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2003

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Articles 1441 - 1470 of 3876

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Comparing The Higgs Sector Of Electroweak Theory With The Scalar Sector Of Low Energy Qcd, Joseph Schechter, Abdou Abdel-Rehim, Deirdre Black, Amir H. Fariborz, Salah Nasri May 2003

Comparing The Higgs Sector Of Electroweak Theory With The Scalar Sector Of Low Energy Qcd, Joseph Schechter, Abdou Abdel-Rehim, Deirdre Black, Amir H. Fariborz, Salah Nasri

Physics - All Scholarship

We first review how the simple K-matrix unitarized linear SU(2) sigma model can explain the experimental data in the scalar pi pi scattering channel of QCD up to about 800 MeV. Since it is just a scaled version of the minimal electroweak Higgs sector, which is often treated with the same unitarization method, we interpret the result as support for this approach in the electroweak model with scaled values of tree level Higgs mass up to at least about 2 TeV. We further note that the relevant QCD effective Lagrangian which fits the data to still higher energies using the …


Scaling Violations And Determination Of ΑS From Jet Production In Γp Interactions At Hera, S. Chekanov, D. Krakauer, J. H. Loizides, S. Magill, B. Musgrave, J. Repond, R. Yoshida, Margarita C. K. Mattingly, P. Antonioli, G. Bari, M. Basile, L. Bellagamba, D. Boscherini, A. Bruni, G. Bruni, G. Cara Romeo, L. Cifarelli, F. Cindolo, A. Contin, M. Corradi, S. De Pasquale, P. Giusti, G. Iacobucci, A. Margotti, R. Nania, F. Palmonari, A. Pesci, G. Sartorelli, A. Zichichi, G. Aghuzumtsyan, D. Bartsch May 2003

Scaling Violations And Determination Of ΑS From Jet Production In Γp Interactions At Hera, S. Chekanov, D. Krakauer, J. H. Loizides, S. Magill, B. Musgrave, J. Repond, R. Yoshida, Margarita C. K. Mattingly, P. Antonioli, G. Bari, M. Basile, L. Bellagamba, D. Boscherini, A. Bruni, G. Bruni, G. Cara Romeo, L. Cifarelli, F. Cindolo, A. Contin, M. Corradi, S. De Pasquale, P. Giusti, G. Iacobucci, A. Margotti, R. Nania, F. Palmonari, A. Pesci, G. Sartorelli, A. Zichichi, G. Aghuzumtsyan, D. Bartsch

Faculty Publications

Differential cross sections for jet photoproduction in the reaction ep → e jet X have been measured with the ZEUS detector at HERA using 82.2 pb-1 of integrated luminosity. Inclusive jet cross sections are presented as a function of the jet transverse energy, ETjet, for jets with ETjet > 17 GeV and pseudorapidity -1 <ηjet >


Institutional Structure Of The New Jersey Coastal Zone Management Program, Urban Harbors Institute, University Of Massachusetts Boston May 2003

Institutional Structure Of The New Jersey Coastal Zone Management Program, Urban Harbors Institute, University Of Massachusetts Boston

Urban Harbors Institute Publications

A discussion paper prepared as part of a series of focus groups on the topic of the Institutional Structure of the New Jersey Coastal Zone Management Program.

The federal Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 (CZMA), since amended, was established to help states and territories to develop and implement comprehensive coastal management programs formed around “enforceable policies”— the establishment of guiding principles and policies that are supported by a regulatory program. These enforceable policies also drive planning, funding, and outreach efforts by a state’s program.


