162,513 research outputs found

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #1]

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    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #2]

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    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    Murder on the mountain: author talk with Peter J. Wosh

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    Author talk by Peter J. Wosh on May 5th, 2022, on his book, "Murder on the Mountain: crime, passion, and punishment in gilded age New Jersey.

    The impression creep Monkman Grant relationship

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    Impression creep testing is an established small-scale testing technique in which the indentation rate of a rectangular indenter can be converted into equivalent creep strain rate. It is a versatile technique in that, once a stable indentation rate is established, either the stress, temperature, or both, can be varied to provide data under multiple test conditions on the same specimen. It does not however produce a specimen failure. In order to overcome this limitation, use can be made of an empirical relationship between the creep strain rate obtained in the impression test and the rupture life obtained in a conventional uniaxial creep test at the same stress and temperature. This relationship, termed the Impression Monkman Grant relationship, has been applied successfully to grade 91 steel where it has been shown that rupture life predicted from impression testing is in good agreement with actual rupture life obtained by conventional uniaxial testing. The relationship has proved particularly useful for plant application in situations where mis-heat treated grade 91 pipework with lower than expected creep strength has been encountered, requiring an estimate of creep strength to justify continued operation in service

    Mr. Melvin J. Collier, RWWL AUC, June 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Mr. Melvin J. Collier. Mr. Collier talks about his book, "From Mississippi to Africa: A Journey of Discovery". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Light-emission from conjugated dendrimers and polymers

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    This thesis reports the photophysical and electroluminescence studies undertaken on two types of material: polymeric and dendritic. The dendritic architecture is a recent concept adopted to develop new materials for light-emitting diodes. The dendritic structure offers a combination of properties of both polymers and small organic molecules whilst having their own interesting characteristic of optimising processibility, charge transport, and optical properties independently. The dendritic structure consists of functional surface groups, conjugated dendrons and a conjugated core. Initial optical (absorption and photoluminescence) studies revealed that the dendrimer emission originates from the core and is independent of excitation wavelength. This was investigated further in distyrylbenzene based dendrimers where the effect of dendrimer generation number on photoluminescence and electroluminescence properties was studied. All dendrimers emit blue electroluminescence with, in some cases, reasonable electroluminescence quantum efficiency in the range of 0.09 % and brightness up to 150 Cd m(^-2). Having established that the furmel effect, where excitation is successfully transferred to the dendrimer core in both PL and EL, different chromophores were incorporated in the dendrimer structure. Colour control was thus demonstrated in EL devices of the different dendrimers, showing the possibility of using a large number of chromophores in a processible form for EL applications. Conjugated polymers were also studied to investigate the nature of the emitting species (poly(p-pyridine)) and the effect of side- chains (poly(p-phenylenevinylene)). In poly(p-pyridine) the emission was found to be strongly dependent on pyridyl ring rotation affecting the emission and its quantum yield while the side-chains in the poly(p-phenylenevinylene) derivatives were found to affect polymer properties such as degree of conversion of non-conjugated to conjugated polymer. The PL quantum yield system was set-up and proved useful in assessing synthesis of new materials

    A Tripartite Post-Recession Rebalancing

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    In this latest Advance & Rutgers Report, entitled “A Tripartite Post-Recession Rebalancing,” Dean James W. Hughes and Professor Joseph J. Seneca deliver an incisive assessment of the current market conditions and obstacles in the path of our economic recovery. They offer a statistical cautionary tale that the private and public sector need to hear and acknowledge in order for the economy to make continued progress.This report was published as Issue Paper Number 7, November 2011, in Advance & Rutgers Report

    Evidence for the decay B0→J/ψω and measurement of the relative branching fractions of meson decays to J/ψη and J/ψη′

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    First evidence of the B 0 → J / ψ ω decay is found and the B s 0 → J / ψ η and B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ decays are studied using a dataset corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb -1 collected by the LHCb experiment in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of sqrt(s) = 7 TeV. The branching fractions of these decays are measured relative to that of the B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0 decay:frac(B (B 0 → J / ψ ω), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 0.89 ± 0.19 (stat) - 0.13 + 0.07 (syst),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 14.0 ± 1.2 (stat) - 1.5 + 1.1 (syst) - 1.0 + 1.1 (frac(f d, f s)),frac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B 0 → J / ψ ρ 0)) = 12.7 ± 1.1 (stat) - 1.3 + 0.5 (syst) - 0.9 + 1.0 (frac(f d, f s)), where the last uncertainty is due to the knowledge of f d / f s, the ratio of b-quark hadronization factors that accounts for the different production rate of B 0 and B s 0 mesons. The ratio of the branching fractions of B s 0 → J / ψ η ′ and B s 0 → J / ψ η decays is measured to befrac(B (B s 0 → J / ψ η ′), B (B s 0 → J / ψ η)) = 0.90 ± 0.09 (stat) - 0.02 + 0.06 (syst)

    The vanishing author in computer-generated works: a critical analysis of recent Australian case law

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    Abstract The use of software is ubiquitous in the creation of many copyright works, yet the requirement in copyright law that every work have a human author who engages in independent intellectual effort means that its use may prevent copyright subsistence. Several recent Australian cases have refocused attention on authorship as an essential criterion of copyright subsistence, and these cases suggest that much computer-produced output may be authorless and thus lack copyright protection. This article, the first in a two-part series, analyses how each case deals with the question of authorship of computer-produced works and why the use of software diminishes copyright protection for a significant number of computer-generated works. The article critiques the application of conventional notions of human authorship developed in the pre-computer age to modern productions and suggests alternative approaches to authorship that satisfy both the major objectives of copyright policy and the need to adapt to the computer age. The article argues that, without a broader judicial approach to authorship of computer-generated works, Parliament must remedy the lacuna in protection for these ‘authorless’ works. Possible solutions for reform are suggested. In a forthcoming article, the author comprehensively examines those reform proposals

    Identification of excited states in conjugated polymers

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    This thesis reports quasi steady state photoinduced absorption measurements from three conjugated polymers: polypyridine (PPy), polyfluorene (PFO) and the emeraldine base (EB) form of polyaniline. The aim of these experiments was to determine the nature of the photoexcited states existing in these materials in the millisecond time domain, as this has important consequences for the operation of real devices manufactured using these materials. The results from the photoinduced absorption experiments are closely compared with published results from pulse radiolysis experiments. In all cases there is very good correspondence between the two data sets, which has enabled the photoexcited states to be assigned with a high degree of confidence. Quasi steady-state photoinduced absorption involves the measurement of the change in absorption of a material in response to optical excitation with a laser beam. The changes in absorption are small, so a dedicated instrument was developed and optimised for each different sample. Lock-in techniques were used to recover the small signals from the samples. The samples involved were thin films of the polymer spin coated onto sapphire substrates in the cases of PPy and EB. Solution state experiments were conducted on EB. The experiments on PFO were conducted on aligned and unaligned thin films provided by Sony. In the case of the aligned PFO samples, the photoinduced absorption spectrometer was modified to enable polarisation-sensitive data collection. In PPy, both triplet excitons and polarons have been shown to be long-lived photoexcitations, with photoinduced absorption features at 2.29 eV (triplet excitontransition), 1.5 eV and 0.8 eV (polaron transitions). In PFO, the one observed photoinduced band at 1.52 eV is assigned to a triplet exciton. Two photoinduced absorption bands are observed in EB, at 1.4 eV and 0.8 eV. These are assigned to aself-trapped CT singlet exciton and triplet exciton, respectively
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