnetite, are generally oblate or triaxial and are typically very consistent at the site level. Preliminary fabric data show subhorizontal foliations across most of the batholith, with steeply dipping foliations near the margins and a minor increase in foliation dip near the inferred fault trace. The hypothesis of magma ascent along fault surfaces will be supported if further data confirm the concentration of relatively steep foliation orientations across the trace of the Georgetown-Princeton thrust.
Huang, Terry T-K; Nansel, Tonja R.; Belsheim, Allen R.; Morrison, John A.
2008-01-01
Objective To estimate the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of pediatric metabolic syndrome (MetS) components (obesity, fasting glucose, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein, and blood pressure) at various cutoffs in relation to adult MetS. Study design Data from the NHLBI Lipid Research Clinics (LRC) Princeton Prevalence Study (1973–76) and the Princeton Follow-up Study (PFS, 2000-4) were used to calculate sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values for each component at a given cutoff, as well as for aggregates of components. Results Individual pediatric components alone showed low to moderate sensitivity, high specificity, and moderate predictive values in relation to adult MetS. When all five pediatric MetS components were considered, the presence of at least one abnormality had higher sensitivity for adult MetS than individual components alone. When multiple abnormalities were mandatory for MetS, positive predictive value was high and sensitivity was low. Childhood body mass alone showed neither high sensitivity nor high positive predictive value for adult MetS. Conclusions Considering multiple metabolic variables in childhood can improve the predictive utility for adult MetS, compared to each component or body mass alone. MetS variables may be useful for identifying some at risk children for prevention interventions. PMID:18206687
Apollo 10 crewmember is pickup by recovery helicopter
1969-05-26
S69-20621 (26 May 1969) --- A member of the Apollo 10 crew is hoisted into a helicopter from the prime recovery ship, USS Princeton, during recovery operations in the South Pacific. Astronauts Thomas P. Stafford, commander; John W. Young, command module pilot; and Eugene A. Cernan, lunar module pilot, were picked up and flown to the deck of the USS Princeton where a red-carpet welcome awaited them. The spacecraft was later retrieved from the water and put aboard the recovery ship. The Apollo 10 splashdown occurred at 11:53 a.m. (CDT), May 26, 1969, about 400 miles east of American Samoa, and about four miles from the recovery ship, to conclude a successful eight-day lunar orbit mission. U.S. Navy underwater demolition team swimmers assisted in the recovery operations.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petravick, D.; Berman, E.; Nicinski, T.; Rechenmacher, R.; Oleynik, G.; Pordes, R.; Stoughton, C.
1991-06-01
As part of its expanding Astrophysics program, Fermilab is participating in the Digital Sky Survey (DSS). Fermilab is part of a collaboration involving University of Chicago, Princeton University, and the Institute of Advanced Studies (at Princeton). The DSS main results will be a photometric imaging survey and a redshift survey of galaxies and color-selected quasars over pi steradians of the Northern Galactic Cap. This paper focuses on our use of Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE) in specifying the data system for DSS. Extensions to standard methodologies were necessary to compensate for tool shortcomings and to improve communication amongst the collaboration members. One such important extension was the incorporation of CASE information into the specification document.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Faccenna, C.; Funiciello, F.
2012-04-01
EC-Marie Curie Initial Training Networks (ITN) projects aim to improve the career perspectives of young generations of researchers. Institutions from both academic and industry sectors form a collaborative network to recruit research fellows and provide them with opportunities to undertake research in the context of a joint research training program. In this frame, TOPOMOD - one of the training activities of EPOS, the new-born European Research Infrastructure for Geosciences - is a funded ITN project designed to investigate and model how surface processes interact with crustal tectonics and mantle convection to originate and develop topography of the continents over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. The multi-disciplinary approach combines geophysics, geochemistry, tectonics and structural geology with advanced geodynamic numerical/analog modelling. TOPOMOD involves 8 European research teams internationally recognized for their excellence in complementary fields of Earth Sciences (Roma TRE, Utrecht, GFZ, ETH, Cambridge, Durham, Rennes, Barcelona), to which are associated 5 research institutions (CNR-Italy, Univ. Parma, Univ. Lausanne, Univ. Montpellier, Univ. Mainz) , 3 high-technology enterprises (Malvern Instruments, TNO, G.O. Logical Consulting) and 1 large multinational oil and gas company (ENI). This unique network places emphasis in experience-based training increasing the impact and international visibility of European research in modeling. Long-term collaboration and synergy are established among the overmentioned research teams through 15 cross-disciplinary research projects that combine case studies in well-chosen target areas from the Mediterranean, the Middle and Far East, west Africa, and South America, with new developments in structural geology, geomorphology, seismology, geochemistry, InSAR, laboratory and numerical modelling of geological processes from the deep mantle to the surface. These multidisciplinary projects altogether aim to answer a key question in earth Sciences: how do deep and surface processes interact to shape and control the topographic evolution of our planet.
PREFACE: Nanosafe2010: International Conference on Safe Production and Use of Nanomaterials
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sentein, Carole; Schuster, Frédéric; Tardif, François
2011-07-01
Conference logo The second edition of the international conference on the "Safe production and use of nanomaterials" - NanoSafe2010 - was held between 16-18 November at the Maison Minatec congress center located in Grenoble, France. As is recognised, the rapidly developing field of nanotechnologies presents many opportunities and benefits for new materials with significantly improved properties as well as revolutionary applications in the fields of energy, environment, medicine, etc. However, the potential impact of these new materials on human health and the environment is viewed with apprehension. All the security aspects have to be solved in order to reach an acceptable level of risk. The new nano industry can only develop dynamically if these legitimate concerns are satisfactory allayed. Initiated within the framework of the Integrated European project NanoSafe2 and funded by the European Commission under FP6 programs, this biennial event was organized by the French Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA). NanoSafe2010 had broad international participation from 30 countries representing 4 continents, with registered delegates numbering over 300. The scientific program involved the presentation and discussion of 175 papers, classified as 13 plenary lectures, 117 oral presentations and 45 posters. The conference attracted many of the best known leading scientists and specialists from almost all of the different fields of expertise covering nanosafety issues: Exposure, Characterisation, Detection, Monitoring, Life cycle, Toxicology, Environmental impact, Personal protection, Secure industrial production, Safety parameter evaluation, Standardization, Regulation, and Education. An exhibition took place in parallel with the conference where 16 exhibitors presented the commercial equipment available today in relation to safety during the production or the use of nanomaterials. We believe that this conference, with the above topics, has provided a forum where the many matters of interest to the NanoSafety community have been debated. The success of the conference confirms the need of such a global meeting with the aim of bridging the gap between the best scientists, engineers, exhibitors and participants from countries concerned with safe and responsible nanomaterial activities. Therefore, the third edition of the International NanoSafe Conference "NanoSafe2012" will be held in Grenoble at Minatec, 13-15 November 2012. The meeting was financially supported by generous contributions from the European Commission, La Région Rhône Alpes, la Ville de Grenoble, la Metro, and partners such as CEA, INERIS, Philips, Cordouan Technologies, Nanosight, TSI, Ecomesure, GRIMM Aerosol Technik, Particle Measuring Systems, Respirex, Lux Research, Dekati, Malvern Instruments, TSE Systems, INTERTEK ICS, NANO magazine and IOP Publishing. We would like to express our thanks to all the authors for their time and genuine efforts and to the reviewers for their fruitful comments during the preparation of this volume. The Conference OrganizersCarole SenteinFrédéric SchusterFrançois Tardif Conference photographs Local Organising CommitteeCarole SENTEIN (CEA)Dominique BAGUET (CEA)Didier MOLKO (MINATEC)Audrey SCARINGELLA (MINATEC)Frédéric SCHUSTER (CEA)François TARDIF (CEA) International Advisory CommitteeChair: Frédéric SCHUSTER (CEA, FR), François TARDIF (CEA, FR)Co-chair: Georgios KATALAGARIANAKIS (EC, BE)Paul AMYOTTE (Dalhousie U., CA)Mélanie AUFFAN (CEREGE, FR)Daniel BERNARD (ARKEMA, FR)Jorge BOCZKOWSKI (INSERM, FR)Jean-Yves BOTTERO (CEREGE, FR)Jacques BOUILLARD (INERIS, FR)Jean-Philippe BOURGOIN (CEA, FR)Marie CARRIERE (CEA, FR)Krunal CHOPRA (LSFI, IN)Rolf ECKHOFF (U. Bergen, NO)Michael ELLENBECKER (U. Massachusetts, USA)Claude EMOND (U. Montréal, CA)François GENDARMES (IRSN, FR)Peter HATTO (ISO, UK)Peter HOET (KUL, BE)Jean-Pierre KAISER (Empa, CH)Olivier LE BIHAN (INERIS, FR)Tinh NGUYEN (NIST, USA)Bernd NOWACK (Empa, CH)Günter OBERDÖRSTER (U. Rochester, USA)David PUI (U. Minnesota, USA)Eric QUEMENEUR (CEA, FR)Robert SCHALLER (EPFL, CH)Carole SENTEIN (CEA, FR)Ken TAKEDA (U. Tokyo, JP)Louis TREPIED (MINEFE, FR)Jacques VENDEL (IRSN, FR)Olivier WITSCHGER (INRS, FR) List of Participants AGUY SCordouan, FR ALLEMAN LEcole des Mines de Douai, FR ALPER MUniv. California Berkeley, US ALVES O LUNICAMP, BR AMDAOUD MUniv. Joseph Fourier, FR AMODEO TINERIS, FR AMYOTTE PDalhousie Univ., CA ARAKELIAN M CFundacion Argentina de Nanotecnologia, AR ARZAMASTSEVA ETomsk Polytechnic Univ., RU ASCHBERGER KEuropean Commission-JRC, IT ASHTON AJPCS, GB ASIMAKOPOULOU ACERTH/CPER, GR AUBLANT J-MLNE, FR AUDE-GARCIA CCEA, FR AUFFAN MCEREGE, FR AUGER ACEA, FR BAEK MSeoul Woman's Univ., KR BAEZA AUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR BAGUET DCEA, FR BARONE FIstituto Superiore di Sanità, IT BAU SINRS, FR BELLEVILLE PCEA, FR BENAZET SSNPE-Matériaux Energétiques, FR BERGER L-MFraunhofer Institute, DE BERGES MDGUV-IFA, DE BERNARD CNIST, US BERNARD DARKEMA, FR BERNE PCEA, FR BERRET J-FUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR BIGORGNE ECNRS, FR BILLAT BPMS, FR BLOCH DCEA, FR BOGDANOVIC-GUILLON AFreelance journalist, FR BOIVIN DRESPIREX France, FR BOLAND SUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR BOMBARDIER PFAURE QEI, FR BORASCHI DInstitute of Biomedical Technologies, IT BOTTERO J-YCEREGE, FR BRADLEY JLux Research, US BREGOLI LVeneto Nanotech, IT BRIGNON J-MINERIS, FR BROCHOT CIRSN, FR BROUWER DTNO Quality of Life, NL BUDIMAN TTSE-Systems, DE CABOCHE JEcole des Mines de Douai, FR CALLET GCEA, FR CALOGINE DINERIS, FR CAPONIGRO ALoreal, FR CARRIERE MCEA, FR CASSETTE SThales Research & Technology, FR CHARPENTIER DINERIS, FR CHEN C-CTaiwan Univ., TW CHEN LHealth Canada, CA CHEVALLET MCEA, FR CHOI S-JSeoul Woman's Univ., KR CHOU C-CChung Cheng University, TW CHUNG H-ESeoul Woman's Univ., KR CIMPAN MUniv. Bergen, NO CIOBANU NTU Munich, DE CLARK KInstitute for Work and Health, CH CONJEAUD HUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR COSTA PEREIRA CNational Health Institute, PT CROOKS MTSI, GB CUPERTINO DC-Tech Innovation Ltd, GB DASKALOS MCERTH/CPERI, GR DE BERARDIS BIstituto Superiore di Sanità, IT DE MIGUEL YTECNALIA, ES DELAHAYE AAd Air Solutions, FR DEMIDOVA TSevertsov Inst. of Ecology and Evolution, RU DENOO KSolae, GR DERROUGH SCEA, FR DOBRZYNSKA E BCentral Institute for Labour Protection, PL DOLEZ PÉcole de technologie supérieure, CA DOUKI TCEA, FR DRAIS EINRS, FR DUFOUR J-PCILAS, FR DURAN NUNICAMP, BR DURAND CCEA, FR DUTOUQUET CINERIS, FR DUVAL-ARNOULD GSaint-Gobain, FR ECKHOFF R KUniv. Bergen, NO ELLENBECKER M JUniv. Massachusetts Lowell, US EMOND CUniv. Montreal, CA ENGEL SBASF, DE ESTRELA-LOPIS ILeipzig Univ., DE FABBRI MJRC, IT FACCINI MLeitat technological center, ES FESSARD VAnses, FR FILIMUNDI ETSI, DE FIRSTOVA VSRCAMB, RU FLEURY DINERIS, FR FRABOULET DCEA, FR FRESNAY CThales Research & Technology, FR GABORIEAU ACEA, FR GAFFET ENanoMaterials Research Group, FR GALLET SCefic, BE GEIGER DBASF, DE GENSDARMES FIRSN, FR GERRITSEN-EBBEN RTNO Quality of Life, NL GKANIS VDemokritos, GR GLUSHKOVA ARIHOPHE, RU GONZALEZ-FERNANDEZ AUniv. Vigo, ES GOOSSENS HPhilips Research Aerasense, NL GRAHNSTEDT SOslo Univ., NO GREENHILL-HOOPER MRio Tinto Minerals, FR GROSSEAU PEcole des Mines de Saint Etienne, FR GUADAGNINI RUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR GUIOT ACEA, FR GUIZARD BCEA, FR HAASE AFederal Institute for Risk Assessment, DE HANINI AUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR HAYNES LUniv. de los Andes, VE HEJAZI MUniv. Tehran, IR HENRY FINERIS, FR HERRERA HInstitute for Work and Health, CH HOET PKU Leuven, BE HOLE PNanosight, GB HULME JUniv. Cambridge, GB JI XINERIS, FR JOUHANNAUD JCEA, FR JOUZEL J-NCenter for the