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Articles 173641 - 173670 of 295643

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Reference 2001: A Director’S Admonitions, Robert A. Seal Feb 2012

Reference 2001: A Director’S Admonitions, Robert A. Seal

Robert A Seal

Reflections on professional roles and responsibilities are explored, as well as the opportunities and challenges facing academic reference librarians. The information environment has been transformed by technology and the Web, and will continue its exponential change. What's coming? What endures? How will we thrive? Whatever approach we take, it is essential to remember that maintaining the status quo is not good enough to meet the changing needs and expectations of library clientele.


The Fierce Green Fire: Vol. 2 Issue 14, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program Feb 2012

The Fierce Green Fire: Vol. 2 Issue 14, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program

The Fierce Green Fire

No abstract provided.


Cosm News, Georgia Southern University Feb 2012

Cosm News, Georgia Southern University

College of Science and Mathematics News (2012-2019)

  • Georgia Southern University Study Adding Protection to the Coast


Ground-State Characterizations Of Systems Predicted To Exhibit L11 Or L13 Crystal Structures, Lance J. Nelson, Gus L. W. Hart, Stefano Curtarolo Feb 2012

Ground-State Characterizations Of Systems Predicted To Exhibit L11 Or L13 Crystal Structures, Lance J. Nelson, Gus L. W. Hart, Stefano Curtarolo

Faculty Publications

Despite their geometric simplicity, the crystal structures L11 (CuPt) and L13 (CdPt3) do not appear as ground states experimentally, except in Cu-Pt. We investigate the possibility that these phases are ground states in other binary intermetallic systems, but overlooked experimentally. Via the synergy between high-throughput and cluster-expansion computational methods, we conduct a thorough search for systems that may exhibit these phases and calculate order-disorder transition temperatures when they are predicted. High-throughput calculations predict L11 ground states in the systems Ag-Pd, Ag-Pt, Cu-Pt, Pd-Pt, Li-Pd, Li-Pt and L13 ground states in the systems Cd-Pt, Cu-Pt, Pd-Pt, Li-Pd, Li-Pt. Cluster expansions confirm …


Following Student Gaze Patterns In Physical Science Lectures, David Rosengrant, Doug Hearrington, Kerriann Alvarado, Danielle Keeble Feb 2012

Following Student Gaze Patterns In Physical Science Lectures, David Rosengrant, Doug Hearrington, Kerriann Alvarado, Danielle Keeble

Faculty and Research Publications

This study investigates the gaze patterns of undergraduate college students attending a lecture-based physical science class to better understand the relationships between gaze and focus patterns and student attention during class. The investigators used a new eye-tracking product; Tobii Glasses. The glasses eliminate the need for subjects to focus on a computer screen or carry around a backpack-sized recording device, thus giving an investigator the ability to study a broader range of research questions. This investigation includes what students focus on in the classroom (i.e. demonstrations, instructor, notes, board work, and presentations) during a normal lecture, what diverts attention away …


Public Knowledge About Polar Regions Increases While Concerns Remain Unchanged, Lawrence C. Hamilton, Matthew J. Cutler, Andrew P. Schaefer Feb 2012

Public Knowledge About Polar Regions Increases While Concerns Remain Unchanged, Lawrence C. Hamilton, Matthew J. Cutler, Andrew P. Schaefer

The Carsey School of Public Policy at the Scholars' Repository

The authors of this brief conduct the first comparative analysis of the polar questions that were part of the National Opinion Research Center's 2006 and 2010 General Social Survey. Developed by scientists at the National Science Foundation's Office of Polar Programs, these questions covered topics such as climate change, melting ice and rising sea levels, and species extinction. The authors report that the public's knowledge about the north and south polar regions significantly improved between 2006 and 2010--before and after the International Polar Year. In addition, respondents who know more about science in general, and polar facts specifically, tend to …


