Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Chemistry (5)
- Earth Sciences (3)
- Geology (2)
- Physical Chemistry (2)
- Physics (2)
-
- Analytical Chemistry (1)
- Anthropology (1)
- Biological and Physical Anthropology (1)
- Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering (1)
- Biostatistics (1)
- Computer Sciences (1)
- Education (1)
- Educational Administration and Supervision (1)
- Engineering (1)
- Inorganic Chemistry (1)
- Medical Biomathematics and Biometrics (1)
- Medical Sciences (1)
- Medicine and Health Sciences (1)
- Paleobiology (1)
- Paleontology (1)
- Quantum Physics (1)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (1)
- Statistics and Probability (1)
- Keyword
Articles 1 - 16 of 16
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Projections Of Alzheimer's Disease In The United States And The Public Health Impact Of Delaying Disease Onset., Ron Brookmeyer, Sarah Gray, Claudia Kawas
Projections Of Alzheimer's Disease In The United States And The Public Health Impact Of Delaying Disease Onset., Ron Brookmeyer, Sarah Gray, Claudia Kawas
Ron Brookmeyer
OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to project the future prevalence and incidence of Alzheimer's disease in the United States and the potential impact of interventions to delay disease onset.
METHODS: The numbers of individuals in the United States with Alzheimer's disease and the numbers of newly diagnosed cases that can be expected over the next 50 years were estimated from a model that used age-specific incidence rates summarized from several epidemiological studies, US mortality rates, and US Bureau of the Census projections.
RESULTS: in 1997, the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease in the United States was 2.32 million (range: …
Analytical Mechanics, Janet Scheel, Louis Hand
Charge Density Wave Caused By Reducing Thse3 By One Electron. Superstructure And Short-Range Order In Ath2se6 (A = K, Rb) Studied By X-Ray Diffraction, Electron Diffraction, And Diffuse Scattering, Kyoung-Shin Choi, Rhonda Patschke, Simon Billinge, Mark Waner, Marcos Dantus, Mercouri Kanatzidis
Charge Density Wave Caused By Reducing Thse3 By One Electron. Superstructure And Short-Range Order In Ath2se6 (A = K, Rb) Studied By X-Ray Diffraction, Electron Diffraction, And Diffuse Scattering, Kyoung-Shin Choi, Rhonda Patschke, Simon Billinge, Mark Waner, Marcos Dantus, Mercouri Kanatzidis
Mark J. Waner
Charge Density Wave Caused by Reducing ThSe3 by One Electron. Superstructure and Short-Range Order in ATh2Se6 (A = K, Rb) Studied by X-ray Diffraction, Electron Diffraction, and Diffuse Scattering
Two-Surface Virial Analysis Of Alkane Adsorption On Carbopack C With And Without Hydrogen Treatment., Chrystal Bruce, Thomas Rybolt, Howard Thomas, Tara Agnew, Brandon Davis
Two-Surface Virial Analysis Of Alkane Adsorption On Carbopack C With And Without Hydrogen Treatment., Chrystal Bruce, Thomas Rybolt, Howard Thomas, Tara Agnew, Brandon Davis
Chrystal D. Bruce
Second gas–solid virial coefficients for propane, butane, pentane, and hexane were found for Carbopack C and Carbopack C-HT (Supelco Inc.) within the temperature range of 323 to 471 K using gas–solid chromatography in the Henry's law region of adsorption. Carbopack C and Carbopack C-HT are both graphitized carbon black powders. Treatment of Carbopack C with hydrogen at 1273 K converts it to Carbopack C-HT and is believed to remove certain high energy sites or “hot spots” from the carbon surface. These two surfaces provide appropriate model systems to test a two-surface virial analysis. Surface areas for both powders were calculated …
The Penrose Dodecahedron Revisited, Padmanabhan Aravind, Jordan Massad
The Penrose Dodecahedron Revisited, Padmanabhan Aravind, Jordan Massad
Padmanabhan K. Aravind
This paper gives an elementary account of the ‘‘Penrose dodecahedron,’’ a set of 40 states of a spin- 3 2 particle used by Zimba and Penrose @Stud. Hist. Phil. Sci. 24, 697–720 ~1993!# to give a proof of Bell’s nonlocality theorem. The Penrose rays are constructed here from the rotation operator of a spin- 3 2 particle and the geometry of a dodecahedron, and their orthogonality properties are derived and illustrated from a couple of different viewpoints. After recalling how the proof of Bell’s theorem can be reduced to a coloring problem on the Penrose rays, a ‘‘proof-tree’’ argument is …
Experimental Studies Of Fe-Mg Carbonates And Their Role In Petrogenesis
Experimental Studies Of Fe-Mg Carbonates And Their Role In Petrogenesis
Andrea M. Koziol
A Heavy Top Quark From Flavor-Universal Colorons, Marko Popovic, Elizabeth Simmons
A Heavy Top Quark From Flavor-Universal Colorons, Marko Popovic, Elizabeth Simmons
Marko B. Popovic
Ordinary technicolor and extended technicolor cannot produce the heavy top quark unaided. We demonstrate that a flavor-universal extension of the color interactions combined with an extended hypercharge sector that singles out the third generation can provide the necessary assistance. We discuss current experimental constraints and suggest how collider experiments can search for the predicted new heavy gauge bosons.