Sociology of Organizations, FR JURKSCHAT KOxford Univ., GB KAISER J-PEmpa, CH KANAYA FNat. Center for Global Health and Medicine, JP KATALAGARIANAKIS GEuropean Commission, BE KECK LGrimm Aerosol Technik, DE KELLER MFraunhofer Institute, DE KHLEBNIKOVA NRIHOPHE, RU KHODABANDEH MUniv. Tehran, IR KHOLODENKO VSRCAMB, RU KOBAYASHI NAIST, JP KOPONEN INRCWE, DK KOWAL SINERIS, FR KRYSANOV ESevertsov Inst. of Ecology and Evolution, RU KÜCK AUniv. Bremen, DE KUO Y-MChung Hwa University, TW KVITEK LPalacky Univ., CZ LABILLE JCEREGE, FR LAMMINEN EDekati, FI LARUE CCEA, FR LE BIHAN OINERIS, FR LE DUR DEcomesure, FR LECERF PCILAS, FR LEGRAND MCordouan, FR LELONG CUJF CEA, FR LIMOUSIN SINERIS, FR LINDELOEV JGEA Process Engineering, DK LIU P PChina Jiliang University, CN LIU WCEREGE, FR MACHEREY A-CCNRS, FR MAGGA YCEA, FR MAHLENDORF FUniversity Duisburg-Essen, DE MANIER NINERIS, FR MANZO LUniv. Pavia, IT MARCHETTO ACEA, FR MARCONE GUNICAMP, BR MARI DEPFL, CH MARIE-DESVERGNE CCEA, FR MARIE-LOUISE APSA Peugeot-Citroen, FR MARMUSE LNano-H S.A.S., FR MARRA JPhilips Research Aerasense, NL MASION ACEREGE, FR MATEI EPolitehnica University Bucharest, RO MATSUI YKyoto Univ., JP MATZKE MUniv. Gothenburg, SE MAYNE-L'HERMITE MCEA, FR MELINTE G ABabes-Bolyai University, RO MERINO CGrupo Antolin Ingenieria, ES MICHAUD-SORET ICEA, FR MICHELETTI CJRC, IT MONTIGEL EBasler Versicherungen, CH MONTOYA ERAMEM, ES MOSSUZ VCEA, FR MOTELLIER SCEA, FR MOTZKUS CLNE, FR MUIR BNaneum, GB NAKAMURA KJAPAN NUS CO., JP NEUBAUER NKarlsruhe Institute of Technologie, DE NEUMEISTER LBG ETEM, DE NGUYEN TNIST, US NIORT NINTERTEK, FR NOIRTIN AINTERTEK, FR NOWACK BEmpa, CH NYEMBE DUniv. Johannesburg, ZA Ó CLAONADH NDublin Institute of Technology, IE OBERDÖRSTER GUniv. Rochester, US OGURA IAIST, JP OSTIGUY CIRSST, CA OTSUKA KJFE Techno-Research Corp., JP OUF F-XIRSN, FR OUSACI SALMA, FR PAGET VCEA, FR PAILLEUX MEcole des Mines de Saint Etienne, FR PANDARD PINERIS, FR PANZER OEuropean Research Services, DE PARISELLI FCNRS, FR PERLET JNANO Magazine, GB PETERS RRIKILT, NL PETIT A-NCEA, FR PETKOVIC JNational Institute of Biology, SI PIMENOFF JBeneq, FI PINAULT MCEA, FR PIRET J-PUniv. Namur, BE PONTONE RTekna Plasma Systems, FR POURCHEZ JEcole des Mines de Saint Etienne, FR PRAETORIUS AETH Zurich, CH PRAT OCEA, FR PREVENSLIK TQED Radiations, CN PREVOST CIRSN, FR PROY HUART DFrance Nature Environnement, FR PUI D Y HUniv. Minnesota, US QUARTARARO JPSA Peugeot-Citroen, FR RAULT SUniv. Caen, FR RAVANEL XCEA, FR RAVINDRAN GIRIJA AToyo Univ., JP REBIB FPôle Technologique d'Auvergne, FR RECHATIN J-LIRELEC, FR REYNIER MINRS, FR RICAUD MINRS, FR RIEDIKER MInstitut de Santé au Travail, CH RMILI BINERIS, FR ROGERIEUX FINERIS, FR ROLANDO CUniv. Lille 1, FR ROMERO AFreelance journalist, DE ROUCHER BCILAS, FR SAEZ J-PNanosight, GB SAFI MUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR SAKAI NKyoto Univ., JP SALVI OINERIS, FR SANFINS EUniv. Paris 7 Diderot, FR SAVOLAINEN KFIOH, FI SCHALLER REPFL, CH SCHMID KInstitute for Work and Health, CH SCHUBERT CCEA, FR SCHUSTER FCEA, FR SCHWEINBERGER FTU Munich, DE SCIFO LTECNALIA, ES SEABRA AUNICAMP, BR SEBASTIEN PSaint-Gobain, FR SENE CSTEPAN, FR SENTEIN CCEA, FR SHEN JStockholm Univ., SE SHINKAI YTokyo Univ., JP SICARD YUJF CEA, FR SIKHWIVHILU LNat. Centre for Nanostructured Materials, ZA SILLANPÄÄ MFinnish Environment Institute, FI SIMON JCEA, FR SINESI SCRP, IT SIRVEN J-BCEA, FR SIRVIÖ SFIOH, FI SOERENSEN SSolae, DK SON S WKorea Univ., KR SUBLEMONTIER OCEA, FR SYMON ARUSNANO Metrology Center, RU SYMONDS JCAMBUSTION, GB TARANTINI AAnses, FR TARDIF FCEA, FR TAKEDA KTokyo Univ., JP TERRAY MMalvern Instruments, FR THABUIS CBureau Veritas, FR THIERIET NAnses, FR TIKKANEN JTHL, FI TROUILLER BINERIS, FR UKKONEN ADekati, FI UMEMURA KTokyo University, JP USTACHE AINERIS, FR VÄISÄNEN PRautaruukki Oyj, FI VAN DEN BRINK WPhilips Research Aerasense, NL VAN TONGEREN MInstitute of Occupational Medicine, GB VANDELAC LUniv. Québec, CA VAQUERO CTECNALIA, ES VEERANARAYANAN SToyo Univ., JP VENDEL JIRSN, FR VERBIST KArboUnie, NL VIANA MIDAEA-CSIC, ES VIDAUD CCEA, FR VIGNES AINERIS, FR VOETZ MBayer Technology Services, DE WAHLBERG MGEA Process Engineering, DK WALSER T DETH Zurich, CH WARTENBERG NCEA, FR WEIGEL SRIKILT, NL WENZLER ETSE-Systems, DE WHITELEY CLancaster Univ., GB WIJMA ERIKILT, NL WILDE CAvantiCell Science Ltd, GB WILLIAMS DManufacture Michelin, FR WITSCHGER OINRS, FR WOHLLEBEN WBASF, DE WU QDet Norske Veritas, NO YAGISHITA TJFE Techno-Research Corporation, JP YU JSeoul Woman's Univ., KR ZAPÓR LCIOP-PIB, PL ZIMMERMANN ECEA, FR
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Higemoto, Wataru; Kawasuso, Atsuo
2010-05-01
It is our great pleasure to deliver the proceedings of ASR2009, the Advanced Science Research International Symposium 2009. ASR2009 is part of a series of symposia which is hosted by the Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Advanced Science Research Center (JAEA-ASRC), and held every year with different scientific topics. ASR2009 was held at Tokai in Japan from 10-12 November 2009. In total, 102 participants, including 29 overseas scientists, made 44 oral presentations and 64 poster presentations. In ASR2009 we have focused on material and atomic/molecular science research using positrons, muons and other exotic particle beams. The symposium covered all the fields of materials science which use such exotic particle beams. Positrons, muons and other beams have similar and different features. For example, although positrons and muons are both leptons having charge and spin, they give quite different information about materials. A muon mainly detects the local magnetic state of the solid, while a positron detects crystal imperfections and electron momenta in solids. Other exotic particle beams also provide useful information about materials which is not able to be obtained with muons or positrons. Therefore, the complementary use of particle beams, coupled with an understanding of their relative advantages, leads to greater excellence in materials research. This symposium crossed the fields of muon science, positron science, unstable-nuclei science, and other exotic particle-beam science. We therefore believe that ASR2009 became an especially important meeting for finding new science with exotic particle beams. Finally, we would like to extend our appreciation to all the participants, committee members, and support staff for their great efforts to make ASR2009 a fruitful symposium. ASR2009 Chairs Wataru Higemoto and Atsuo Kawasuso Advanced Science Research Center, Japan Atomic Energy Agency Organizing committee Y Hatano, JAEA (Director of ASRC) M Fujinami, Chiba Univ. R H Heffner, JAEA/LANL W Higemoto, JAEA (Co-chair) T Hyodo, Univ. Tokyo I Kanazawa, Tokyo Gakugei Univ. A Kawasuso, JAEA (Co-chair) Y Kobayashi, AIST T Matsuzaki, RIKEN-RAL Y Miyake, KEK N Nishida, Tokyo IT K Nishiyama, KEK I Shimamura, RIKEN Y Shirai, Kyoto Univ. R Suzuki, AIST A Uedono, Univ. Tsukuba Local organizing committee (JAEA) M Maekawa Y Fukaya T U Ito A Yabuuchi K Ninomiya T Hirade W Higemoto A Kawasuso S Sakurai Secretariat (JAEA) H Sekino Cooperation The Physical Society of Japan Positron Science Society Society of Muon and Meson Science of Japan International Society for μSR Spectroscopy Conference photograph
Conference/Symposium: 2017 Princeton-Combustion Institute Summer School on Combustion
2018-02-07
continuing source of knowledge and inspiration. Just like the lecturers, the organizers derive immense pleasure and satisfaction in facilitating the education, networking and collaboration elements of the combustion enterprise.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Malahoff, A.; Wiltshire, J. C.; Smith, J. R.
2005-12-01
The Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory organised an international research team to explore the chemistry, geology, biology, hydrothermal venting processes, mineral deposition, and biodiversity of seamounts extending south from Hawaii to New Zealand, including the submarine volcanoes of the Tonga-Kermadec Island Arc. Research team members came from a Consortium comprising of principal investigators from the NOAA Pacific Marine Environment Lab and VENTS program, the Inst of Geological and Nuclear Sciences and the National Inst of Water and Atmospheric Research both of New Zealand, the Univ of Kiel in Germany, the Univ of Mississippi, Univ of Hawaii, the NOAA Marine Fisheries Service, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Univ of Oregon, Oregon State Univ, Stanford Univ, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Funding came from the member organizations of the Consortium and the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and National Undersea Research Program. The expedition left Hawaii on 18 March 2005 and returned on 05 August, aboard the R/V Ka`imikai-o-Kanaloa with the submersibles Pisces IV and Pisces V and the ROV RCV-150. Sixty-one science dives were executed during the eight legs of the expedition. Twelve active volcanoes in the Samoa to New Zealand legs, one in the Samoan hot spot chain and the flanks of five islands and atolls on the legs between Samoa and Hawaii were investigated. Hundreds of specimens of new and unusual marine life, corals and other benthic organisms, extremophile micro- and macro-organisms, water samples for chemical analysis, polymetallic sulfides and rock samples were collected during the expedition. Unusual processes were observed at the Kermadec submarine volcanoes, including the oozing of liquid sulphur onto the seafloor and profuse carbon dioxide venting into seawater. Extensive submarine hydrothermal venting, black smoker activity and extraordinary chimney formations were studied in the caldera of Brothers Volcano. In addition, extensive communities of animals consisting of giant mussels, long-necked barnacles, pogonopheran worms, crabs, vent fish and mats of micro-organisms were mapped on the volcano flanks down to water depths of 2,000 m. Of note was that each active volcano maintained its own characteristic mix and dominance of animals. New species of life forms were detected and 27 new species of extremophile bacteria have been analysed. The active submarine volcano Vailulu'u in the Samoan chain was found to have a new 300-m high volcanic cone growing in its caldera that was not present when the edifice was last depth sounded in 2001. Turbid waters, hydrothermal activity and a ``Medusa'' rock full of eels were additional noteworthy discoveries. Assessment of living marine resources and habitat, collection of precious corals for dating to infer climate change and marine archaeology were the projects on the Samoa-to-Hawaii legs through the Line Islands. These were first exploration of these waters at depths below 200 m. The terrain was primarily sediment-scoured carbonate cliffs and escarpments, incised with box canyons and deeper chasms. The team consortium approach to a systematic study of these diverse submarine volcano and seamount settings ensured the operational and research success of this ambitious expedition.
Directional Emissivity Effects on Martian Surface Brightness Temperatures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pitman, K. M.; Wolff, M. J.; Bandfield, J. L.; Clancy, R. T.; Clayton, G. C.
2001-11-01
The angular dependence of thermal emission from the surface of Mars has not been well characterized. Although nadir sequences constitute most of the MGS/TES Martian surface observations [1,2], a significant number scans of Martian surfaces at multiple emission angles (emission phase function (EPF) sequences) also exist. Such data can provide insight into surface structures, thermal inertias, and non-isotropic corrections to thermal emission measurements [3]. The availability of abundant EPF data as well as the added utility of such observations for atmospheric characterization provide the impetus for examining the phenomenon of directional emissivity. We present examples of directional emissivity effects on brightness temperature spectra for a variety of typical Martian surfaces. We examine the theoretical development by Hapke (1993, 1996) [4,5] and compare his algorithm to that of Mishchenko et al. (1999) [6]. These results are then compared to relevant TES EPF data. This work is supported through NASA grant NAGS-9820 (MJW) and JPL contract no. 961471 (RTC). [1] Smith et al. (1998), AAS-DPS meeting # 30, # 11.P07. [2] Kieffer, Mullins, & Titus (1998), EOS, 79, 533. [3] Jakosky, Finiol, & Henderson (1990), JGR, 17, 985--988. [4] Hapke, B. (1993), Theory of Reflectance & Emittance Spectroscopy, Cambridge Univ. Press, NY. [5] Hapke, B. (1996), JGR, 101, E7, 16817--16831. [6] Mishchenko et al. (1999), JQSRT, 63, 409--432.
Discos de acreción circumplanares: Modelo de Co-acreción
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Parisi, M. G.; de Elía, G.
Los discos de acreción circumplanetarios precursores de los satélites regulares de los planetas gigantes, se pueden formar por cuatro mecanismos (Pollack y otros, 1991, In Uranus, Bergtralh, Miner y Mattews, Eds., p. 469, Univ. de Arizona Press, Tucson). En este trabajo estudiamos uno de tales mecanismos: el Modelo de Co-acreción. En dicho modelo, el disco circumplanetario se forma a partir de las colisiones mutuas entre planetesimales dentro de la esfera de Hill del planeta durante el proceso de formación planetaria. Realizamos un modelo semi-analítico para calcular la masa del disco y compararla con la masa requerida para formar los satélites regulares de los planetas gigantes. Hemos obtenido una cota superior para la masa del disco que resulta inferior a la masa de los satélites más grandes de los planetas gigantes. En principio, estos resultados permitirían descartar el modelo de co-acreción como uno de los procesos que podrían dar lugar a la formación de los satélites regulares. Estos resultados permiten obtener restricciones en el escenario de formación planetaria y en los mecanismos de formación de sistemas de satélites.