Secds: A Secure Epc Discovery Services System In Epcglobal Network, Jie Shi, Darren Sim, Yingjiu Li, Robert H. Deng Feb 2012

Secds: A Secure Epc Discovery Services System In Epcglobal Network, Jie Shi, Darren Sim, Yingjiu Li, Robert H. Deng

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

In recent years, the Internet of Things (IOT) has drawn considerable attention from the industrial and research communities. Due to the vast amount of data generated through IOT devices and users, there is an urgent need for an effective search engine to help us make sense of this massive amount of data. With this motivation, we begin our initial works on developing a secure and efficient search engine (SecDS) based on EPC Discovery Services (EPCDS) for EPCglobal network, an integral part of IOT. SecDS is designed to provide a bridge between different partners of supply chains to share information while …


Hierarchical Templates And Their Application To Multimodal Porous Materials Fabrication, Bo Zhao Feb 2012

Hierarchical Templates And Their Application To Multimodal Porous Materials Fabrication, Bo Zhao

Theses and Dissertations

Hierarchical materials offer great promise for high-performance sensors and catalysis carriers. Well-defined hierarchically porous materials are promising candidates for a wide range of applications relating to biosensors, separations, drug delivery, surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS), etc. Research on synthetic methodologies is expanding. However, fabrication of hierarchical porous structures with tunable pore dimension and shape, controllable pore distribution and interconnectivity is still a challenging task in materials science. One of the main tasks of this work is to establish a facile and reliable approach of making well-defined hierarchically porous materials. Then, based on those multimodal porous structures, different functions and applications can …


A Doubling Method For The Generalized Lambda Distribution, Todd C. Headrick, Mohan D. Pant Feb 2012

A Doubling Method For The Generalized Lambda Distribution, Todd C. Headrick, Mohan D. Pant

Mohan Dev Pant

This paper introduces a new family of generalized lambda distributions (GLDs) based on a method of doubling symmetric GLDs. The focus of the development is in the context of L-moments and L-correlation theory. As such, included is the development of a procedure for specifying double GLDs with controlled degrees of L-skew, L-kurtosis, and L-correlations. The procedure can be applied in a variety of settings such as modeling events and Monte Carlo or simulation studies. Further, it is demonstrated that estimates of L-skew, L-kurtosis, and L-correlation are substantially superior to conventional product-moment estimates of skew, kurtosis, and Pearson correlation in terms …


Van Der Waals Density Functional Study Of Co2 Binding In Zeolitic Imidazolate Frameworks, Keith G. Ray, David Olmsted, Ning He, Yao Houndonougbo, Brian B. Laird, Mark Asta Feb 2012

Van Der Waals Density Functional Study Of Co2 Binding In Zeolitic Imidazolate Frameworks, Keith G. Ray, David Olmsted, Ning He, Yao Houndonougbo, Brian B. Laird, Mark Asta

Chemistry and Biochemistry Faculty Publications

The van der Waals density functional (vdW-DF) formalism is employed in a study of the binding energetics for CO2 in a set of five zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) compounds. The ZIF structures investigated share the same RHO-type zeolite topology and metal atoms, but feature imidazolate linkers with different chemical functionalization. Three distinct binding sites are identified, for which the binding energies are found to show different dependencies on the functionalization of the linker molecules. The origin of the variations in the binding energies across the ZIF compounds is discussed through analyses of the binding geometries and charge-density distributions. A comparison …


Dynamics Of The Solvent Exchange Reaction Of Weakly Bound Organic Solvents To Group 6 Transition Metal Carbonyls And The Molybdenum Hexacarbonyl Mediated Pauson-Khand Reaction, Richard J. Gates Feb 2012

Dynamics Of The Solvent Exchange Reaction Of Weakly Bound Organic Solvents To Group 6 Transition Metal Carbonyls And The Molybdenum Hexacarbonyl Mediated Pauson-Khand Reaction, Richard J. Gates