Steps Toward The Creation Of A Carbon Nanotube Single Electron Transistor, R. Matthew Ferguson May 2003

Steps Toward The Creation Of A Carbon Nanotube Single Electron Transistor, R. Matthew Ferguson

Pomona Senior Theses

This report details work toward the fabrication of a single-electron transistor created from a single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT). Specifically discussed is a method for growing carbon nanotubes (CNTs) via carbon vapor deposition (CVD). The growth is catalyzed by a solution of 0.02g Fe(NO3)3·9H2O, 0.005g MoO2(acac)2, and 0.015g of alumina particles in 15mL methanol. SWNT diameter ranges from 0.6 to 3.0 nm. Also discussed is a method to control nanotube growth location by patterning samples with small islands of catalyst. A novel “maskless” photolithographic process is used to focus light from a lightweight commercial digital projector through a microscope. Catalyst islands …


Maskless Projection Lithography, J. David Musgraves May 2003

Maskless Projection Lithography, J. David Musgraves

Pomona Senior Theses

Photolithography is a key element of the modem integrated circuit process. It is photolithography, combined with metal deposition, that allows a three dimensional circuit to be built up on a two dimensional surface. Since it is such an important part of the semiconductor manufacturing industry, a massive base of research in this area already exists. The problem with this pre-existing research is that it is geared solely toward industrial purposes, as opposed to more academic research areas. The goal of my research is to move this industrial process into the academic setting of Pomom College.


Little Venice Water Quality Monitoring 2002 Annual Report, Ronald Jones, Joseph N. Boyer May 2003

Little Venice Water Quality Monitoring 2002 Annual Report, Ronald Jones, Joseph N. Boyer

SERC Research Reports

No abstract provided.


Steps Toward The Creation Of A Carbon Nanotube Single Electron Transistor, R. Matthew Ferguson May 2003

Steps Toward The Creation Of A Carbon Nanotube Single Electron Transistor, R. Matthew Ferguson

Pomona Senior Theses

This report details work toward the fabrication of a single-electron transistor created from a single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT). Specifically discussed is a method for growing carbon nanotubes (CNTs) via carbon vapor deposition (CVD). The growth is catalyzed by a solution of 0.02g Fe(NO3)3·9H2O, 0.005g MoO2(acac)2, and 0.015g of alumina particles in 15mL methanol. SWNT diameter ranges from 0.6 to 3.0 nm. Also discussed is a method to control nanotube growth location by patterning samples with small islands of catalyst. A novel “maskless” photolithographic process is used to focus light from a lightweight commercial digital projector through a microscope. Catalyst islands …


Energetic Baroclinic Super-Tidal Oscillations On The Southeast Florida Shelf, Alexander Soloviev, Mark E. Luther, Robert H. Weisberg May 2003

Energetic Baroclinic Super-Tidal Oscillations On The Southeast Florida Shelf, Alexander Soloviev, Mark E. Luther, Robert H. Weisberg

Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Articles

Historical and recent data reveal a very energetic regime on the shelf off southeast Florida. In addition to spin off eddies, large-amplitude tidal velocity fluctuations with amplitudes exceeding 0.5 ms−1 are observed. Recent exploratory measurements conducted as a part of the South Florida Ocean Measurement Center (SFOMC) show that the time scale of these oscillations is about 10 hrs. This period does not coincide either with the inertial period (27 Hrs) or with the semidiurnal M2 (12.42 hrs) or S2 (12 hrs) tidal constituents. In addition, these internal oscillations appear to be modulated seasonally. A possible explanation …


Reply To "Comment On ‘Atomic Spectral Line Free-Parameter Deconvolution Procedure’”, Vladimir Milosavljevic, Goran Poparic May 2003

Reply To "Comment On ‘Atomic Spectral Line Free-Parameter Deconvolution Procedure’”, Vladimir Milosavljevic, Goran Poparic

Articles

We do not agree with the authors of the preceding Comment [X. Nikolic, X. Ojurovic, and X. Mijatovic, Phys. Rev. E, 67, 058401, 2003]. Our numerical procedure for the deconvolution of the theoretical asymmetric convolution integral of a Gaussian and a plasma broadened spectral line profile jA,R(λ) for spectral lines enables the determination of all broadening parameters. All broadening parameters can be determined directly from the recorded line profile of a single line, with minimal assumptions or prior knowledge. Additional experimental diagnostics are not required.