Wind shear related research at Princeton University
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert
1992-01-01
The topics addressed are: (1) real-time decision aiding-aircraft guidance for wind shear avoidance; (2) reducing the thrust-manual recovery strategies; and (3) dynamic behaviour of and aircraft encountering a single axis vortex.
None
2018-01-16
The U.S. Department of Energy's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory has released ''Star Power,'' a new informational video that uses dramatic and beautiful images and thought-provoking interviews to highlight the importance of the Laboratory's research into magnetic fusion.
PDG Construction, LLC Information Sheet
PDG Construction, LLC d/b/a Princeton Design Guild (the Company) is located in Bell Meade, New Jersey. The settlement involves renovation activities conducted at property constructed prior to 1978, located in Hopewell, New Jersey.
... Is Hepatitis B? The ABCs of Viral Hepatitis Liver Cancer and Hepatitis B Hepatitis Delta Coinfection Hepatitis C ... Project Princeton Workshop Public Health and International Programs Liver Cancer Connect Coalition Against Hepatitis for People of African ...
US fusion effort hit by tokamak losses
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gwynne, Peter
2016-11-01
Stewart Prager, director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) in the US, resigned in late September just weeks after a major setback at the lab's National Spherical Torus Experiment Upgrade (NSTX-U).
Results from the First Observing Season of PIQUE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hedman, M. M.; Barkats, D.; Gundersen, J. O.; Staggs, S. T.; Winstein, B.
2000-12-01
The Princeton IQU Experiment (PIQUE) is a ground-based telescope designed to measure the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). Between 19 January 2000 and 2 April 2000, this telescope observed one of the Stokes parameters (Q) on the ring at δ = 89o from the roof of Jadwin Hall, Princeton, NJ. The telescope had a beam full-width-half-maximum of 0.24o and the detector was a single correlation polarimeter operating at 90 GHz. These observations have yielded a new limit on the polarization of the CMB in the multipole range 100 < l < 600. This work was supported by NIST precision measurement grant #60NANB8D0061 and by NSF grant #PHY9600015. Additional support was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the Guggenheim Foundation through their fellowships for STS and BW respectively.
Electrostatic atomization--Experiment, theory and industrial applications
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Okuda, H.; Kelly, Arnold J.
1996-05-01
Experimental and theoretical research has been initiated at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory on the electrostatic atomization process in collaboration with Charged Injection Corporation. The goal of this collaboration is to set up a comprehensive research and development program on the electrostatic atomization at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory so that both institutions can benefit from the collaboration. Experimental, theoretical and numerical simulation approaches are used for this purpose. An experiment consisting of a capillary sprayer combined with a quadrupole mass filter and a charge detector was installed at the Electrostatic Atomization Laboratory to study fundamental properties of the charged droplets such as the distribution of charges with respect to the droplet radius. In addition, a numerical simulation model is used to study interaction of beam electrons with atmospheric pressure water vapor, supporting an effort to develop an electrostatic water mist fire-fighting nozzle.
Fully optimized shaped pupils: preparation for a test at the Subaru Telescope
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carlotti, Alexis; Kasdin, N. Jeremy; Martinache, Frantz; Vanderbei, Robert J.; Young, Elizabeth J.; Che, George; Groff, Tyler D.; Guyon, Olivier
2012-09-01
The SCExAO instrument at the Subaru telescope, mainly based on a PIAA coronagraph can benefit from the addition of a robust and simple shaped pupil coronagraph. New shaped pupils, fully optimized in 2 dimensions, make it possible to design optimal apodizers for arbitrarily complex apertures, for instance on-axis telescopes such as the Subaru telescope. We have designed several masks with inner working angles as small as 2.5 λ / D, and for high-contrast regions with different shapes. Using Princeton University nanofabrication facilities, we have manufactured two masks by photolithography. These masks have been tested in the laboratory, both in Princeton and in the facilities of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) in Hilo. The goal of this work is to prepare tests on the sky of a shaped pupil coronagraph in 2012.
Some Recent Observations on the Burning of Isolated N-Heptane and Alcohol Droplets
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Dryer, F. L.
1999-01-01
In a joint program involving Prof F.A. Williams of the University of California, San Diego and Dr. Vedha Nayagam of the National Center for Microgravity Research on Fluid and Combustion, the combustion of liquid fuel droplets having initial diameters between about 1 mm and 6 mm is being studied. The objectives of the work are to improve fundamental knowledge of droplet combustion dynamics through microgravity experiments and theoretical analyses. The Princeton contributions to the collaborative program supports the engineering design, data analysis, and data interpretation requirements for the study of initially single component, spherically symmetric, isolated droplet combustion studies through experiments and numerical modeling. The complementary UCSD contributions apply asymptotic theoretical analyses and are described in the published literature and in a companion communication in this volume. Emphases of the Princeton work are on the study of simple alcohols (methanol, ethanol), alcohol/water mixtures, and pure alkanes (n-heptane, n-decane) as fuels, with time dependent measurements of drop size, flame-stand-off, liquid-phase composition, and finally, extinction. Ground based experiments have included bench-scale studies at Princeton and collaborative experimental studies in the 2.2 and 5.18 second drop towers at NASA-Glenn Research Center. Spacelab studies have included fiber-supported droplet combustion (FSDC) experiments in the Glovebox facility with accompanying numerical analyses. Experiments include FSDC-1, performed on the USML-2 mission in October, 1995 (STS-73) and FSDC-2, on the second flight of the MSL-1 mission in July, 1997 (STS-94).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Walsh, Edward J.
1999-10-01
The Colloidal Domain: Where Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Technology Meet, 2nd edition
D. Fennell Evans and Hakan Wennerstroem. Advances in Interfacial Engineering Series. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. xl + 632 pp. ISBN 0-471-24247-0. 89.95.
Commercial Nuclear Power: Assuring Safety for the Future
Charles B. Ramsey and Mohammed Modarres. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1998. xxviii + 508 pp. ISBN 0-471-29186-2. 79.95.
Advances in Medicinal Chemistry, Vol. 4
Bruce E. Maryanoff and Allen B. Reitz, Eds. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. ISBN 1-7623-0064-7. 109.50.
Advances in Strained and Interesting Organic Molecules, Vol. 7
Brian Halton, Ed. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. xii + 259 pp. ISBN 0-7623-0530-4. 109.50.
Advances in Electron Transfer Chemistry, Vol. 6
Patrick S. Mariano, Ed. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. x + 171 pp. ISBN 0-7623-0213-5. 109.50.
Automating Science and Engineering Laboratories with Visual Basic
Mark F. Russo and Martin M. Echols. Wiley-Interscience Series on Laboratory Automation. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xx + 355 pp. ISBN 0-471-25493-2. 49.95.
Plantwide Process Control
Kelvin T. Erickson and John L. Hedrick. Wiley Series in Chemical Engineering. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xii + 547 pp. ISBN 0-471-17835-7. 89.95.
Heme Peroxidases
H. Brian Dunford. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. xiii + 507 pp. ISBN 0-471-24244-6. 195.00.
Industrial Ecology: Environmental Chemistry and Hazardous Wastes
Stanley E. Manahan. Lewis: Boca Raton, FL, 1999. 318 pp. ISBN 1-56670-381-6. 69.95.
Reviews in Computational Chemistry, Vol. 13
Kenny B. Lipkowitz and Donald B. Boyd. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. xxxiii + 426 pp. ISBN 0-471-33135-x. 135.00.
Surfaces, Interfaces, and Colloids: Principles and Applications, 2nd edition
Drew Myers. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. xx + 501 pp. ISBN 0-471-33060-4. 94.95.
Onium Ions
George A. Olah, Kenneth K. Laali, Qi Wang, and G. K. Surya Prakash. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1998. xv + 509 pp. ISBN 0-471-14877-6. 110.00.
Environmental Soil and Water Chemistry: Principles and Applications V. P. Evangelou. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1998. xix + 564 pp. ISBN 0-471-16515-8. 79.95.
1001 Chemicals in Everyday Products, 2nd edition
Grace Ross Lewis. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. x + 388 pp. ISBN 0-471-29212-5. 39.95.
Organic Coatings: Science and Technology, 2nd edition
Zeno W. Wicks Jr., Frank N. Jones, and S. Peter Pappas. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xxi + 630 pp. ISBN 0-471-24507-0. 125.00.
Progress in Inorganic Chemistry, Vol. 48
Kenneth D. Karlin, Ed. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. vi + 603 pp. ISBN 0-471-32623-2. 145.00.
Occupational Biomechanics, 3rd edition
Don B. Chaffin, Gunnar B. Andersson, and Bernard J. Martin. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xvii + 579 pp. ISBN 0-471-24697-2. 69.95.
Advances in Photochemistry, Vol. 25
Douglas C. Neckers, David H. Volman, and Gunther Von Bünau. Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xi + 238 pp. ISBN 0-471-32708-5. 110.00.
Distillation
Johann G. Stichlmair and James R. Fair. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1998. xiii + 524 pp. ISBN 0-471-25241-7. 94.95.
Ammonia - Principles and Industrial Practice
Maz Appl. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. ix + 301 pp. ISBN 3-527-29593-3. 160.00.
Precursor-Derived Ceramics: Synthesis, Structure, and High-Temperature Mechanical Properties
Fritz Aldinger, Fumihiro Wakai, and Joachim Bill, Eds. Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999. xv + 298 pp. ISBN 3-527-29814-2. 180.00.
Advances in Sonochemisty, Vol. 5
Timothy J. Mason. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. xi + 311 pp. ISBN 0-7623-0331-x. 109.50.
Fluid Metals: The Liquid-Vapor Transition of Metals
Friedrich Hensel and William W. Warren Jr. Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ. 1999. xvii + 243 pp. ISBN 0-691-05830-x. 69.50.
Direct Phasing in Crystallography: Fundamentals and Applications
Carmelo Giacovazzo. Oxford University Press: New York, 1999. xxiii + 767 pp. ISBN 0-19-850072-6. 140.00.
Practical Environmental Analysis
M. Radojevic and V. N. Bashkin. Royal Society of Chemistry: Cambridge, UK. 1999. xx + 466 pp. ISBN 0-85404-594-5. £32.00.
Advances in Dendritic Macromolecules, Vol. 4 George R. Newkome, Ed. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. x + 207 pp. ISBN 0-7623-0347-6. 109.50.
Advances in Quantitative Structure-Property Relationships, Vol. 2
Marvin Charton. JAI Press: Stamford, CT, 1999. ix + 257 pp. ISBN 0-7623-0067-1. 109.50.
Pesticide Residues in Foods: Methods, Techniques, and Regulations
W. George Fong, H. Anson Moye, James N. Seiber, and John P. Toth. Chemical Analysis, Vol. 151.Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1999. xiv + 358 pp. ISBN 0-471-57400-7. $84.95.
Status Report and Lessons Learned from the Univ. of Arizona NMSD
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Baiocchi, Dave; Burge, Jim
2003-01-01
We will present the latest generation of space mirror technology being developed at the Univ. of Arizona (UA). Unlike conventional monolithic mirrors, the UA mirrors are completely active in their operation. This allows greater flexibility in the mass, volume and performance specifications. The UA mirror design uses a thin flexible substrate for the optical surface and an actuated lightweight structure for surface accuracy and support. We provide an update on the UA NGST Mirror System Demonstrator (NMSD). The 2-m, f/5 NMSD mirror uses a 2 mm thick glass substrate and weighs 86 pounds. We review the mirror's design, discuss the mythology schemes used to actuate the figure, and present a list of the lessons learned.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Minami, H.; Yamaguchi, K. E.; Naraoka, H.
2014-12-01
It has been widely believed that Great Oxidation Event (GOE: Holland, 1994) occurred at ~2.4-2.2 Ga ago. However, some previous studies have found evidence for oxic ocean and atmosphere from earlier rock records (e.g., Hoashi et al., 2009). In order to explore if such oxic environment was local or global and if there was redox heterogeneity in a sedimentary basin before the inferred GOE, using the 2.7 Ga pyrite-bearing drillcore black shales (deep-facies WRL1 and shallow-facies RHDH2A drillcores) from Pilbara, Western Australia, we separately quantified abundance of S-bearing species (SAVS (acid-volatile sulfide), Spy (pyrite), SSO4 (sulfate), Sorg (organic-S), and S0 (elemental S) and Fe-bearing species (Fecarb, Feox, and Femag) by using sequential extraction methods. These samples were previously used by Brocks et al. (1999), Yamaguchi (2002), Yamaguchi et al. (2005), and Eigenbrode and Freeman (2006). The shallow samples have high S contents and are interpreted to have deposited in relatively anoxic environment, but most of deep samples with elevated Fe contents deposited in relatively oxic environment. The DOP values and δ34Spy values are relatively higher in shallow samples, suggesting active bacterial sulfate reduction in reducing environment created due to near-complete consumption of dissolved O2by decomposition of organic matter produced by photosynthesizers living in the surface ocean. All of these observations consistently suggest that the shallower part was anoxic and deeper part was oxic in the 2.7 Ga ocean. The surface ocean would have been oxygenated due to activity of oxygenic photosynthesis. Such redox stratification of the ocean, i.e., development of mid-depth (shallow) OMZ in an essentially oxic ocean, is typically seen in highly productive regions in the modern ocean. Modern-style oceanic redox structure could have existed as far back as 2.7 Ga ago, much earlier than the inferred GOE at ~2.4-2.2 Ga. Brocks et al. (1999) Science 285, 1033-1036; Eigenbrode & Freeman (2006) PNAS 103, 15759-15764; Hoashi et al. (2009) Nature Geosc. 2, 301-306; Holland (1994) Early Life on Earth, Columbia Univ. Press; Yamaguchi (2002) Ph.D. dissertation, Penn State Univ.; Yamaguchi et al. (2005) Chem. Geol. 218, 135- 169.
Scientists warn of 'trillion-dollar' spent-fuel risk
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gwynne, Peter
2016-07-01
A study by two Princeton University physicists suggests that a major fire in the spent nuclear fuel stored on the sites of US nuclear reactors could “dwarf the horrific consequences of the Fukushima accident”.