Theses and Dissertations

Many organometallic reactions are solvent-dependent, suggesting solvent molecules interact with reaction intermediates. Studies of the solvent exchange reaction of group 6 transition metal carbonyls with moderately binding ligands have provided insight into these interactions, however, studies of the mechanism for this reaction with weakly binding ligands have not been performed. Experiments were conducted on the nanosecond time scale in methylcyclohexane over the temperature range of 4 to 44 °C using Step Scan FTIR (SS FTIR) spectroscopy with weakly binding ligands benzene and mesitylene. Upon photolysis of the metal hexacarbonyls, the kinetically favored product (M(CO)5(solv)), decays following pseudo-first-order kinetics to the …


Hydrologic And Microclimate Characterizations Of Thornton’S Cave, West-Central Florida (Usa), Dorien K. Mcgee Feb 2012

Hydrologic And Microclimate Characterizations Of Thornton’S Cave, West-Central Florida (Usa), Dorien K. Mcgee

Studia UBB Geologia

A cave’s environment is controlled by a suite of factors unique to the environments in which they formed, including, but not limited to, regional geologic and climate settings. These factors collectively owe to wide variations in cave biology, geomorphology and overall speleogenesis. This report combines local climate, hydrologic, and CO2 data collected over the course of a two-year study at Thornton’s Cave, a partially-flooded cave in the West-Central Florida karst belt, to characterize its current environment and yield insight regarding how changes in regional climate and hydrology impact its past and future speleogenesis. Data loggers continuously monitoring cave and …


Sedimentary Succesion Of The Lower Cretaceous Deposits From The North-Western Part Of Pădurea Craiului (Apuseni Mountains, Romania), Daniel F. Lazar, Ioan I. Bucur, Ioan Cociuba, Emanoil Sasaran Feb 2012

Sedimentary Succesion Of The Lower Cretaceous Deposits From The North-Western Part Of Pădurea Craiului (Apuseni Mountains, Romania), Daniel F. Lazar, Ioan I. Bucur, Ioan Cociuba, Emanoil Sasaran

Studia UBB Geologia

Within the general succession of the Lower Cretaceous deposits from the Vârciorog-Dobreşti area (Pădurea Craiului Mountains), carbonate and terrigenous deposits were identified. The limestones were assigned to two distinctive lithostratigraphic units: the Valea Măgurii and Vârciorog formations. Based on the orbitolinids Palorbitolina lenticularis and Mesorbitolina texana their ages are assigned to the early Aptian, and respectively late Aptian–Albian. The terrigenous facies mainly include fine grained deposits (clays, siltites, marls) and, to a lesser extent, coarser ones (glauconitic sandstones and conglomerates), and they are attributed to the Ecleja and Vârciorog formations. The marls of the Ecleja Formation have been observed in …


Modeling Spontaneous Three-Dimensional Polymerization, Zhitong Zhao Feb 2012

Modeling Spontaneous Three-Dimensional Polymerization, Zhitong Zhao

Dissertations, Master's Theses and Master's Reports - Open

For human beings, the origin of life has always been an interesting and mysterious matter, particularly how life arose from inorganic matter through natural processes. Polymerization is always involved in such processes. In this paper we built what we refer to as ideal and physical models to simulate spontaneous polymerization based on certain physical principles. As the modeling confirms, without taking external energy, small and simple inorganic molecules formed bigger and more complicated molecules, which are necessary ingredients of all living organisms. In our simulations, we utilized actual ranges of parameters according to their experimentally observed values. The results from …


From Velocities To Fluxions, Marco Panza Feb 2012

From Velocities To Fluxions, Marco Panza

MPP Published Research

"Though the De Methodis results, for its essential structure and content, from a re-elaboration of a previous unfinished treatise composed in the Fall of 1666—now known, after Whiteside, as The October 1666 tract on fluxions ([22], I, pp. 400-448)—, the introduction of the term ‘fluxion’ goes together with an important conceptual change concerned with Newton’s understanding of his own achievements. I shall argue that this change marks a crucial step in the origins of analysis, conceived as an autonomous mathematical theory."