Collaborative Research: Did The Laurentine Ice Sheet Control Abrupt Climate Change?, Terence J. Hughes, James L. Fastook, David Bromwich, E. Richard Toracinta May 2003

Collaborative Research: Did The Laurentine Ice Sheet Control Abrupt Climate Change?, Terence J. Hughes, James L. Fastook, David Bromwich, E. Richard Toracinta

University of Maine Office of Research Administration: Grant Reports

This is a collaborative project with the University of Maine and Ohio State University. The Principal Investigators will model the late glacial Laurentide Ice Sheet from near steady-state equilibrium at - 25,000 BP (years before present), through reversible stadial/interstadial transitions associated with Laurentide iceberg outbursts (Heinrich events 2 and 1), and across the threshold of irreversible Laurentide collapse after the last iceberg outburst at - 1 1,000 BP (Heinrich event 0). The goals are to determine if ice-sheet changes could have triggered climate changes by abrupt ice sheet change and to investigate the structure of these changes. The Principal Investigators …


Mixtures Of Varying Coefficient Models For Longitudinal Data With Discrete Or Continuous Non-Ignorable Dropout, Joseph W. Hogan, Xihong Lin, Benjamin A. Herman May 2003

Mixtures Of Varying Coefficient Models For Longitudinal Data With Discrete Or Continuous Non-Ignorable Dropout, Joseph W. Hogan, Xihong Lin, Benjamin A. Herman

The University of Michigan Department of Biostatistics Working Paper Series

The analysis of longitudinal repeated measures data is frequently complicated by missing data due to informative dropout. We describe a mixture model for joint distribution for longitudinal repeated measures, where the dropout distribution may be continuous and the dependence between response and dropout is semiparametric. Specifically, we assume that responses follow a varying coefficient random effects model conditional on dropout time, where the regression coefficients depend on dropout time through unspecified nonparametric functions that are estimated using step functions when dropout time is discrete (e.g., for panel data) and using smoothing splines when dropout time is continuous. Inference under the …


Spatial Inhomogeneity Of Imprint And Switching Behavior In Ferroelectric Capacitors, Alexei Gruverman, B. J. Rodriguez, A. I. Kingon, R. J. Nemanich, J. S. Cross, M. Tsukada May 2003

Spatial Inhomogeneity Of Imprint And Switching Behavior In Ferroelectric Capacitors, Alexei Gruverman, B. J. Rodriguez, A. I. Kingon, R. J. Nemanich, J. S. Cross, M. Tsukada

Alexei Gruverman Publications

Piezoresponse force microscopy has been used to perform nanoscale characterization of the spatial variations in the imprint and switching behavior of (111)-oriented Pb(Zr,Ti)O3-based capacitors on Pt electrodes. Mapping of polarization distribution in the poled capacitors as well as local d33–V loop measurements revealed a significant difference in imprint and switching behavior between the peripheral and inner parts of the capacitors. It has been found that the inner regions of the capacitors are negatively imprinted (with the preferential direction of the normal component of polarization upward) and tend to switch back after application of the positive poling …


Coolest Mud Ever, Kevin Radloff May 2003

Coolest Mud Ever, Kevin Radloff

Honors Theses

MUDs, or Multi-User Dungeons, are text-based online multiplayer roleplaying games. Players type commands that allow them to interact with other players in a virtual world, and also interact with the world itself, for example, picking up objects or casting spells. The goal of The Coolest MUD Ever (CME) was to build the basis of an event driven and completely extensible MUD engine with unheard of levels of environmental realism. Whereas other MUDs are organized as a set of distinct nodes in which gameplay occurs exclusively of each other node, my MUD will blur the lines between nodes. While players still …


Extending Csp To Disambiguate Linda Predicate Operations, Kyle Burke May 2003

Extending Csp To Disambiguate Linda Predicate Operations, Kyle Burke

Honors Theses

The Tuple Space communication environment is plagued by the apparent ambiguity present in the predicate operations of Linda, the programming extension used to implement Tuple Space. It bas been shown that by using a method of reasoning which describes only sequentialized traces of events, it is unclear what a failed predicate operation actually means. Using an operational semantics model of Tuple Space, an analysis of the predicate operations using a description of events occurring simultaneously has disambiguated the meanings of the failure cases. Here an algebraic model is provided, using the Communicating Sequential Process (CSP) process algebra as a base. …