76 FR 58715 - Amendment of Class E Airspace; Wrightstown, NJ
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-09-22
... the earth. * * * * * AEA NJ E5 Wrightstown, NJ [Amended] Lakewood, Lakewood Airport, NJ (Lat. 40[deg... with the Atlantic City, NJ, Princeton, NJ. Old Bridge NJ, Philadelphia, PA, Class E airspace areas...
OAO-C Copernicus Operations Report
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1981-01-01
An analysis of the operation of OAO 3, Copernicus, the orbiting astronomical observatory, is given with particular emphasis upon the Princeton Experiment Package. Malfunctions and their impact are discussed, as are orbital observations and operations. Software is described.
Val L. Fitch, the CP Violation, and Antimatter
Cronin received the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Award in 1976 for major experimental contributions to Why Matter Exists, Princeton University Top Some links on this page may take you to non-federal
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Belton, Michael J. S.; Thomas, Peter; Veverka, J.; Schultz, Peter; A'Hearn, Michael F.; Feaga, Lori; Farnham, Tony; Groussin, Olivier; Li, Jian-Yang; Lisse, Casey; McFadden, Lucy; Sunshine, Jessica; Meech, Karen J.; Delamere, W. Alan; Kissel, Jochen
2007-03-01
We consider the hypothesis that the layering observed on the surface of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 from the Deep Impact spacecraft and identified on other comet nuclei imaged by spacecraft (i.e., 19P/Borrelly and 81P/Wild 2) is ubiquitous on Jupiter family cometary nuclei and is an essential element of their internal structure. The observational characteristics of the layers on 9P/Tempel 1 are detailed and considered in the context of current theories of the accumulation and dynamical evolution of cometary nuclei. The works of Donn [Donn, B.D., 1990. Astron. Astrophys. 235, 441-446], Sirono and Greenberg [Sirono, S.-I., Greenberg, J.M., 2000. Icarus 145, 230-238] and the experiments of Wurm et al. [Wurm, G., Paraskov, G., Krauss, O., 2005. Icarus 178, 253-263] on the collision physics of porous aggregate bodies are used as basis for a conceptual model of the formation of layers. Our hypothesis is found to have implications for the place of origin of the JFCs and their subsequent dynamical history. Models of fragmentation and rubble pile building in the Kuiper belt in a period of collisional activity (e.g., [Kenyon, S.J., Luu, J.X., 1998. Astron. J. 115, 2136-2160; 1999a. Astron. J. 118, 1101-1119; 1999b. Astrophys. J. 526, 465-470; Farinella, P., Davis, D.R., Stern, S.A., 2000. In: Mannings, V., Boss, A.P., Russell, S.S. (Eds.), Protostars and Planets IV. Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 1255-1282; Durda, D.D., Stern, S.J., 2000. Icarus 145, 220-229]) following the formation of Neptune appear to be in conflict with the observed properties of the layers and irreconcilable with the hypothesis. Long-term residence in the scattered disk [Duncan, M.J., Levison, H.F., 1997. Science 276, 1670-1672; Duncan, M., Levison, H., Dones, L., 2004. In: Festou, M., Keller, H.U., Weaver, H.A. (Eds.), Comets II. Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 193-204] and/or a change in fragmentation outcome modeling may explain the long-term persistence of primordial layers. In any event, the existence of layers places constraints on the environment seen by the population of objects from which the Jupiter family comets originated. If correct, our hypothesis implies that the nuclei of Jupiter family comets are primordial remnants of the early agglomeration phase and that the physical structure of their interiors, except for the possible effects of compositional phase changes, is largely as it was when they were formed. We propose a new model for the interiors of Jupiter family cometary nuclei, called the talps or "layered pile" model, in which the interior consists of a core overlain by a pile of randomly stacked layers. We discuss how several cometary characteristics—layers, surface texture, indications of flow, compositional inhomogeneity, low bulk density low strength, propensity to split, etc., might be explained in terms of this model. Finally, we make some observational predictions and suggest goals for future space observations of these objects.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Belton, Michael J. S.; Thomas, Peter; Veverka, J.; Schultz, Peter; A'Hearn, Michael F.; Feaga, Lori; Farnham, Tony; Groussin, Olivier; Li, Jian-Yang; Lisse, Casey; McFadden, Lucy; Sunshine, Jessica; Meech, Karen J.; Delamere, W. Alan; Kissel, Jochen
We consider the hypothesis that the layering observed on the surface of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 from the Deep Impact spacecraft and identified on other comet nuclei imaged by spacecraft (i.e., 19P/Borrelly and 81P/Wild 2) is ubiquitous on Jupiter family cometary nuclei and is an essential element of their internal structure. The observational characteristics of the layers on 9P/Tempel 1 are detailed and considered in the context of current theories of the accumulation and dynamical evolution of cometary nuclei. The works of Donn [Donn, B.D., 1990. Astron. Astrophys. 235, 441 446], Sirono and Greenberg [Sirono, S.-I., Greenberg, J.M., 2000. Icarus 145, 230 238] and the experiments of Wurm et al. [Wurm, G., Paraskov, G., Krauss, O., 2005. Icarus 178, 253 263] on the collision physics of porous aggregate bodies are used as basis for a conceptual model of the formation of layers. Our hypothesis is found to have implications for the place of origin of the JFCs and their subsequent dynamical history. Models of fragmentation and rubble pile building in the Kuiper belt in a period of collisional activity (e.g., [Kenyon, S.J., Luu, J.X., 1998. Astron. J. 115, 2136 2160; 1999a. Astron. J. 118, 1101 1119; 1999b. Astrophys. J. 526, 465 470; Farinella, P., Davis, D.R., Stern, S.A., 2000. In: Mannings, V., Boss, A.P., Russell, S.S. (Eds.), Protostars and Planets IV. Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 1255 1282; Durda, D.D., Stern, S.J., 2000. Icarus 145, 220 229]) following the formation of Neptune appear to be in conflict with the observed properties of the layers and irreconcilable with the hypothesis. Long-term residence in the scattered disk [Duncan, M.J., Levison, H.F., 1997. Science 276, 1670 1672; Duncan, M., Levison, H., Dones, L., 2004. In: Festou, M., Keller, H.U., Weaver, H.A. (Eds.), Comets II. Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 193 204] and/or a change in fragmentation outcome modeling may explain the long-term persistence of primordial layers. In any event, the existence of layers places constraints on the environment seen by the population of objects from which the Jupiter family comets originated. If correct, our hypothesis implies that the nuclei of Jupiter family comets are primordial remnants of the early agglomeration phase and that the physical structure of their interiors, except for the possible effects of compositional phase changes, is largely as it was when they were formed. We propose a new model for the interiors of Jupiter family cometary nuclei, called the talps or “layered pile” model, in which the interior consists of a core overlain by a pile of randomly stacked layers. We discuss how several cometary characteristics—layers, surface texture, indications of flow, compositional inhomogeneity, low bulk density low strength, propensity to split, etc., might be explained in terms of this model. Finally, we make some observational predictions and suggest goals for future space observations of these objects.
Alpha decay calculations with a new formula
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Akrawy, D. T.; Poenaru, D. N.
2017-10-01
A new semi-empirical formula for calculations of α decay half-lives is presented. It was derived from the Royer relationship by introducing new parameters which are fixed by fit to a set of experimental data. We are using three sets: set A with 130 e-e (even-even), 119 e-o (even-odd), 109 o-e, and 96 o-o, set B with 188 e-e, 147 e-o, 131 o-e and 114 o-o, and set C with 136 e-e, 84 e-o, 76 o-e and 48 o-o alpha emitters. A comparison of results obtained with the new formula (newF) and the following well known relationships: semiempirical relationship based on fission theory (semFIS), analytical superasymmetric fission (ASAF) model and universal formula (UNIV) made in terms of rms standard deviation. We also introduced a weighted mean value of this quantity, allowing us to compare the global properties of a given model. For set B the order of the four models is the following: semFIS, UNIV, newF and ASAF. Nevertheless for even-even alpha emitters, UNIV gives the second best result after semFIS, and for odd-even parents the second is newF. Despite its simplicity in comparison with semFIS, newF, presented in this article, behaves quite well, competing with the other well known relationships.
Pathways, Networks and Systems Medicine Conferences
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nadeau, Joseph H.
The 6th Pathways, Networks and Systems Medicine Conference was held at the Minoa Palace Conference Center, Chania, Crete, Greece (16-21 June 2008). The Organizing Committee was composed of Joe Nadeau (CWRU, Cleveland), Rudi Balling (German Research Centre, Brauschweig), David Galas (Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle), Lee Hood (Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle), Diane Isonaka (Seattle), Fotis Kafatos (Imperial College, London), John Lambris (Univ. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia),Harris Lewin (Univ. of Indiana, Urbana-Champaign), Edison Liu (Genome Institute of Singapore, Singapore), and Shankar Subramaniam (Univ. California, San Diego). A total of 101 individuals from 21 countries participated in the conference: USA (48), Canada (5),more » France (5), Austria (4), Germany (3), Italy (3), UK (3), Greece (2), New Zealand (2), Singapore (2), Argentina (1), Australia (1), Cuba (1), Denmark (1), Japan (1), Mexico (1), Netherlands (1), Spain (1), Sweden (1), Switzerland (1). With respect to speakers, 29 were established faculty members and 13 were graduate students or postdoctoral fellows. With respect to gender representation, among speakers, 13 were female and 28 were male, and among all participants 43 were female and 58 were male. Program these included the following topics: Cancer Pathways and Networks (Day 1), Metabolic Disease Networks (Day 2), Day 3 ? Organs, Pathways and Stem Cells (Day 3), and Day 4 ? Inflammation, Immunity, Microbes and the Environment (Day 4). Proceedings of the Conference were not published.« less
Erectile Dysfunction: A Sign of Heart Disease?
... e609. Cunningham GR, et al. Overview of male sexual dysfunction. http://www.uptodate.com/home. Accessed July 8, ... G, et al. The second Princeton consensus on sexual dysfunction and cardiac risk: New guidelines for sexual medicine. ...
Toward the Factory of the Future.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hazony, Yehonathan
1983-01-01
Computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) involves use of data processing technology as the vehicle for full integration of the total manufacturing process. A prototype research and educational facility for CIM developed with industrial sponsorship at Princeton University is described. (JN)
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Lockyer, Nigel S.; Smith, AJ Stewart,; et. al.
In 2004 a team from the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, and the Institute for Advanced Study proposed to host the 2008 International Conference on High Energy Physics (ICHEP) on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The proposal was approved later that year by the C-11 committee of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics. The Co-Chairs were Nigel S. Lockyer (U. Penn/TRIUMF) and A.J. Stewart Smith (Princeton); Joe Kroll of U. Penn served as Deputy Chair from 2007 on. Highlights of the proposal included 1. greatly increased participation of young scientists, women scientists, and graduatemore » students 2. new emphasis on formal theory 3. increased focus on astrophysics and cosmology 4. large informal poster session (170 posters) in prime time 5. convenient, contiguous venues for all sessions and lodging 6. landmark locations for the reception and banquet. The conference program consisted of three days of parallel sessions and three days of plenary talks.« less
Two U.S. Experiments to Fly Aboard European Spacelab Facility in 1996
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1996-01-01
Space provides researchers a way to study the behavior of fluids when the forces of gravity are removed. The studies described here involve international cooperative research projects to study various aspects of fluid behavior in a microgravity environment. These projects utilize the Bubble Droplet Particle Unit (BDPU), which was built by the European Space Agency's (ESA) Technology Center in Noordwijk, The Netherlands. This Spacelab-based multiuser facility flew for the first time in July 1994 on the second International Microgravity Laboratory (IML-2). It is scheduled for reflight on the Life and Microgravity Sciences (LMS) mission in June 1996. This experiment hardware was designed primarily to conduct fluid physics experiments with transparent fluids. LMS will fly both European and U.S. investigations including experiments defined by Professor R.S. Subramanian of Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, and Professor S.A. Saville of Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey.
POM.gpu-v1.0: a GPU-based Princeton Ocean Model
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Xu, S.; Huang, X.; Oey, L.-Y.; Xu, F.; Fu, H.; Zhang, Y.; Yang, G.
2015-09-01
Graphics processing units (GPUs) are an attractive solution in many scientific applications due to their high performance. However, most existing GPU conversions of climate models use GPUs for only a few computationally intensive regions. In the present study, we redesign the mpiPOM (a parallel version of the Princeton Ocean Model) with GPUs. Specifically, we first convert the model from its original Fortran form to a new Compute Unified Device Architecture C (CUDA-C) code, then we optimize the code on each of the GPUs, the communications between the GPUs, and the I / O between the GPUs and the central processing units (CPUs). We show that the performance of the new model on a workstation containing four GPUs is comparable to that on a powerful cluster with 408 standard CPU cores, and it reduces the energy consumption by a factor of 6.8.
Results from the First Two Observing Seasons of PIQUE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gundersen, Joshua; Barkats, Denis; Hedman, Matt; Staggs, Suzanne; Winstein, Bruce
2001-04-01
We report on the first two seasons of the Princeton IQU Experiment (PIQUE). PIQUE is a ground-based telescope designed to measure the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). During the first season (1/19/00-4/2/00), PIQUE measured the Q Stokes parameter on a ring at declination of 89 degrees from the roof of the Physics Department at Princeton University using a 90 GHz correlation polarimeter with a full-width-half maximum beam of 0.24 degrees. PIQUE's observations from the first season yielded a new limit on the polarization of the CMB in the multipole range 100
Comparing Feedback Methods after Testing
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Forster, Jerald R.
1969-01-01
Based on the author's doctoral dissertation, University of Minnesota. Requestions for reprints should be sent to: Jerald Forster, Department of Educational Psychology, 318 Miller Hall, Univ. of Wash., Seattle, Washington 98105.
Probabilistic models of genetic variation in structured populations applied to global human studies.
Hao, Wei; Song, Minsun; Storey, John D
2016-03-01
Modern population genetics studies typically involve genome-wide genotyping of individuals from a diverse network of ancestries. An important problem is how to formulate and estimate probabilistic models of observed genotypes that account for complex population structure. The most prominent work on this problem has focused on estimating a model of admixture proportions of ancestral populations for each individual. Here, we instead focus on modeling variation of the genotypes without requiring a higher-level admixture interpretation. We formulate two general probabilistic models, and we propose computationally efficient algorithms to estimate them. First, we show how principal component analysis can be utilized to estimate a general model that includes the well-known Pritchard-Stephens-Donnelly admixture model as a special case. Noting some drawbacks of this approach, we introduce a new 'logistic factor analysis' framework that seeks to directly model the logit transformation of probabilities underlying observed genotypes in terms of latent variables that capture population structure. We demonstrate these advances on data from the Human Genome Diversity Panel and 1000 Genomes Project, where we are able to identify SNPs that are highly differentiated with respect to structure while making minimal modeling assumptions. A Bioconductor R package called lfa is available at http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/lfa.html jstorey@princeton.edu Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online. © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Finley, V.L.; Wiezcorek, M.A.