Solving Elliptic Equations On An Amr Grid Hierarchy: Are Iterations Required, Donna Calhoun Feb 2012

Solving Elliptic Equations On An Amr Grid Hierarchy: Are Iterations Required, Donna Calhoun

Donna Calhoun

When solving elliptic problems using a finite volume scheme on a patch-based grid hierarchy of adaptively refined meshes, the question of how to preserve numerical conservation naturally arises. One way that researchers have used to maintain conservation at coarse/fine boundaries is to introduce a conservative "fix-up" at these boundaries between coarse and fine refinement patches. For explicit time stepping schemes, these fix-ups can be applied once, after the time step. But for implicit schemes, the quantity needed to ensure conservation comes out of a coupled solution process, and cannot be computed explicitly. But for at least two decades, researchers actively …


Ecosystem Services: The Making Of A Metaphor We Live (?) By, Richard B. Norgaard Feb 2012

Ecosystem Services: The Making Of A Metaphor We Live (?) By, Richard B. Norgaard

Systems Science Friday Noon Seminar Series

What started as a humble metaphor to help us think about our relation to nature has become integral to how we are addressing the future of humanity and the course of biological evolution. The metaphor of nature as a stock that provides a flow of services is insufficient for the difficulties we are in or the task ahead. Indeed, combined with the mistaken presumption that we can analyze a global problem within a partial equilibrium economic framework and reach a new economy project-by-project without major institutional change, the simplicity of the stock-flow framework blinds us to the complexity of the …


Sensitivity Analysis Of The Gems Soil Organic Carbon Model To Land Cover Land Use Classification Uncertainties Under Different Climate Scenarios In Senegal, Amadou M. Dieye, David P. Roy, N. P. Hanan, S. Lui, M. Hansen, A. Toure Feb 2012

Sensitivity Analysis Of The Gems Soil Organic Carbon Model To Land Cover Land Use Classification Uncertainties Under Different Climate Scenarios In Senegal, Amadou M. Dieye, David P. Roy, N. P. Hanan, S. Lui, M. Hansen, A. Toure

GSCE Faculty Publications

Spatially explicit land cover land use (LCLU) change information is needed to drive biogeochemical models that simulate soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics. Such information is increasingly being mapped using remotely sensed satellite data with classification schemes and uncertainties constrained by the sensing system, classification algorithms and land cover schemes. In this study, automated LCLU classification of multi-temporal Landsat satellite data were used to assess the sensitivity of SOC modeled by the Global Ensemble Biogeochemical Modeling System (GEMS). The GEMS was run for an area of 1560km2 in Senegal under three climate change scenarios with LCLU maps generated using different Landsat …


Identifying And Analyzing Pointer Misuses For Sophisticated Memory-Corruption Exploit Diagnosis, Mingwei Zhang, Aravind Prakash, Xiaolei Li, Zhenkai Liang, Heng Yin Feb 2012

Identifying And Analyzing Pointer Misuses For Sophisticated Memory-Corruption Exploit Diagnosis, Mingwei Zhang, Aravind Prakash, Xiaolei Li, Zhenkai Liang, Heng Yin

Electrical Engineering and Computer Science - Technical Reports

Software exploits are one of the major threats to internet security. To quickly respond to these attacks, it is critical to automatically diagnose such exploits and find out how they circumvent existing defense mechanisms.