Semiparametric Regression Models With Missing Data: The Mathematics In The Work Of Robins Et Al., Menggang Yu, Bin Nan May 2003

Semiparametric Regression Models With Missing Data: The Mathematics In The Work Of Robins Et Al., Menggang Yu, Bin Nan

The University of Michigan Department of Biostatistics Working Paper Series

This review is an attempt to understand the landmark papers of Robins, Rotnitzky, and Zhao (1994) and Robins and Rotnitzky (1992). We revisit their main results and corresponding proofs using the theory outlined in the monograph by Bickel, Klaassen, Ritov, and Wellner (1993). We also discuss an illustrative example to show the details of applying these theoretical results.


Bounds On Total Domination Subdivision Numbers., Lora Shuler Hopkins May 2003

Bounds On Total Domination Subdivision Numbers., Lora Shuler Hopkins

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The domination subdivision number of a graph is the minimum number of edges that must be subdivided in order to increase the domination number of the graph. Likewise, the total domination subdivision number is the minimum number of edges that must be subdivided in order to increase the total domination number. First, this thesis provides a complete survey of established bounds on the domination subdivision number and the total domination subdivision number. Then in Chapter 4, new results regarding bounds on the total domination subdivision number are given. Finally, a characterization of the total domination subdivision number of caterpillars is …


Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of The H178a Methionyl Aminopeptidase From Escherichia Coli, Alicja J. Copik, Sabina I. Swierczek, W. Todd Lowther, Ventris M. D'Souza, Brian W. Matthews, Richard C. Holz May 2003

Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of The H178a Methionyl Aminopeptidase From Escherichia Coli, Alicja J. Copik, Sabina I. Swierczek, W. Todd Lowther, Ventris M. D'Souza, Brian W. Matthews, Richard C. Holz

Chemistry Faculty Research and Publications

To gain insight into the role of the strictly conserved histidine residue, H178, in the reaction mechanism of the methionyl aminopeptidase from Escherichia coli (EcMetAP-I), the H178A mutant enzyme was prepared. Metal-reconstituted H178A binds only one equivalent of Co(II) or Fe(II) tightly with affinities that are identical to the WT enzyme based on kinetic and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) data. Electronic absorption spectra of Co(II)-loaded H178A EcMetAP-I indicate that the active site divalent metal ion is pentacoordinate, identical to the WT enzyme. These data indicate that the metal binding site has not been affected by altering H178. …


Categorizing Non-Functional Requirements Using A Hierarchy In Uml., James David Moody May 2003

Categorizing Non-Functional Requirements Using A Hierarchy In Uml., James David Moody

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Non-functional requirements (NFRs) are a subset of requirements, the means by which software system developers and clients communicate about the functionality of the system to be built. This paper has three main parts: first, an overview of how non-functional requirements relate to software engineering is given, along with a survey of NFRs in the software engineering literature. Second, a collection of 161 NFRs is diagrammed using the Unified Modelling Language, forming a tool with which developers may more easily identify and write additional NFRs. Third, a lesson plan is presented, a learning module intended for an undergraduate software engineering curriculum. …


Parameter Estimation For A Modified Cable Model Using A Green's Function And Eigenvalue Perturbation., Scott Lewis La Voie May 2003

Parameter Estimation For A Modified Cable Model Using A Green's Function And Eigenvalue Perturbation., Scott Lewis La Voie

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

In this thesis we developed the Green's Function for a tapered equivalent cylinder model of dendritic electrical propagation. We then use the Green's Function to develop a Carleman linear embedding scheme which is used to estimate the effects of a nonlinear ion channel hot-spot on the tapered cylinder solution. Mathematica© was used to implement the Carleman embedding scheme.