This report gives the results of the environmental activities and monitoring programs at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) for CY93. The report is prepared to provide the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the public with information on the level of radioactive and non-radioactive pollutants, if any, added to the environment as a result of PPPL operations, as well as environmental initiatives, assessments, and programs that were undertaken in 1993. The objective of the Annual Site Environmental Report is to document evidence that DOE facility environmental protection programs adequately protect the environment and the public health. The Princeton Plasmamore » Physics Laboratory has engaged in fusion energy research since 1951. The long-range goal of the U.S. Magnetic Fusion Energy Research Program is to develop and demonstrate the practical application of fusion power as an alternate energy source. In 1993, PPPL had both of its two large tokamak devices in operation; the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) and the Princeton Beta Experiment-Modification (PBX-M). PBX-M completed its modifications and upgrades and resumed operation in November 1991. TFTR began the deuterium-tritium (D-T) experiments in December 1993 and set new records by producing over six million watts of energy. The engineering design phase of the Tokamak Physics Experiment (TPX), which replaced the cancelled Burning Plasma Experiment in 1992 as PPPL`s next machine, began in 1993 with the planned start up set for the year 2001. In 1993, the Environmental Assessment (EA) for the TFRR Shutdown and Removal (S&R) and TPX was prepared for submittal to the regulatory agencies.« less
Interior of southeast gun chamber (labeled "Gun Turret No. Two), ...
Interior of southeast gun chamber (labeled "Gun Turret No. Two), showing gun mounting pad, wall rings, small niche, and opening to outside - U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Battery Adair, Princeton Place, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI
Remediation System Evaluation, Higgins Farm Superfund Site
The Higgins Farm Superfund Site is located in a rural portion of Franklin Township, Somerset County, New Jersey, approximately 4 miles northeast of Princeton, New Jersey. The site occupies approximately 75 acres southeast of New Jersey State Highway 518...
77 FR 38630 - Open Internet Advisory Committee
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-28
... Computer Science and Co-Founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University, is... of Technology Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, is appointed vice-chairperson... Jennifer Rexford, Professor of Computer Science, Princeton University Dennis Roberson, Vice Provost...
Interior view of main corridor, with doors to shell, powder, ...
Interior view of main corridor, with doors to shell, powder, and plotting rooms visible. Corridor to southeast gun chamber on the right - U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Battery Adair, Princeton Place, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI
Hazardous Waste Cleanup: American Standard Incorporated in Hamilton Township, New Jersey
American Standard Incorporated is located at 240 Princeton Avenue in Trenton, New Jersey. American Standard's Trenton Pottery Facility has operated at its present location since 1923. The facility manufactures ceramic plumbing fixtures using clay, plaster
Towards Reduced Wall Effect Hall Plasma Accelerators
2007-07-01
Unpublished Conference Presentations E. Fernandez, N. Borelli , M. Cappelli, N. Gascon, "Investigation of Fluctuation-Induced Electron Transport in Hall...International Electric Propulsion Conference, Princeton University, October 31 November 4, 2005. 38. E. Fernandez, N. Borelli , M. Cappelli, N. Gascon
76 FR 60840 - Agency Information Collection Request; 30-Day Public Comment Request
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-09-30
... collection for the proper performance of the agency's functions; (2) the accuracy of the estimated burden; (3... 373 Princeton Center for Leadership Traning (PCLT)/ 533 1 36/60 320 TeenPEP Total 3986 2512 Keith...
Dutch museum marks Einstein anniversary
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
van Calmthout, Matijn
2016-01-01
A new painting of Albert Einstein's field equation from his 1915 general theory of relativity was unveiled in a ceremony in November 2015 by the Dutch physicist Robbert Dijkgraaf, who is director of the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study in the US.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
White, L. D.; Maygarden, D.; Serpa, L. F.
2015-12-01
Since 2010, the Minority Education Through Traveling and Learning in the Sciences (METALS) program, a collaboration among San Francisco State Univ., the Univ. of Texas at El Paso, the Univ. of New Orleans, and Purdue Univ., has created meaningful, field-based geoscience experiences for underrepresented minority high school students. METALS activities promote excitement about geoscience in field settings and foster mutual respect and trust among participants of different backgrounds and ethnicities. These gains are strengthened by the collective knowledge of the university partners and by faculty, graduate and undergraduate students, scientists, and science teachers who guide the field trips and who are committed to encouraging diversity in the geosciences. Through the student experiences it provides, METALS has helped shape and shift student attitudes and orientation toward geoscience, during and beyond their field experience, just as these students are poised at the critical juncture from high school to college. A review of the METALS findings and summative evaluation shows a distinct pattern of high to moderately high impact on most students in the various cohorts of the program. METALS, overall, was perceived by participants as a program that: (1) opens up opportunities for individuals who might not typically be able to experience science in outdoor settings; (2) offers high-interest geology content in field contexts, along with social and environmental connections; (3) promotes excitement about geology while encouraging the development of mutual respect, interdependence, and trust among individuals of different ethnicities; (4) influences the academic choices of students, in particular their choice of major and course selection in college. Summative data show that multiple aspects of this program were highly effective. Cross-university collaborations create a dynamic forum and a high-impact opportunity for students from different backgrounds to meet and develop friendships. Such collaborations also expose students to a network of professionals and mentors who can help them navigate career and educational paths. Taken as a whole, the results of the program and our evaluations suggest that the multi-university character of METALS is particularly beneficial for both students and mentors.
Facility Focus: Historic Renovations.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
College Planning & Management, 2002
2002-01-01
Describes the renovation of historic buildings at Rice University (conversion of the Chemistry Building into space for the biophysics and bioengineering departments) and at Princeton University (renovation of the Dial Lodge eating club into a building for the Bendheim Center for Finance). Includes photographs. (EV)
Investigation of air transportation technology at Princeton University, 1983
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stengel, Robert F.
1987-01-01
Progress is discussed for each of the following areas: voice recognition technology for flight control; guidance and control strategies for penetration of microbursts and wind shear; application of artificial intelligence in flight control systems; and computer-aided aircraft design.
Electric Vehicle Grid Experiments and Analysis
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2018-02-02
This project developed a low cost building energy management system (EMS) and conducted vehicle-to-grid (V2G) experiments on a commercial office building. The V2G effort included theinstallation and operation of a Princeton Power System CA-30 bi-dire...
2014 Princeton-CEFRC Summer School on Combustion
2014-11-20
of Technology ? New Developments in Combustion Technology: George A. Richards of NETL, DOE; • Participants lived in comfortable dormitory setting...Institute of Technology New Developments in Combustion Technology: George A. Richards of NETL, DOE; Participants lived in comfortable dormitory
A Simple Correlation for Neutron Capture Rates from Nuclear Masses
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Couture, Aaron Joseph
Recent studies of neutron capture performed at LANL have revealed a previously unrecognized connection between nuclear masses and the average neutron capture cross section. A team of three scientists from Los Alamos (P-27), Yale Univ., and Istanbul Univ. (Turkey) recently discovered this connection and have published their results as a Rapid Communication in Physical Review C. Neutron capture is a reaction in which a free neutron is absorbed by the nucleus, keeping the element unchanged, but changing isotopes. This reaction is typically exothermic. As a result, the reaction can proceed even when many other reaction channels are closed. In anmore » astrophysical environment, this means that neutron capture is the primary mechanism by which all of the elements with atomic number greater than nickel are produced is neutron capture.« less
CAMPARE and Cal-Bridge: Two Institutional Networks Increasing Diversity in Astronomy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rudolph, Alexander L.; Impey, Chris David; Smecker-Hane, Tammy A.
2016-01-01
We describe two programs, CAMPARE and Cal-Bridge, with the common mission of increasing participation of groups traditionally underrepresented in astronomy, through summer research opportunities, in the case of CAMPARE, scholarships in the case of Cal-Bridge, and significant mentoring in both programs, leading to an increase in their numbers successfully pursuing a PhD in the field.In 6 years, the CAMPARE program has sent 62 students, >85% from underrepresented groups, to conduct summer research at one of twelve major research institutions in California, Arizona, and Wyoming. The graduation rate among CAMPARE scholars is 97%, and of the 37 CAMPARE scholars who have graduated with a Bachelor's degree, almost 60% (21) have completed or are pursuing graduate education in astronomy or a related field, at institutions including UCLA, USC, UC Riverside, Stanford, Univ. of Rochester, Georgia Tech, Kent State, Indiana Univ., Univ. of Oregon, Syracuse, and the Fisk-Vanderbilt Master's-to-PhD program. The Cal-Bridge program is a CSU-UC Bridge program comprised of faculty form 5 University of California (UC), 8 California State University (CSU), and 8 California Community College (CCC) campuses in Southern California. Cal-Bridge provides much deeper mentoring and professional development experiences over the last two years of undergraduate and first year of graduate school to students from this diverse network of higher education institutions. Cal-Bridge Scholars benefit from financial support, intensive, joint mentoring by CSU and UC faculty, professional development workshops, and exposure to research opportunities at the participating UC campuses.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hawkins, B. Denise
2010-01-01
In this article, the author discusses Princeton Theological Seminary's Hispanic Theological Initiative (HTI), which helps Latino doctoral students launch careers as religion scholars. The HTI is the only academic program of its kind that brings together Hispanic doctoral students and is ecumenical, multi-ethnic, and multi-denominational. Students…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-09-08
... Arkansas County A.M. Bohnert Rice Plantation Pump 2 Engine, SE corner of US 165 and Post Bayou Lane..., Main St, Princeton St, High St, Holden, 10000786 NEW YORK Clinton County Miner, Alice T., Colonial...
Deloose, Eveline; Tack, Jan
2016-02-15
During the fasting state the upper gastrointestinal tract exhibits a specific periodic migrating contraction pattern that is known as the migrating motor complex (MMC). Three different phases can be distinguished during the MMC. Phase III of the MMC is the most active of the three and can start either in the stomach or small intestine. Historically this pattern was designated to be the housekeeper of the gut since disturbances in the pattern were associated with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth; however, its role in the involvement of hunger sensations was already hinted in the beginning of the 20th century by both Cannon (Cannon W, Washburn A. Am J Physiol 29: 441-454, 1912) and Carlson (Carlson A. The Control of Hunger in Health and Disease. Chicago, IL: Univ. of Chicago Press, 1916). The discovery of motilin in 1973 shed more light on the control mechanisms of the MMC. Motilin plasma levels fluctuate together with the phases of the MMC and induce phase III contractions with a gastric onset. Recent research suggests that these motilin-induced phase III contractions signal hunger in healthy subjects and that this system is disturbed in morbidly obese patients. This minireview describes the functions of the MMC in the gut and its regulatory role in controlling hunger sensations. Copyright © 2016 the American Physiological Society.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Quinet, Pascal; Fivet, Vanessa; Bautista, Manuel
2015-08-01
The knowledge of accurate and reliable atomic data for lowly ionized iron peak elements, from scandium to copper, is of paramount importance for the analysis of the high resolution spectra currently available. The third spectra of several iron group elements have been observed in different galactic sources like Herbig-Haro objects in the Orion Nebula [1] and stars like Eta Carinae [2]. However, forbidden transitions between low-lying metastable levels of doubly ionized species have been little investigated so far and radiative rates for those lines remain sparse or inexistent.In the present contribution, we report on the recent study we have performed concerning the determination of magnetic dipole (M1) and electric quadrupole (E2) transition probabilities in those ions. For the calculations, we have extensively used the pseudo-relativistic Hartree-Fock (HFR) code of Cowan [3] and the central Thomas-Fermi-Dirac potential approximation implemented in AUTOSTRUCTURE [4]. This multi-platform approach allowed us to check the consistency and to assess the accuracy of the results obtained.[1] Mesa-Delgado A. et al., MNRAS 395, 855 (2009)[2] Johansson S. et al., A&A 361, 977 (2000)[3] Cowan R.D., The Theory of Atomic Structure and Spectra, Univ. California Press, Berkeley (1981)[4] Badnell N.R., J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 30, 1 (1997)
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Three O-type binaries photometry in LMC (Morrell+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Morrell, N. I.; Massey, P.; Neugent, K. F.; Penny, L. R.; Gies, D. R.
2017-03-01
We will concentrate on the presentation and discussion of our photometric and spectroscopic observations of 3 binary systems containing the earliest type components among the observed sample of 17 binaries in the LMC, namely, LMC 169782, LMC 171520, and [P93] 921. All three systems belong to the 30 Dor region, which harbors some of the most massive stars known to date (Crowther et al. 2010MNRAS.408..731C; Schnurr et al. 2009MNRAS.395..823S).Time-resolved photometry was carried out for all three systems in order to provide the light curves needed to establish periods and calculate orbital inclinations. As described in Paper I (Massey et al. 2012ApJ...748...96M), this was carried out using simple aperture photometry as opposed to point-spread-function fitting; tests showed that we obtained equally accurate results with aperture photometry, which was expected given that our targets are not overly crowded. In order to compute the observed absolute magnitudes for our targets, we have assumed a distance modulus of 18.50 (50 kpc) for the LMC following van den Bergh (2000, The Galaxies of the Local Group (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press)), and we have used the intrinsic colors given by FitzGerald (1970A&A.....4..234F) and a normal reddening law with Rv = 3.1. (3 data files).
The making of the architecture of the plant cell wall: how cells exploit geometry.
Emons, A M; Mulder, B M
1998-06-09
Cell wall deposition is a key process in the formation, growth, and differentiation of plant cells. The most important structural components of the wall are long cellulose microfibrils, which are synthesized by synthases embedded in the plasma membrane. A fundamental question is how the microfibrils become oriented during deposition at the plasma membrane. The current textbook explanation for the orientation mechanism is a guidance system mediated by cortical microtubules. However, too many contraindications are known in secondary cell walls for this to be a universal mechanism, particularly in the case of helicoidal arrangements, which occur in many situations. An additional construction mechanism involves liquid crystalline self-assembly [A. C. Neville (1993) Biology of Fibrous Composites: Development Beyond the Cell Membrane (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, U.K.)], but the required amount of bulk material that is able to equilibrate thermally is not normally present at any stage of the wall deposition process. Therefore, we have asked whether the complex ordered texture of helicoidal cell walls can be formed in the absence of direct cellular guidance mechanisms. We propose that they can be formed by a mechanism that is based on geometrical considerations. It explains the genesis of the complicated helicoidal texture and shows that the cell has intrinsic, versatile tools for creating a variety of textures. A compelling feature of the model is that local rules generate global order, a typical phenomenon of life.