Hyperpolarized Noble Gas Magnetic Resonance Imaging And Dynamic Spectroscopy For Investigation Of Rat Models Of Lung Inflammation, Matthew S. Fox Feb 2012

Hyperpolarized Noble Gas Magnetic Resonance Imaging And Dynamic Spectroscopy For Investigation Of Rat Models Of Lung Inflammation, Matthew S. Fox

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Imaging of the lungs using non-ionizing approaches such as hyperpolarized 3He and 129Xe magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a useful tool both for research and clinical applications. This work focused on development of 129Xe MRI techniques to investigate inflammation in rat lungs. A rodent model of inflammation, specifically radiation-induced lung injury (RILI) was developed using a collimated 60Co source. A quantitative MRI technique measuring absolute ventilated lung volume (|VLV|) was performed using 129Xe and 3He. Following a comparison between |VLV| values obtained from rats using the previously established 3He method and those obtained …


An Evaluation Of The Australian Research Council's Journal Ranking, Jerome K. Vanclay Feb 2012

An Evaluation Of The Australian Research Council's Journal Ranking, Jerome K. Vanclay

Professor Jerome K Vanclay

As part of its program of ‘Excellence in Research for Australia’ (ERA), the Australian Research Council ranked journals into four categories (A*, A, B, and C) in preparation for their performance evaluation of Australian universities. The ranking is important because it likely to have a major impact on publication choices and research dissemination in Australia. The ranking is problematic because it is evident that some disciplines have been treated very differently than others. This paper reveals weaknesses in the ERA journal ranking and highlights the poor correlation between ERA rankings and other acknowledged metrics of journal standing. It highlights the …


Forestry At Southern Cross University: Fifteen Years In Review, Diana Lloyd, J Doland Nichols, Kathryn H. Taffs, Jerome K. Vanclay Feb 2012

Forestry At Southern Cross University: Fifteen Years In Review, Diana Lloyd, J Doland Nichols, Kathryn H. Taffs, Jerome K. Vanclay

Professor Jerome K Vanclay

After 15 years, it is timely to review the 4-year bachelor degree in forestry offered by Southern Cross University (SCU), now the only remaining such 4-year degree in Australia. The SCU program is characterised by innovative teaching, a strong fieldwork component, emphasis on research, and strong links with local interest groups (both environmental and industrial). The progressive introduction of two-site delivery and on-line lectures has maintained the viability of the course despite modest student demand.


What Was Wrong With Australia's Journal Ranking?, Jerome K. Vanclay Feb 2012

What Was Wrong With Australia's Journal Ranking?, Jerome K. Vanclay

Professor Jerome K Vanclay

No abstract provided.


Spectral Energy Transfer Of Atmospheric Gravity Waves Through Sum And Difference Nonlinear Interactions, Kaiming Huang, Alan Z. Liu, Shaodong Zhang, Fan Yi, Zhenhua Li Feb 2012

Spectral Energy Transfer Of Atmospheric Gravity Waves Through Sum And Difference Nonlinear Interactions, Kaiming Huang, Alan Z. Liu, Shaodong Zhang, Fan Yi, Zhenhua Li

Zhenhua Li

No abstract provided.


Spectral Energy Transfer Of Atmospheric Gravity Waves Through Sum And Difference Nonlinear Interactions, Kaiming Huang, Alan Z. Liu, Shaodong Zhang, Fan Yi, Zhenhua Li Feb 2012

Spectral Energy Transfer Of Atmospheric Gravity Waves Through Sum And Difference Nonlinear Interactions, Kaiming Huang, Alan Z. Liu, Shaodong Zhang, Fan Yi, Zhenhua Li

Alan Z Liu

No abstract provided.


Β-Casein–Phospholipid Monolayers As Model Systems To Understand Lipid–Protein Interactions In The Milk Fat Globule Membrane, Sophie Gallier, Derek E. Gragson, Rafael Jiménez-Flores, David W. Everett Feb 2012

Β-Casein–Phospholipid Monolayers As Model Systems To Understand Lipid–Protein Interactions In The Milk Fat Globule Membrane, Sophie Gallier, Derek E. Gragson, Rafael Jiménez-Flores, David W. Everett