Factors In The Design And Development Of A Data Warehouse For Academic Data., Margaret C. Lester May 2003

Factors In The Design And Development Of A Data Warehouse For Academic Data., Margaret C. Lester

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Data warehousing is a relatively new field in the realm of information technology, and current research centers primarily around data warehousing in business environments. As new as the field is in these environments, only recently have educational institutions begun to embark on data warehousing projects, and little research has been done regarding the special considerations and characteristics of academic data, and the complexity of analyzing such data. Educational institutions measure success very differently from business-oriented organizations, and the analyses that are meaningful in such environments pose very unique and intricate problems in data warehousing. This research describes the process of …


Healthcare Enterprise Process Development And Integration, Kemafor Anyanwu, Amit P. Sheth, Jorge Cardoso, John A. Miller, Krzysztof J. Kochut May 2003

Healthcare Enterprise Process Development And Integration, Kemafor Anyanwu, Amit P. Sheth, Jorge Cardoso, John A. Miller, Krzysztof J. Kochut

Kno.e.sis Publications

Healthcare enterprises involve complex processes that span diverse groups and organisations. These processes involve clinical and administrative tasks, large volumes of data, and large numbers of patients and personnel. The tasks can be performed either by humans or by automated systems. In the latter case, the tasks are supported by a variety of software applications and information systems which are very often heterogeneous, autonomous, and distributed. The development of systems to manage and automate these processes has increasingly played an important role in improving the efficiency of healthcare enterprises. In this paper we look at four healthcare and medical applications …


Synthesis Of Novel [3, 2-B] Indole Fused Oleanolic Acids As Potential Inhibitors Of Cell Proliferation, Heather J. Finlay, Tadashi Honda, Gordon W. Gribble May 2003

Synthesis Of Novel [3, 2-B] Indole Fused Oleanolic Acids As Potential Inhibitors Of Cell Proliferation, Heather J. Finlay, Tadashi Honda, Gordon W. Gribble

Dartmouth Scholarship

Seven new indole-fused oleanolic acid derivatives were synthesized from oleanolic acid for their ability to inhibit cell proliferation in NRP. 152 cells.


A Lattice Study Of The Two-Dimensional Wess Zumino Model, Simon Catterall, Sergey Karamov May 2003

A Lattice Study Of The Two-Dimensional Wess Zumino Model, Simon Catterall, Sergey Karamov

Physics - All Scholarship

We present results from a numerical simulation of the two-dimensional Euclidean Wess-Zumino model. In the continuum the theory possesses N=1 supersymmetry. The lattice model we employ was analyzed by Golterman and Petcher in \cite{susy} where a perturbative proof was given that the continuum supersymmetric Ward identities are recovered without finite tuning in the limit of vanishing lattice spacing. Our simulations demonstrate the existence of important non-perturbative effects in finite volumes which modify these conclusions. It appears that in certain regions of parameter space the vacuum state can contain solitons corresponding to field configurations which interpolate between different classical vacua. In …


A Preemption-Based Meta-Scheduling System For Distributed Computing, Sathish Vadhiyar May 2003

A Preemption-Based Meta-Scheduling System For Distributed Computing, Sathish Vadhiyar

Doctoral Dissertations

This research aims at designing and building a scheduling framework for distributed computing systems with the primary objectives of providing fast response times to the users, delivering high system throughput and accommodating maximum number of applications into the systems. The author claims that the above mentioned objectives are the most important objectives for scheduling in recent distributed computing systems, especially Grid computing environments.

In order to achieve the objectives of the scheduling framework, the scheduler employs arbitration of application-level schedules and preemption of executing jobs under certain conditions. In application-level scheduling, the user develops a schedule for his application using …


Studies Of Electroosmotic Flow Dynamics During Electrophoretic Separations, Jason Lasseter Pittman May 2003

Studies Of Electroosmotic Flow Dynamics During Electrophoretic Separations, Jason Lasseter Pittman

Doctoral Dissertations

Instrumentation and techniques for monitoring electroosmotic flow (EOF) during capillary electrophoretic (CE) separations in both fused-silica capillaries and glass microfluidic devices are presented. These techniques were applied under conventional and sample stacking separation conditions. The instrumentation developed for monitoring EOF was also used to develop optically gated vacancy separations in microfluidic devices.