AMMOS2: a web server for protein-ligand-water complexes refinement via molecular mechanics.
Labbé, Céline M; Pencheva, Tania; Jereva, Dessislava; Desvillechabrol, Dimitri; Becot, Jérôme; Villoutreix, Bruno O; Pajeva, Ilza; Miteva, Maria A
2017-07-03
AMMOS2 is an interactive web server for efficient computational refinement of protein-small organic molecule complexes. The AMMOS2 protocol employs atomic-level energy minimization of a large number of experimental or modeled protein-ligand complexes. The web server is based on the previously developed standalone software AMMOS (Automatic Molecular Mechanics Optimization for in silico Screening). AMMOS utilizes the physics-based force field AMMP sp4 and performs optimization of protein-ligand interactions at five levels of flexibility of the protein receptor. The new version 2 of AMMOS implemented in the AMMOS2 web server allows the users to include explicit water molecules and individual metal ions in the protein-ligand complexes during minimization. The web server provides comprehensive analysis of computed energies and interactive visualization of refined protein-ligand complexes. The ligands are ranked by the minimized binding energies allowing the users to perform additional analysis for drug discovery or chemical biology projects. The web server has been extensively tested on 21 diverse protein-ligand complexes. AMMOS2 minimization shows consistent improvement over the initial complex structures in terms of minimized protein-ligand binding energies and water positions optimization. The AMMOS2 web server is freely available without any registration requirement at the URL: http://drugmod.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr/ammosHome.php. © The Author(s) 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
The pepATTRACT web server for blind, large-scale peptide-protein docking.
de Vries, Sjoerd J; Rey, Julien; Schindler, Christina E M; Zacharias, Martin; Tuffery, Pierre
2017-07-03
Peptide-protein interactions are ubiquitous in the cell and form an important part of the interactome. Computational docking methods can complement experimental characterization of these complexes, but current protocols are not applicable on the proteome scale. pepATTRACT is a novel docking protocol that is fully blind, i.e. it does not require any information about the binding site. In various stages of its development, pepATTRACT has participated in CAPRI, making successful predictions for five out of seven protein-peptide targets. Its performance is similar or better than state-of-the-art local docking protocols that do require binding site information. Here we present a novel web server that carries out the rigid-body stage of pepATTRACT. On the peptiDB benchmark, the web server generates a correct model in the top 50 in 34% of the cases. Compared to the full pepATTRACT protocol, this leads to some loss of performance, but the computation time is reduced from ∼18 h to ∼10 min. Combined with the fact that it is fully blind, this makes the web server well-suited for large-scale in silico protein-peptide docking experiments. The rigid-body pepATTRACT server is freely available at http://bioserv.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr/services/pepATTRACT. © The Author(s) 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
PockDrug-Server: a new web server for predicting pocket druggability on holo and apo proteins.
Hussein, Hiba Abi; Borrel, Alexandre; Geneix, Colette; Petitjean, Michel; Regad, Leslie; Camproux, Anne-Claude
2015-07-01
Predicting protein pocket's ability to bind drug-like molecules with high affinity, i.e. druggability, is of major interest in the target identification phase of drug discovery. Therefore, pocket druggability investigations represent a key step of compound clinical progression projects. Currently computational druggability prediction models are attached to one unique pocket estimation method despite pocket estimation uncertainties. In this paper, we propose 'PockDrug-Server' to predict pocket druggability, efficient on both (i) estimated pockets guided by the ligand proximity (extracted by proximity to a ligand from a holo protein structure) and (ii) estimated pockets based solely on protein structure information (based on amino atoms that form the surface of potential binding cavities). PockDrug-Server provides consistent druggability results using different pocket estimation methods. It is robust with respect to pocket boundary and estimation uncertainties, thus efficient using apo pockets that are challenging to estimate. It clearly distinguishes druggable from less druggable pockets using different estimation methods and outperformed recent druggability models for apo pockets. It can be carried out from one or a set of apo/holo proteins using different pocket estimation methods proposed by our web server or from any pocket previously estimated by the user. PockDrug-Server is publicly available at: http://pockdrug.rpbs.univ-paris-diderot.fr. © The Author(s) 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.
Morrison, John A; Glueck, Charles J; Wang, Ping
2012-04-01
To evaluate children's cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors as predictors of parents' subsequent CVD, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and high blood pressure (HBP). We conducted a 26-year prospective follow-up of 852 5- to 19-year-old black and white schoolchildren (mean age, 12 years; Lipid Research Clinics, 1973-8), and parents (mean age, 40 years) from 519 families in Princeton Schools, Cincinnati, Ohio. Schoolchildren were reassessed in the Princeton Follow-up study 1999-2003 at mean age 39 years; CVD, T2DM, and HBP history of their 1038 parents were reassessed by mean age 66 years. We assessed relationships of childhood risk factors with parental CVD, T2DM, and HBP. Child-probands identified with triglyceride (TG) levels, blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels, body mass index (BMI), and glucose level greater than and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels less than established cutoff points. Pediatric HBP (P=.006) and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P=.018) were predictive of parental CVD at age ≤50 years. Pediatric HBP (P=.02) and high TG (P=.03) were predictive of parental CVD at age ≤60 years. Pediatric high TG (P=.009) and high low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P=.04) were predictive of parental CVD by age 66 years. Pediatric high BMI (P=.0006) were predictive of parental T2DM. Pediatric high BMI (P=.003) and black race (P=.004) were predictive of parental HBP. Pediatric risk factors identify families with parents at increased risk for CVD, T2DM, and HBP, emphasizing the usefulness of the child as proband. Copyright © 2012 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Finley, V.L.; Wieczorek, M.A.
This report gives the results of the environmental activities and monitoring programs at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) for CY94. The report is prepared to provide the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the public with information on the level of radioactive and nonradioactive pollutants, if any, added to the environment as a result of PPPL operations, as well as environmental initiatives, assessments, and programs that were undertaken in 1994. The objective of the Annual Site Environmental Report is to document evidence that PPPL`s environmental protection programs adequately protect the environment and the public health. The Princeton Plasma Physicsmore » Laboratory has engaged in fusion energy research since 195 1. The long-range goal of the US Magnetic Fusion Energy Research Program is to develop and demonstrate the practical application of fusion power as an alternate energy source. In 1994, PPPL had one of its two large tokamak devices in operation-the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR). The Princeton Beta Experiment-Modification or PBX-M completed its modifications and upgrades and resumed operation in November 1991 and operated periodically during 1992 and 1993; it did not operate in 1994 for funding reasons. In December 1993, TFTR began conducting the deuterium-tritium (D-T) experiments and set new records by producing over ten @on watts of energy in 1994. The engineering design phase of the Tokamak Physics Experiment (T?X), which replaced the cancelled Burning Plasma Experiment in 1992 as PPPL`s next machine, began in 1993 with the planned start up set for the year 2001. In December 1994, the Environmental Assessment (EA) for the TFTR Shutdown and Removal (S&R) and TPX was submitted to the regulatory agencies, and a finding of no significant impact (FONSI) was issued by DOE for these projects.« less
RHUM-RUM investigates La Réunion mantle plume from crust to core
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sigloch, Karin; Barruol, Guilhem
2013-04-01
RHUM-RUM (Réunion Hotspot and Upper Mantle - Réunions Unterer Mantel) is a French-German passive seismic experiment designed to image an oceanic mantle plume - or lack of plume - from crust to core beneath La Réunion Island, and to understand these results in terms of material, heat flow and plume dynamics. La Réunion hotspot is one of the most active volcanoes in the world, and its hotspot track leads unambiguously to the Deccan Traps of India, one of the largest flood basalt provinces on Earth, which erupted 65 Ma ago. The genesis and the origin at depth of the mantle upwelling and of the hotspot are still very controversial. In the RHUM-RUM project, 57 German and French ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) are deployed over an area of 2000 km x 2000 km2 centered on La Réunion Island, using the "Marion Dufresne" and "Meteor" vessels. The one-year OBS deployment (Oct. 2012 - Oct. 2013) will be augmented by terrestrial deployments in the Iles Eparses in the Mozambique Channel, in Madagascar, Seychelles, Mauritius, Rodrigues and La Réunion islands. A significant number of OBS will be also distributed along the Central and South West Indian Ridges to image the lower-mantle beneath the hotspot, but also to provide independent opportunity for the study of these slow to ultra-slow ridges and of possible plume-ridge interactions. RHUM-RUM aims to characterize the vertically ascending flow in the plume conduit, as well as any lateral flow spreading into the asthenosphere beneath the western Indian Ocean. We want to establish the origin of the heat source that has been fueling this powerful hotspot, by answering the following questions: Is there a direct, isolated conduit into the deepest mantle, which sources its heat and material from the core-mantle boundary? Is there a plume connection to the African superswell at mid-mantle depths? Might the volcanism reflect merely an upper mantle instability? RHUM-RUM also aims at studying the hotspot's interaction with the neighboring ridges of the Indian Ocean. There is in particular a long-standing hypothesis, not yet examined seismically, that channelized plume flow beneath the aseismic Rodrigues Ridge could feed the Central Indian Ridge at 1000 km distance. The RHUM-RUM group (www.rhum-rum.net): * IPG Paris & Géosciences Réunion: G. Barruol, J.P. Montagner, E. Stutzmann, F.R. Fontaine, C. Deplus, M. Cannat, G. Roult, J. Dyment, S. Singh, W. Crawford, C. Farnetani, N. Villeneuve, L. Michon. V. Ferrazzini, Y. Capdeville. * Univ. Munich (LMU): K. Sigloch, H. Igel. AWI Bremerhaven: V. Schlindwein. Univ. Frankfurt: G. Rümpker. Univ. Münster: C. Thomas. Univ. Bonn: S. Miller. * Géosciences Montpellier: C. Tiberi, A. Tommasi, D. Arcay, C. Thoraval. * Mauritius Oceanography Institute: D. Bissessur. Univ. Antananarivo: G. Rambolamanana. SEYPEC Seychelles Petroleum: P. Samson, P. Joseph. * Other institutes: A. Davaille, M. Jegen, M. Maia, G. Nolet, D. Sauter, B. Steinberger.
RHUM-RUM investigates La Réunion mantle plume from crust to core
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sigloch, K.; Barruol, G.
2012-12-01
RHUM-RUM (Réunion Hotspot and Upper Mantle - Réunions Unterer Mantel) is a French-German passive seismic experiment designed to image an oceanic mantle plume - or lack of plume - from crust to core beneath La Réunion Island, and to understand these results in terms of material, heat flow and plume dynamics. La Réunion hotspot is one of the most active volcanoes in the world, and its hotspot track leads unambiguously to the Deccan Traps of India, one of the largest flood basalt provinces on Earth, which erupted 65 Ma ago. The genesis and the origin at depth of the mantle upwelling and of the hotspot are still very controversial. In the RHUM-RUM project, 57 German and French ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) are deployed over an area of 2000 km x 2000 km2 centered on La Réunion Island, using the "Marion Dufresne" and "Meteor" vessels. The one-year OBS deployment (Oct. 2012 - Oct. 2013) will be augmented by terrestrial deployments in the Iles Eparses in the Mozambique Channel, in Madagascar, Seychelles, Mauritius, Rodrigues and La Réunion islands. A significant number of OBS will be also distributed along the Central and South West Indian Ridges to image the lower-mantle beneath the hotspot, but also to provide independent opportunity for the study of these slow to ultra-slow ridges and of possible plume-ridge interactions. RHUM-RUM aims to characterize the vertically ascending flow in the plume conduit, as well as any lateral flow spreading into the asthenosphere beneath the western Indian Ocean. We want to establish the origin of the heat source that has been fueling this powerful hotspot, by answering the following questions: Is there a direct, isolated conduit into the deepest mantle, which sources its heat and material from the core-mantle boundary? Is there a plume connection to the African superswell at mid-mantle depths? Might the volcanism reflect merely an upper mantle instability? RHUM-RUM also aims at studying the hotspot's interaction with the neighboring ridges of the Indian Ocean. There is in particular a long-standing hypothesis, not yet examined seismically, that channelized plume flow beneath the aseismic Rodrigues Ridge could feed the Central Indian Ridge at 1000 km distance. The RHUM-RUM group (www.rhum-rum.net): * IPG Paris & Géosciences Réunion: G. Barruol, J.P. Montagner, E. Stutzmann, F.R. Fontaine, C. Deplus, M. Cannat, G. Roult, J. Dyment, S. Singh, W. Crawford, C. Farnetani, N. Villeneuve, L. Michon. V. Ferrazzini, Y. Capdeville. * Univ. Munich (LMU): K. Sigloch, H. Igel. AWI Bremerhaven: V. Schlindwein. Univ. Frankfurt: G. Rümpker. Univ. Münster: C. Thomas. Univ. Bonn: S. Miller. * Géosciences Montpellier: C. Tiberi, A. Tommasi, D. Arcay, C. Thoraval. * Mauritius Oceanography Institute: D. Bissessur. Univ. Antananarivo: G. Rambolamanana. SEYPEC Seychelles Petroleum: P. Samson, P. Joseph. * Other institutes: A. Davaille, M. Jegen, M. Maia, G. Nolet, D. Sauter, B. Steinberger.
The Promise and Pitfalls of Grand Strategy
2012-08-01
others, Thomas Friedman, “Rethinking Foreign Affairs,” The New York Times, February 7, 1992; R. W. Apple, “The Sense of Triumph Fades, Uncertainty and...1947, Box 146, James Forrestal Papers, Seeley Mudd Manuscript Library (SMML), Princeton University. 39. Kennan National War College Lecture
Training College Outdoor Program Leaders.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Curtis, Rick
This paper describes a training program for college outdoor program leaders developed by the Outdoor Action Program at Princeton University (New Jersey). The training program includes a leader training course, a safety management seminar, a wilderness first aid course, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and group skills workshop. This paper describes…
Full Spectrum Operations: A Running Start
2009-03-31
looking like nails. —MAJ Curt Taylor , S3 2-8 IN, Diwaniyah, Iraq, August 2006. To avoid the hammer and nails dynamic that may plague maneuver...Gasification System from Princeton Environmental Group; the AgriPower system, based on the “open” Brayton Cycle technology; and Thermogenics
75 FR 3467 - Ocean Transportation Intermediary License; Applicants
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-01-21
.../Secretary/ Treasurer. (Qualifying Individual) EB Logistics, LLC, 300 Colonial Center Parkway, Suite 100.... (Qualifying Individual) Tri-Vi-U.S. Logistics Ltd., 147-35 Farmers Blvd., Jamaica, NY 11434, Officers: Yehudit... Logistics LLC, 6 Emerald Court, Princeton Junction, NJ 08550, Yongpeng Jin, Owner. Officer: (Qualifying...