Rafael Jiménez-Flores

Phospholipid–protein monolayer films were studied as model systems to mimic the structure of the native bovine milk fat globule membrane (MFGM) and to understand lipid–protein interactions at the surface of the globule. Phospholipids extracted from bovine raw milk, raw cream, processed milk and buttermilk powder were spread onto the air–water interface of a Langmuir trough, β-casein was then added to the sub-phase, and Langmuir–Blodgett films were studied by epifluorescence microscopy and atomic force microscopy. In all films, β-casein was responsible for clustering of the sphingomyelin- and cholesterol-rich microdomains into larger platforms. This suggests that the same phenomenon may happen at …


The Steady-State Economy As A Solution To The World’S Problems: A Theoretical Examination Of The Greatest Environmental Problem Facing Human Society, Brianna L. Besch Feb 2012

The Steady-State Economy As A Solution To The World’S Problems: A Theoretical Examination Of The Greatest Environmental Problem Facing Human Society, Brianna L. Besch

The Macalester Review

This paper is a theoretical exploration of the questioning, if you were given a magic power to solve one, and only one, of the worlds problem outlined by a classic environmental author, which would you solve, and why? While the field of environmental studies is relatively new, since the publishing of Malthus’ An Essay on the Principles of Population environmental scholars have been debating what should be considered the greatest environmental problem facing humanity. This paper explains how the creation of a steady-state economy to replace our current economic system, as described by Herman Daly, offers a holistic solution to …


Empirical Correction Of A Toy Climate Model, Nicholas A. Allgaier, Kameron D. Harris, Christopher M. Danforth Feb 2012

Empirical Correction Of A Toy Climate Model, Nicholas A. Allgaier, Kameron D. Harris, Christopher M. Danforth

College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences Faculty Publications

Improving the accuracy of forecast models for physical systems such as the atmosphere is a crucial ongoing effort. The primary focus of recent research on these highly nonlinear systems has been errors in state estimation, but as that error has been successfully diminished, the role of model error in forecast uncertainty has duly increased. The present study is an investigation of an empirical model correction procedure involving the comparison of short forecasts with a reference "truth" system during a training period, in order to calculate systematic (1) state-independent model bias and (2) state-dependent error patterns. An estimate of the likelihood …


The 2010 Very High Energy Gamma-Ray Flare And 10 Years Of Multi-Wavelength Observations Of M 87, P. T. Reynolds, Hess, Magic, Veritas, Et. Al. Feb 2012

The 2010 Very High Energy Gamma-Ray Flare And 10 Years Of Multi-Wavelength Observations Of M 87, P. T. Reynolds, Hess, Magic, Veritas, Et. Al.

Physical Sciences Publications

The giant radio galaxy M 87 with its proximity (16 Mpc), famous jet, and very massive black hole ((3 – 6) × 109 M ☉) provides a unique opportunity to investigate the origin of very high energy (VHE; E > 100 GeV) γ-ray emission generated in relativistic outflows and the surroundings of supermassive black holes. M 87 has been established as a VHE γ-ray emitter since 2006. The VHE γ-ray emission displays strong variability on timescales as short as a day. In this paper, results from a joint VHE monitoring campaign on M 87 by the MAGIC and VERITAS instruments in …


Studies Of Aftershock Sequences Of Large Subduction Zone Earthquakes, Armick Ivanian Feb 2012

Studies Of Aftershock Sequences Of Large Subduction Zone Earthquakes, Armick Ivanian

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Amongst the different types of earthquakes, it is observed that the mega-thrust earthquakes, which occur in subduction zones, are the most devastating. The aftershock sequences following the mega-thrust earthquakes can also increase the level of seismic hazard, even in remote areas away from the mainshock fault zone. This thesis examines the statistical parameters of aftershock sequences of large subduction zone earthquakes that have occurred in the western and eastern Pacific Ocean. These parameters are vital for seismic hazard assessment of regions located near subduction zones. The results show that, on average, the Gutenberg-Richter exponent—the b-value—is markedly higher in the …