‘Race, Gender And Justice’: New Technologies And Student Empowerment, Ron Buckmire, Donna Maeda, Gabrielle Foreman
‘Race, Gender And Justice’: New Technologies And Student Empowerment, Ron Buckmire, Donna Maeda, Gabrielle Foreman
Ron Buckmire
No abstract provided.
Improving Performance By Branch Reordering, Minghui Yang, Gang-Ryung Uh, David B. Whalley
Improving Performance By Branch Reordering, Minghui Yang, Gang-Ryung Uh, David B. Whalley
Gang-Ryung Uh
Friction Anisotropy And Asymmetry Of A Compliant Monolayer Induced By A Small Molecular Tilt, Nancy Burnham, M Liley, D. Gourdon, Dimitrios Stamou, U Meseth, T Fischer, C Lautz, H Stahlberg, H Vogel, C Duschl
Friction Anisotropy And Asymmetry Of A Compliant Monolayer Induced By A Small Molecular Tilt, Nancy Burnham, M Liley, D. Gourdon, Dimitrios Stamou, U Meseth, T Fischer, C Lautz, H Stahlberg, H Vogel, C Duschl
Nancy A. Burnham
Lateral force microscopy in the wearless regime was used to study the friction behavior of a lipid monolayer on mica. In the monolayer, condensed domains with long-range orientational order of the lipid molecules were present. The domains revealed unexpectedly strong friction anisotropies and non-negligible friction asymmetries. The angular dependency of these effects correlated well with the tilt direction of the alkyl chains of the monolayer, as determined by electron diffraction and Brewster angle microscopy. The molecular tilt causing these frictional effects was less than 15 degrees, demonstrating that even small molecular tilts can make a major contribution to friction.
Synthesis Of Licoo2 Powders For Lithium-Ion Batteries From Precursors Derived By Rotary Evaporation., P. Kumpta, D. Gallet, A. Waghray, G. Blomgren, Michael Setter
Synthesis Of Licoo2 Powders For Lithium-Ion Batteries From Precursors Derived By Rotary Evaporation., P. Kumpta, D. Gallet, A. Waghray, G. Blomgren, Michael Setter
Michael P. Setter
Lithium cobalt oxide (LiCoO2) has received considerable attention in the last few years and is a well-known cathode material for high voltage (4 V) rechargeable Li-ion batteries. A simple chemical approach based on aqueous solution chemistry has been developed to synthesize molecularly mixed amorphous precursors. The precursors begin to transform to form LiCoO2 upon heat treatment at temperatures as low as 400°C. Strong peaks characteristic of the desired high temperature (HT) phase of LiCoO2 evolve when the precursors are heat treated to 800°C for 2 h. The morphology and particle size of the powders have been examined using scanning electron …
The Voltammetry Of C84 Isomers, Mark Anderson, Harry Dorn, Steven Stevenson, Susanne Dana
The Voltammetry Of C84 Isomers, Mark Anderson, Harry Dorn, Steven Stevenson, Susanne Dana
Mark R. Anderson
The square-wave voltammetry of isolated isomers of C84 is reported. Based on their relative abundance, the isomers are assumed to have D2 and D2d symmetry. The D2 isomer has four reversible reductions at −0.65, −0.98, −1.34, and −1.75 V versus Fc/Fc+ prior to electrolyte decomposition. This behavior is consistent with previous reports, and is similar to the voltammetry of C60 and C70 (e.g. sequential reductions spaced at slightly increasing intervals). The D2d isomer has five reversible reductions at −0.46, −0.77, −1.58, −1.98, and −2.27 V versus Fc/Fc+ prior to the onset of electrolyte decomposition. The large potential difference separating the …
Imaging The Molecular Dimensions And Oligomerization Of Proteins At Liquid/Solid Interfaces, Mark Waner, Martha Gilchrist, Melvin Schindler, Marcos Dantus
Imaging The Molecular Dimensions And Oligomerization Of Proteins At Liquid/Solid Interfaces, Mark Waner, Martha Gilchrist, Melvin Schindler, Marcos Dantus
Mark J. Waner