A Dialogue on Competitiveness.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gomory, Ralph E.; Shapiro, Harold T.
1988-01-01
Presents a dialogue between Ralph E. Gomory of IBM and Harold T. Shapiro of Princeton University concerning what science, technology, and education can and cannot do to establish industrial leadership. The discussion focuses on the role of universities and industry, scientific literacy, and cooperation between universities and industry. (YP)
The Retreat from Race: Asian-American Admissions and Racial Politics.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Takagi, Dana Y.
This book follows the debates over Asian-American admissions at Berkeley University (California), the University of California at Los Angeles, Brown University in Providence (Rhode Island), Stanford University (California), Harvard University in Cambridge (Massachusetts), and Princeton University (New Jersey). The book explores important…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-07-12
... Art, Princeton, New Jersey, from on or about October 25, 2014, until on or about January 25, 2015, and the New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, Louisiana, from on or about February 27, 2015, until on or...
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Murdin, P.
2000-11-01
Geophysicist, born in New York City, professor of geology at Princeton, led Project Mohole, the first expedition to drill through the Earth's oceanic crust to the mantle beneath, theorized that spreading of mid-ocean ridges was the source of new mantle-derived continental material. Also a lunar geologist....
An update on the analysis of the Princeton 19Ne beta asymmetry measurement
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Combs, Dustin; Calaprice, Frank; Jones, Gordon; Pattie, Robert; Young, Albert
2013-10-01
We report on the progress of a new analysis of the 1994 19Ne beta asymmetry measurement conducted at Princeton University. In this experiment, a beam of 19Ne atoms were polarized with a Stern-Gerlach magnet and then entered a thin-walled mylar cell through a slit fabricated from a piece of micro channel plate. A pair of Si(Li) detectors at either end of the apparatus were aligned with the direction of spin polarization (one parallel and one anti-parallel to the spin of the 19Ne) and detected positrons from the decays. The difference in the rate in the two detectors was used to calculate the asymmetry. A new analysis procedure has been undertaken using the Monte Carlo package PENELOPE with the goal of determining the systematic uncertainty due to positrons scattering from the face of the detectors causing the incorrect reconstruction of the initial direction of the positron momentum. This was a leading cause of systematic uncertainty in the experiment in 1994.
High-energy vacuum birefringence and dichroism in an ultrastrong laser field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Meuren, Sebastian; Bragin, Sergey; Keitel, Christoph H.; di Piazza, Antonino
2017-10-01
The interaction between real photons in vacuum is a long-standing prediction of quantum electrodynamics, which has never been observed experimentally. Upcoming 10 PW laser systems like the Extreme Light Infrastructure (ELI) will provide laser pulses with unprecedented intensities. If combined with highly energetic gamma photons - obtainable via Compton backscattering from laser-wakefield accelerated electron beams - the QED critical field becomes accessible. In we have derived how a generally polarized probe photon beam is influenced by both vacuum birefringence and dichroism in a strong linearly polarized plane-wave laser field. We put forward an experimental scheme to measure these effects in the nontrivial high-energy regime, where the QED critical field is reached and the Euler-Heisenberg approximation, valid for low-frequency electromagnetic fields, breaks down. Our results suggest the feasibility of verifying/rejecting the QED prediction for vacuum birefringence/dichroism at the 3 σ confidence level on the time scale of a few days at several upcoming laser facilities. Now at Princeton University, Princeton, NJ.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Arndt, S.; Merkel, P.; Monticello, D. A.; Reiman, A. H.
1999-04-01
Fixed- and free-boundary equilibria for Wendelstein 7-X (W7-X) [W. Lotz et al., Plasma Physics and Controlled Nuclear Fusion Research 1990 (Proc. 13th Int. Conf. Washington, DC, 1990), (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1991), Vol. 2, p. 603] configurations are calculated using the Princeton Iterative Equilibrium Solver (PIES) [A. H. Reiman et al., Comput. Phys. Commun., 43, 157 (1986)] to deal with magnetic islands and stochastic regions. Usually, these W7-X configurations require a large number of iterations for PIES convergence. Here, two methods have been successfully tested in an attempt to decrease the number of iterations needed for convergence. First, periodic sequences of different blending parameters are used. Second, the initial guess is vastly improved by using results of the Variational Moments Equilibrium Code (VMEC) [S. P. Hirshmann et al., Phys. Fluids 26, 3553 (1983)]. Use of these two methods have allowed verification of the Hamada condition and tendency of "self-healing" of islands has been observed.
Landon, M.K.; Delin, G.N.; Nelson, K.J.; Regan, C.P.; Lamb, J.A.; Larson, S.J.; Capel, P.D.; Anderson, J.L.; Dowdy, R.H.
1997-01-01
The Minnesota Management Systems Evaluation Area (MSEA) project was part of a multi-scale, inter-agency initiative to evaluate the effects of agricultural management systems on water quality in the midwest corn belt. The research area was located in the Anoka Sand Plain about 5 kilometers southwest of Princeton, Minnesota. The ground-water-quality monitoring network within and immediately surrounding the research area consisted of 73 observation wells and 25 multiport wells. The primary objectives of the ground-water monitoring program at the Minnesota MSEA were to: (1) determine the effects of three farming systems on ground-water quality, and (2) understand the processes and factors affecting the loading, transport, and fate of agricultural chemicals in ground water at the site. This report presents well construction, geologic, water-level, chemical application, water-quality, and quality-assurance data used to evaluate the effects of farming systems on ground-water quality during 1991-95.
Addressing the Underrepresentation of Women in Physics at Multiple Levels
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Greco, Shannon; Dominguez, Arturo; Ortiz, Deedee; Zwicker, Andrew
2016-10-01
APS provides support to several universities and research institutions to host Conferences for Undergraduate Women in Physics (CUWiP). The goal of these Conferences is to provide practical tools and a community to help women persist in physics and STEM careers. This is particularly relevant for the DPP where women make up only 7% of the membership. In January 2017, Princeton University and the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) will host a CUWiP. CUWiP and the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internship (SULI) program expose undergraduates to the variety of possible careers in plasma physics and fusion energy in academia, government labs or private industry. We will report on the success of a number of PPPL programs to engage women at all levels in physics and highlight how programs such as CUWiP and SULI contribute to this goal. Special thanks to the Department of Energy for supporting PPPL's education programs and to APS for supporting the Conference for Undergraduate Women in Physics.
Interpolating Polynomial Macro-Elements with Tension Properties
2000-01-01
Univ. Calgary, 1978. Paolo Costantini Dipartimento di Matematica " Roberto Magari" Via del Capitano 15 53100 Siena, Italy costantini~unisi. it Carla...Manni Dipartimento di Matematica Via Carlo Alberto 10 10123 Torino, Italy manniDdm .unito. it
GREENPLEX -- A SUSTAINABLE URBAN FORM FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
Outputs include images of architecture, space usage, social design, elevators, skybridges, ETFE envelope, structures, construction process, HVAC system, and water system. Outputs include performance metrics for the University Community Greenplex and traditional univer...
Spin Transport in Carbon Nanotubes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schoenenberger, Christian
2005-03-01
We report on spin transport in carbon nanotubes. First, spin injection in arc-discharge grown multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) is achieved by using a ferromagnetic PdNi alloy as contact material. The two contacts, i.e. source and drain, have different shape rendering different magnetic switching fields. Typical two-terminal resistances are in the range of 5-100 kOhm. We find a tunneling magneto resistance (TMR) signal amounting to 2.5-3%. Secondly, we explore the TMR signal as a function of temperature T, source-drain voltage Vsd, and gate voltage Vg. As expected the TMR signal decays with T and Vsd. Remarkably, however, we find a sign change in the spin signal (the TMR signal) as a function of both Vsd and Vg. This work has been done in collaboration with: S. Sahoo and T. Kontos (Univ. of Basel), C. Sürgers (Univ. of Karlsruhe), and L. Forro (EPFL Lausanne).
RecPhyloXML - a format for reconciled gene trees.
Duchemin, Wandrille; Gence, Guillaume; Arigon Chifolleau, Anne-Muriel; Arvestad, Lars; Bansal, Mukul S; Berry, Vincent; Boussau, Bastien; Chevenet, François; Comte, Nicolas; Davín, Adrián A; Dessimoz, Christophe; Dylus, David; Hasic, Damir; Mallo, Diego; Planel, Rémi; Posada, David; Scornavacca, Celine; Szöllosi, Gergely; Zhang, Louxin; Tannier, Éric; Daubin, Vincent
2018-05-14
A reconciliation is an annotation of the nodes of a gene tree with evolutionary events-for example, speciation, gene duplication, transfer, loss, etc-along with a mapping onto a species tree. Many algorithms and software produce or use reconciliations but often using different reconciliation formats, regarding the type of events considered or whether the species tree is dated or not. This complicates the comparison and communication between different programs. Here, we gather a consortium of software developers in gene tree species tree reconciliation to propose and endorse a format that aims to promote an integrative-albeit flexible-specification of phylogenetic reconciliations. This format, named recPhyloXML, is accompanied by several tools such as a reconciled tree visualizer and conversion utilities. http://phylariane.univ-lyon1.fr/recphyloxml/. wandrille.duchemin@univ-lyon1.fr. There is no supplementary data associated with this publication.
High-Performance, Low-Energy-Curing Resins.
1984-03-01
with a phenolic resin 0. Quinlivan, private communication). Although in this system, the phenolic resin requires curing well above room temperature...34 -4 JOHN T. QUINLIVAN received a B.S. degree from Gonzaga University and M.A. *1 and Ph.D. degrees in chemistry from Princeton University. After
AIA Honors Imaginative Solutions to Common Campus Problems.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Chronicle of Higher Education, 1987
1987-01-01
The American Institute of Architects honored five recently completed university buildings whose architects solved the difficulties of site and scale: Columbia University's Computer Science Building, Dartmouth's Hood Museum of Art, Emory's Museum of Art, Princeton's Lewis Thomas Laboratory, and the University of California at Irvine's Computer…
A Larger Sense of Purpose: Higher Education and Society
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Shapiro, Harold T.
2005-01-01
Universities were once largely insular institutions whose purview extended no further than the campus gates. Not anymore. Today's universities have evolved into multifaceted organizations with complex connections to government, business, and the community. This thought-provoking book by Harold Shapiro, former president of both Princeton University…
78 FR 1750 - Establishment of Class E Airspace; Princeton, KY
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-01-09
... the safety and airspace management of Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) operations within the National Airspace System. This action also makes a minor adjustment to the geographic coordinates of the airport... action qualifies for categorical exclusion under the National Environmental Policy Act in accordance with...
A Compiler and Run-time System for Network Programming Languages
2012-01-01
A Compiler and Run-time System for Network Programming Languages Christopher Monsanto Princeton University Nate Foster Cornell University Rob...Foster, R. Harrison, M. Freedman, C. Monsanto , J. Rexford, A. Story, and D. Walker. Frenetic: A network programming language. In ICFP, Sep 2011. [10] A
NSF Establishes First Four National Supercomputer Centers.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lepkowski, Wil
1985-01-01
The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded support for supercomputer centers at Cornell University, Princeton University, University of California (San Diego), and University of Illinois. These centers are to be the nucleus of a national academic network for use by scientists and engineers throughout the United States. (DH)
76 FR 4696 - Ocean Transportation Intermediary License Applicants
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-01-26
...: New NVO License. Makro Logistics Group, LLC (NVO & OFF), 2229 NW. 79 Avenue, Doral, FL 33122. Officers.... SAPIA Logistics, Inc. (NVO & OFF), 1331 Gemini Street, Suite 103, Houston, TX 77058. Officers: Vernon... License. Seagull Global Logistics USA Limited Liability Company (OFF), 124 Jackson Avenue, Princeton, NJ...
Cybernetic Control of an Electrochemical Repertoire.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
He, Peixin; And Others
1982-01-01
Describes major features of a computer-operated, cybernetic potentiostat and the development, design, and operation of the software in ROM. The instrument contains control circuitry and software making it compatible with the static mercury drop electrode produced by EG&G Princeton Applied Research Corporation. Sample results using the…
76 FR 45200 - Suspension of Community Eligibility
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-07-28
... in available in SFHAs community Region III Maryland: Baltimore County, 240010 March 24, 1972, Aug. 2... 170851 February 20, ......do Do. County. 1976, Emerg; September 24, 1984, Reg; August 2, 2011, Susp..., 2011, Susp. Princeton, City of, Bureau 170014 March 24, 1975, ......do Do. County. Emerg; September 4...
Conceptual Design and Neutronics Analyses of a Fusion Reactor Blanket Simulation Facility
1986-01-01
Laboratory (LLL) ORNL Oak Ridge National Laboratory PPPL Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory RSIC Reactor Shielding Information Center (at ORNL) SS...Module (LBM) to be placed in the TFTR at PPPL . Jassby et al. describe the program, including design, manufacturing techniques. neutronics analyses, and
Lessons Learned: Reflections of a University President
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bowen, William G.
2010-01-01
"Lessons Learned" gives unprecedented access to the university president's office, providing a unique set of reflections on the challenges involved in leading both research universities and liberal arts colleges. In this landmark book, William Bowen, former president of Princeton University and of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and…
Druliner, A.D.; Mason, J.P.
2001-01-01
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Lower Platte South Natural Resources District, conducted a hydrogeologic and water-quality reconnaissance study of the five principal aquifers in deposits of Quaternary age in the Natural Resources District. The purpose of the study was to delineate the approximate extent of the aquifers, to estimate volumes of drainable water in three aquifers, to provide information that could be useful in designing future ground-water-quality monitoring, and to determine baseline water-quality conditions in the aquifers, focusing on nitrate concentrations. The approximate lateral boundaries of the Dwight-Valparaiso, Crete-Princeton-Adams, and Waverly aquifers were defined as areas in which the thickness of continuous sand and gravel deposits was less than 40 feet. The three aquifers were determined to contain about 1,340,000; 1,540,000; and 172,000 acre-feet of drainable water, respectively, assuming a specific yield of 0.20. During the summer of 1994, ground-water samples were collected from 46 wells in the five aquifers and analyzed for nitrate and screened for triazine herbicides. Additionally, water samples from 39 of these wells were analyzed for major ions, iron, and manganese, and 35 were analyzed for radon. Water-quality analyses revealed that the water in the five aquifers had specific conductances that ranged from 399 to 2,040 micro-siemens per centimeter and was a calcium-carbonate to calcium-magnesium-sodium carbonate type. The most mineralized water samples were from the Crete-Princeton-Adams aquifer, which contained a median concentration of dissolved solids of 520 milligrams per liter. Concentrations of nitrate in water samples from the aquifers ranged from less than 0.05 to 23 milligrams per liter as nitrogen, and only six water samples exceeded the Maximum Contaminant Level established by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency of 10 milligrams per liter. The median concentration of radon for water samples from the five aquifers was 300 picocuries per liter, which is the proposed Maximum Contaminant Level. Water samples from the Crete-Princeton-Adams and Waverly aquifers had the largest concentrations of radon among the five aquifers. The Crete-Princeton-Adams aquifer had a median concentration of 440 picocuries per liter, and the Waverly aquifer had a median concentration of 390 picocuries per liter. Herbicides were detected in water from only six wells, which were in four of the five aquifers. Atrazine, metabolites of atrazine, metolachlor, and metribuzin were detected in concentrations generally less than 1.00 microgram per liter.