A recently developed technique for monitoring EOF in capillary electrophoresis by periodic photobleaching of a neutral fluorophore added to the running buffer was further characterized and optimized and then applied to monitoring EOF during a typical capillary electrophoresis separation. The concentration of neutral fluorophore (rhodamine B) added to …


The Role Of Surface States In Electron-Phonon Coupling On The Open Surfaces Of Simple Metals, Shu-Jung Tang May 2003

The Role Of Surface States In Electron-Phonon Coupling On The Open Surfaces Of Simple Metals, Shu-Jung Tang

Doctoral Dissertations

Symmetry is the beauty of nature. It is the mirror of the way nature minimizes the energy of the system, and achieves the stable state. In the bulk crystal, 3D symmetry has ensured the minimum of free energy contributed by electrostatic energy, vibrational energy and many body self-energy. When the crystal is broken to form two surfaces, the 3D symmetry is destroyed, leading to high free energy on the surface. In order to minimize the free energy, the electronic charge on or near the surface rearranges to form an electronic and lattice structure quite distinct from the bulk. My research …


“Applications Of Coherent Electron Beams, Alexander Erwin Thesen May 2003

“Applications Of Coherent Electron Beams, Alexander Erwin Thesen

Doctoral Dissertations

The use of coherent beams for interferometric measurements has gained great popularity in light optics over the last several decades. The availability of coherent electron sources has now opened the door to apply the concept of holographic imaging in many new areas. Off-axis holograms can now be recorded in field emission transmission electron microscopes equipped with the electron optical equivalent of a biprism. This technique allows the accurate retrieval of phase and amplitude of the electron wave, which has been transmitted through a sample. The sensitivity of the phase of the electron wave to electrical potentials makes it possible to …


Aspects Of Black Hole Scattering, Suphot Musiri May 2003

Aspects Of Black Hole Scattering, Suphot Musiri

Doctoral Dissertations

We discuss various aspects of black hole scattering. Firstly, we consider nonextremal rotating black branes. We solve the wave equation for a massless scalar field and calculate the absorption cross section. We obtain a function of two temperature parameters once we move away from extremality, which is similar to the case of Kerr- Newman black holes. We discuss the implications of this result to the AdS/CFT correspondence. Secondly, we study a system of maximally-charged slowly-moving black holes and take the limit of a continuous self-interacting matter distribution (black string). We quantize the system by using the path integral method. We …


Can Probabilistic Databases Help Elect Qualified Officials?, Judy Goldsmith, Alex Dekhtyar, Wenzhong Zhao May 2003

Can Probabilistic Databases Help Elect Qualified Officials?, Judy Goldsmith, Alex Dekhtyar, Wenzhong Zhao

Computer Science and Software Engineering

We present a flexible framework for implementing reasoning with uncertainty: Semistructured Probabilistic Databases. This framework bridges the gap between the process of obtaining probabilistic information from data and its use in AI applications by providing the facilities to store and query diverse and complex probabilistic data.


Dvsst: A Dynamic Voltage Scaling Algorithm For Sporadic Tasks, Ala' Adel Qadi, Steve Goddard, Shane Farritor May 2003

Dvsst: A Dynamic Voltage Scaling Algorithm For Sporadic Tasks, Ala' Adel Qadi, Steve Goddard, Shane Farritor

CSE Technical Reports

Dynamic voltage scaling (DVS) algorithms save energy by scaling down the processor frequency when the processor is not fully loaded. Many algorithms have been proposed for periodic and aperiodic task models but none support the canonical sporadic task model. A DVS algorithm, called DVSST, is presented that can be used with sporadic tasks in conjunction with the preemptive EDF scheduling algorithm. The algorithm is proven to guarantee each task meets its deadline while saving the maximum amount of energy possible with processor frequency scaling when tasks execute with their worst-case execution times.
DVSST was implemented in the &#;C/OS-II real-time operating …