Individual Concanavalin A (ConA) molecules have been imaged at the liquid/solid interface with an atomic force microscope (AFM). Three-dimensional sizing with very high resolution (<5 Å) has been obtained by a novel approach based on height distributions, which avoids the tip convolution effects which normally affect scanning probe microscopy techniques. Each height measurement correlates to a particular molecular orientation on the surface. A large number of such measurements provide a statistical ensemble of orientations. The complete height distribution reflects the three-dimensional size of the protein sample and hence its tertiary and quaternary structure. A surface adsorption and orientation model, based on a minimization of surface adsorption energy, is proposed. This model is in good agreement with the observed height distribution of Con A molecules at the liquid/solid interface. Analysis of Con A and succinylated Con A molecules on mica demonstrates that Con A dimers are the prevalent species at the liquid/solid interface. This is in contrast to the tetrameric organization of Con A normally observed in solution. The new possibilities opened by height distribution analysis on the physical characterization of biomolecules at interfaces are also discussed.
Active Tectonics And Ultrahigh-Pressure Rocks, Ann Blythe
Active Tectonics And Ultrahigh-Pressure Rocks, Ann Blythe
Ann Blythe
This chapter compares modern exhumation and surface uplift rates with the rates needed for the preservation of ultrahigh pressure (UHP) metamorphic rocks. The highest recorded exhumation rates of ~ 5–10 mm/a are inferred from isotopic and fission-track analyses in the Himalaya, Southern Alps of New Zealand, and D’Entrecasteaux Islands. Similar rates (~7 mm/a) of surface uplift are measured from leveling surveys in Nepal and correlations of marine terraces in the Southern Alps. In Nepal, however, this surface uplift rate is occurring despite erosion, and the true rate of surface uplift is probably considerably higher. In restraining bends along the San …
Using An E-Mail Tutorial And Student Seminars To Improve An Intermediate-Level Undergraduate Physics Course, Janet Scheel
Using An E-Mail Tutorial And Student Seminars To Improve An Intermediate-Level Undergraduate Physics Course, Janet Scheel
Janet D. Scheel
The authors revised the junior-level classical mechanics course at Cornell University to incorporate asynchronous, autonomous, and group learning. We created an E-mail tutorial and a student seminar. We will first discuss the theoretical background for these changes and then describe the results of their implementation over a period of three years.
Longitudinal Study Of Dental Development In Chimpanzees Of Known Chronological Age: Implications For Understanding The Age At Death Of Plio-Pleistocene Hominids, Robert Anemone, Mark Mooney
Longitudinal Study Of Dental Development In Chimpanzees Of Known Chronological Age: Implications For Understanding The Age At Death Of Plio-Pleistocene Hominids, Robert Anemone, Mark Mooney
Robert L. Anemone
Reconstruction of life history variables of fossil hominids on the basis of dental development requires understanding of and comparison with the pattern and timing of dental development among both living humans and pongids. Whether dental development among living apes or humans provides a better model for comparison with that of Plio-Pleistocene hominids of the genus Australopithecus remains a contentious point. This paper presents new data on chimpanzees documenting developmental differences in the dentitions of modern humans and apes and discusses their significance in light of recent controversies over the human or pongid nature of australopithecine dental development. Longitudinal analysis of …