Conducting a longitudinal survey of overnight travel : methods and preliminary findings.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2015-06-01
This report summarizes the implementation and initial results of the Longitudinal : Study of Overnight Travel (LSOT), conducted monthly between February 2013 and : February 2014 using an online survey instrument developed by researchers at the : Univ...
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Jones, William R., Jr.
1987-01-01
The tribological behavior of several polyphenyl ethers and polyphenyl thioethers is reported. Tribological areas covered include: surface tension and wettability measurements, boundary lubrication, ferrography, thermal and oxidative stability and chemiluminescence.
ORD BBS USER'S MANUAL - VERSION 2.0
The Office of Research and Development's Electronic Bulletin Board System (BBS or ''Board") is designed to facilitate the exchange of technical information and ORD products among EPA Headquarters, laboratory and Regional staff and contractors; States; other Federal agencies, univ...
Improving traffic safety culture in Iowa : phase II.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-07-01
Phase II of Improving Traffic Safety Culture in Iowa focuses on producing actions that will improve the traffic safety culture across the state, and involves collaboration among the three large public universities in Iowa: Iowa State University, Univ...
Global Emerging Sciences and Technology Assessment
2015-12-21
institutions, laboratories, and individual scientists/ technologists worth considering for AFOSR investment. In addition, recommendations will be...Thailand), Indian Inst. of Tech. Madras, and Taipei Medical Univ. (Taiwan). The entire list of 300 top universities in Asia can be found at http
Research implementation of the SMART SIGNAL system on Trunk Highway (TH) 13.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2013-02-01
In our previous research, the SMART-SIGNAL (Systematic Monitoring of Arterial Road Traffic and Signals) : system that can collect event-based traffic data and generate comprehensive performance measures has been : successfully developed by the Univer...
The Shock and Vibration Digest. Volume 13, Number 5
1981-05-01
Ducts................ 82 Numerical Methods..107 VEHICLE SYSTEMS ........ 51 Building Components..85 Parameter Identification. . 107 Groud Veicls ...in Hybrid Systems Beam Vibrations W. Wed ig 68 Inst. for Technical Mechanics, Univ. of Karlsruhe, CYLINDERS Recent Advances in Structural Dynamics
Evaluation of the intelligent cruise control system. Volume 2, Appendices
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
1999-10-01
The Intelligent Cruise Control (ICC) system evaluation was sponsored by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and based on an ICC Field Operational Test (FOT) conducted under a cooperative agreement between the NHTSA and the Univ...
Components of self-esteem in affective patients and non-psychiatric controls.
Serretti, Alessandro; Olgiati, Paolo; Colombo, Cristina
2005-09-01
Decrease in self-esteem (SE) is found in all mood disorders during inter-episode phases. This trait was associated with relapse and suicidality but its genetic basis is still undefined, probably because SE has multiple components. The aim of the current study was to ascertain which of those components were altered in a sample of affective patients. Three hundred and thirty-one outpatients with bipolar (N=199) and major depressive MD (N=132) disorders in remission for at least three months and one hundred controls completed the Rosenberg Self-esteem Scale (RSE; [Rosenberg, M., 1965. The measurement of self-esteem, Society and the Adolescent Self-Image. Princeton University Press, pp.16-36]). Principal component analysis was performed to identify RSE factor structure. Extracted factors were compared across case and control groups in the whole sample (N=431) and in a sub-sample (N=301) with low self-esteem (RSE <20). PCA yielded a two-factor solution with self-confidence (SC) and self-deprecation (SD) that was largely consistent with the existing literature. Such factors were both associated with lower scores in affective patients than controls (SC: F=52, p<0.01; SD: F=43, p<0.01). However in the low RSE group only self-confidence was found to be decreased in subjects with mood disorders (SC: F=13.8, p<0.01; SD: F=0.05, p=0.9). These findings suggest that self-esteem deficit in affective disorders might involve specific components. Implications for research and clinical practice are discussed.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Viola, M. E.; Brown, T.; Heitzenroeder, P.
The National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX) is being constructed at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) in conjunction with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). The goal of this experiment is to develop a device which has the steady state properties of a traditional stellarator along with the high performance characteristics of a tokamak. A key element of this device is its highly shaped Inconel 625 vacuum vessel. This paper describes the manufacturing of the vessel. The vessel is being fabricated by Major Tool and Machine, Inc. (MTM) in three identical 120º vessel segments, corresponding to the three NCSX fieldmore » periods, in order to accommodate assembly of the device. The port extensions are welded on, leak checked, cut off within 1" of the vessel surface at MTM and then reattached at PPPL, to accommodate assembly of the close-fitting modular coils that surround the vessel. The 120º vessel segments are formed by welding two 60º segments together. Each 60º segment is fabricated by welding ten press-formed panels together over a collapsible welding fixture which is needed to precisely position the panels. The vessel is joined at assembly by welding via custom machined 8" (20.3 cm) wide spacer "spool pieces." The vessel must have a total leak rate less than 5 X 10-6 t-l/s, magnetic permeability less than 1.02μ, and its contours must be within 0.188" (4.76 mm). It is scheduled for completion in January 2006.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Swap, R. J.; Sabea, H.; Annegarn, H.; Ford, C.; Netshandama-Funyufunyu, V.; Omara-Ojungu, P.; Vaz, K.; Ribeiro, N.; Twine, W.; Terni, C.; Estes, L.
2005-12-01
We describe an interdisciplinary course for non-specialist undergraduates in which the students experience firsthand issues of regional environmental complexity and have the unique opportunity to gain insight into the role the environment plays in shaping the people and culture of southern Africa. Undergraduates receive 3 hours of credit both in Environmental Science and Anthropology for the ``People, Culture and Environment of Southern Africa" study abroad program. The program is an intensive introduction to the physical geography, history and culture of the region and involves an intensive blend of in-class lectures and field trips with daily debriefing discussions. Over the duration of the 30 day program, students are exposed to elements of geology, ecology, hydrology and atmospheric science and how the interconnectedness of these different aspects of the physical environment help shape the history of the people and their culture in the region. Information about logistics and course development as well as to how this summer study abroad program has contributed to the development and expansion of the Southern Africa Virginia Networks and Associations (SAVANA) consortium will be detailed. The program builds upon more than 12 years of relationships between UVA faculty and their southern African colleagues developed during the course of several regional scale research programs with the most recent being the Southern African Regional Science Initiative - SAFARI 2000. Students enrolled with the UVA program are joined by their counterparts and interact with faculty from institutional partners both in the classroom and in the field. Participants operate out of four major locations: Johannesburg, RSA (Univ. of the Witwatersrand); Thohoyondou, RSA (Univ. of Venda); Maputo, MOZ (Univ. of Eduardo Mondlane); and Acornhoek, RSA (Univ. of the Witwatersrand - Rural Facility). Class size is limited to 15 students from UVA and about 6 SAVANA consortium students. This pairing with SAVANA students provides a unique, `round-the clock' learning experience for both U.S. and southern African students. Program participants have come from a variety of student backgrounds and majors including: Anthropology, African American Affairs, Architecture, Biology, English, Environmental Thought and Practice, Environmental Science, History, International Relations, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology and Women's Studies. Many course alumni have participated in Peace Corps, Teach for America, Americorps as well as to volunteer in South Africa or have pursued graduate degrees often related to various aspects of their experience.
Low Temperature, Chloroaluminate Thermal Cells.
1981-11-01
Thermal Batteries ", AFWAL-TR-81-2044, Aeropropulsion Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, June 1981. 5. J. C. Nardi, J. K. Erbacher, C. L. Hussey, and L...R. L. Vaughn, L. A. King, Proc. of the 29th Power Sources Symp, The Electrochemical Society, Princeton, NJ, June 1980. 4. D. M. Ryan, " Advanced
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-08-29
... Funds Trust and Equinox Institutional Asset Management LP; Notice of Application August 23, 2013. AGENCY...: Equinox Funds Trust (the ``Trust'') and Equinox Institutional Asset Management LP (the ``Initial Adviser... Institutional Asset Management LP, 47 Hulfish Street, Suite 510, Princeton, NJ 08542; Daniel Prezioso, Equinox...
Community-Based Research and Student Development: An Interview with Trisha Thorme
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
O'Shea, Joseph
2012-01-01
A growing number of universities have implemented community-based research pedagogy into their undergraduate education. Integrating academic training with community engagement has the potential to engage students in a way volunteering may not. This interview with Trisha Thorme, an anthropologist and assistant director of Princeton University's…
Interior view of the northwest end corridor, showing doors and ...
Interior view of the northwest end corridor, showing doors and barred openings to former fan and engine rooms (now garage) and entry to northwest gun chamber (labeled "Gun Turret No. One") - U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Battery Adair, Princeton Place, Pearl City, Honolulu County, HI
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gott, Richard J.
2002-05-01
This excerpt is from a book written by J. Richard Gott III titled Time Travel in Einstein's Universe. He describes what it would be like to travel through space and time by way of wormholes. The author is a professor of astrophysical sciences at Princeton University and a leading expert in the physics of time travel.
Learning by Doing: The Challenge of Engaging Undergraduates in Economics Research
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brunnermeier, Smita
2017-01-01
This article describes strategies developed at Princeton University to foster and promote research by all undergraduate students majoring in economics. It describes core features of the undergraduate research program and provides tangible recommendations for addressing resource constraints, and for incentivizing faculty advisors and students to…
1983-01-01
34 for these controllers: the remote words required appear On the system bus vithout having been requested, as if the controllers has ExtraSensory ... Perception .) In any case, the processor is not aware of the ESP controller (except for time delays); it operates as if it had a long bus linking it to all
75 FR 80346 - Flutolanil; Pesticide Tolerances
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-12-22
... turnip greens. The Interregional Research Project Number 4 requested these tolerances under the Federal... the Interregional Research Project No. 4 (IR-4), 500 College Road East, Suite 201W, Princeton, NJ... susceptibility of rat or rabbit fetuses to in utero exposure or rat pups to pre- and post-natal exposure to...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
DeBuvitz, William
2014-01-01
I am a volunteer reader at the Princeton unit of "Learning Ally" (formerly "Recording for the Blind & Dyslexic") and I recently discovered that high school students are introduced to the concept of quantization well before they take chemistry and physics. For the past few months I have been reading onto computer files a…
Training College Wilderness Leaders.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Curtis, Rick
College outdoor program leaders are often paraprofessionals, who may have less training than professional outdoor educators, yet must deal with the same types of problems on the trail. This paper describes the Outdoor Action (OA) Program at Princeton University, and outlines the training assessment and development model used to train OA program…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-04-20
...., Princeton, NJ 08540 on behalf of Arkion Life Sciences, 551 Mews Drive, Suite J, New Castle, DE 19720...) 3055407, e-mail address: [email protected] . 3. PP 1F7836. (EPA-HQ-OPP-2011-0283). Dow AgroSciences, LLC...
Rites of Passage or Unwanted Traditions?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Reisberg, Leo
2000-01-01
Reports on efforts at several colleges (Ithaca College, New York; Princeton University, New Jersey; Luther College, Iowa; and Vassar College, New York) to end such school traditions as nude streaking or naked soccer, usually accompanied by heavy drinking. School officials see such activities as significant threats to students' health and safety.…
76 FR 8906 - Final Flood Elevation Determinations
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-02-16
... from the requirements of 44 CFR part 10, Environmental Consideration. An environmental impact... downstream of Lock and of Buffalo, City of Dam No. 15. Davenport, City of Le Claire, City of Princeton, City... West 4th Street, Davenport, IA 52801. City of Le Claire Maps are available for inspection at 325...
One Hundred Years of College Mental Health
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kraft, David P.
2011-01-01
Although the first student health service is credited to Amherst College in 1861, almost 50 years passed before Princeton University established the first mental health service in 1910. At that time, a psychiatrist was hired to help with student personality development. Although other schools subsequently established such services, the first 50…
EMP Design Guidelines for Naval Ship Systems
1975-08-22
le xc Ci .ube irret i Type FXC it LA 38 Beads 4 * 1 svj- I * 1 1 \\ Measured 3( )0 Beads V i i V 30 Bead 1 s...ATTN: R. W. Rostrom RCA Corporation Government & Commercial Systems Astro Electronics Division P. 0. Box 800 Princeton, New Jersey 08540 ATTN
Cockpit voice recognition program at Princeton University
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Huang, C. Y.
1983-01-01
Voice recognition technology (VRT) is applied to aeronautics, particularly on the pilot workload alleviation. The VRT does not have to prove its maturity any longer. The feasibility of voice tuning of radio and DME are demonstrated since there are immediate advantages to the pilot and can be completed in a reasonable time.
2009-01-01
Stuart Antman © Copyright by [Ananthanarayanan Veeraragavan] [2009...Engineering, Univ. Maryland. I thank the other members of my advisory committee (Professors Antman , Marshall, Akin, and Jackson) for their willingness
GENETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY AND EXPERIMENTAL INDUCTION OF PULMONARY DISEASE
Genetic Susceptibility and Experimental Induction of Pulmonary Disease. UP Kodavanti, MC Schladweiler, AD Ledbetter, PS Gilmour, P Evansky, KR Smith*, WP Watkinson, DL Costa, KE Pinkerton*. ETD, NHEERL, ORD, US EPA, RTP, NC; *Univ California, Davis, CA, USA.
Conventional la...
Anxiety and Overgener a lization: Negative Results
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Murray, E. Neil
1969-01-01
Research supported in part by a United States Public Health Service grant. Article based on a PhD thesis submitted to the University of Pittsburgh. Reprints from: E.N. Murray, Dept of Psychology, State Univ of N.Y., Buffalo, N.Y.