Posts Tagged ‘Research’
How batteries store and discharge electricity?
Kenneth Buckle, a visiting scientist at the Center
for Integrated Manufacturing Studies at the Rochester
Institute of Technology, provides this answer:
When connected to a load like a lightbulb, a typical battery
undergoes chemical reactions that release electrons, which
travel through the bulb and are then reabsorbed by the battery.
(Devices that store mechanical energy also exist, but the most
common bat ter ies , such as those used in fl ashlights and remotes,
hold energy in chemical form.) Inside is at least one galvanic
cell, which produces between zero and several volts, depending
on its chemistry. In a car battery, six cells, each contributing
two volts, are connected in series …
Replication Versus Realism: The Need for Ecosystem-Scale Experiments
David W. Schindler
ABSTRACT
The results of bottle and mesocosm experiments
were compared with those obtained in whole-
ecosystem experiments at the Experimental Lakes
Area. Unless they can be cleverly designed to mimic
major ecosystem processes and community compo-
sitions, smaller-scale experiments often give highly
replicable, but spurious, answers. Problems with
appropriate scaling are difficult to deduce without
direct comparisons with whole-ecosystem experi-
ments. Reasons aremany, but include inappropriate
spatial scales to include whole communities, in
particular predators and nocturnally active animals;
temporal scales that are too short to assess accu-
rately the response of slow-responding organisms
and biogeochemical processes; and elimination of
key littoral–pelagic and catchment–lake interac-
tions. Identical studies of limnological processes in
lakes of a large …
Shadow Pricing in Economics
David A. Starrett
Economists are widely viewed by the general public
as being committed tomarkets as a way of allocating
resources and consequently to the use of market
prices as a reflection of social value. This view has
given economists a bad reputation in some circles;
indeed, there is a cynical definition of an economist
as someone who ‘‘knows the price of everything and
the value of nothing.’’ Whereas economists prob-
ably do as a group have more faith in markets than
others, it certainly is not true that we equate price
with value. We recognize many goods and services
for which there are no markets (such as clean air,
wildlife habitat, and …
Do Forests Receive Occult Inputs of Nitrogen?
Dan Binkley,
Yowhan Son,
and David W. Valentine
ABSTRACT
The nitrogen (N) cycle of forest ecosystems is un-
derstood relatively well, and few scientists expect
that major revisions will be necessary; most current
work on N cycling focuses on improving the preci-
sion estimates of pools and fluxes, or measuring the
magnitudes of well-known pools in response to
management or disturbances. However, in the past
few decades more than a dozen articles in refereed
journals have claimed very high rates of N input, far
beyond the rates expected for known sources of N.
In this review, we summarize the literature on N
accretion rates in forests that lack substantial con-
tributions from symbiotic N-fixing plants. We …
Valuation of Ecosystem Services in Institutional Context
Lowell Pritchard Jr.,
Carl Folke,
and Lance Gunderson
INTRODUCTION
As long as we are forced to make choices, we are
doing valuation. But different approaches to valua-
tion are based on qualitatively different assump-
tions. For example, the economics approach to
valuation is based on the ethical principle of con-
sumer sovereignty, and it privileges the kinds of
decisions individuals make in the marketplace. We
accept the economics approach as a useful partial
approach to decision making in relation to ecosys-
temservices if one is interested in what people think
about and want from services; if one believes that
human preferences are the basis for the value of
services; if one accepts the assumption that adding
individual …
Low temperature step-graded InAlAs/GaAs metamorphic buffer layers grown by molecular beam epitaxy
X Z Shang1,3
,SDWu2
, C Liu1
,WXWang2
, LWGuo2
, Q Huang2
and J M Zhou2
1
School of Physics and Technology, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, Hubei, People’s
Republic of China
2
State Key Laboratory for Surface Physics, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, Beijing 100080, People’s Republic of China
E-mail: xunzhong@acc-lab.whu.edu.cn
Received 8 December 2005
Published 20 April 2006
Online at stacks.iop.org/JPhysD/39/1800
Abstract
Low-temperature step-graded InAlAs metamorphic buffer layers on GaAs
substrate grown by molecular beam epitaxy were investigated. The strain
relaxation and the composition of the top InAlAs layer were determined by
high-resolution triple-axis x-ray diffraction measurements, which show that
the top InAlAs layer is nearly fully relaxed. Surface morphology was
observed by reflection high-energy electron diffraction pattern and …
Oxide Nanoelectrolics
Cheng Cen,
Stefan Thiel,
Jochen Mannhart,
Jeremy Levy
Electronic confinement at nanoscale dimensions remains a central means of science and
technology. We demonstrate nanoscale lateral confinement of a quasi–two-dimensional electron
gas at a lanthanum aluminate–strontium titanate interface. Control of this confinement using an
atomic force microscope lithography technique enabled us to create tunnel junctions and field-effect
transistors with characteristic dimensions as small as 2 nanometers. These electronic devices can be
modified or erased without the need for complex lithographic procedures. Our on-demand
nanoelectronics fabrication platform has the potential for widespread technological application.
Sedimentation processes and new age constraints on rifting stages in Lake Baikal: results of deep-water drilling
Abstract With this paper we present a first attempt to
combine the direct results on lithology, composition
and age dating in the boreholes BDP-93, BDP-96 and
BDP-97 with geological and seismic data from the areas
where those sections were drilled. The sedimentary
environments represented by the BDP boreholes are
markedly different and possess characteristic litholog-
ical features. The results of the deep drilling provide
the essential means for testing …
eLearning Critical Analysis
Over recent years, we’ve been increasingly amazed by technology that provides us with easier ways of accomplishing many things. Doing business, shopping, researching, holding meetings, dating and keeping in touch with our distant friends can now all be done electronically.
Elearning is one of these technological advances that allows us to learn anywhere anytime. Elearning institutions afford us professional instructors and comprehensive online courses over the Internet and can be taken up by using a single computer. These new learning opportunities were brought in by thoughtful people committed in making life easier.
However, there are people who are critical of elearning …
Hypothesis for Cretaceous rifting of east Gondwana caused by subducted slab capture
Bruce P. Luyendyk Institute for Crustal Studies and Department of Geological Sciences, University of California,
Santa Barbara, California 93106-1100
ABSTRACT
In the process of subducted slab capture, a spreading ridge approaches subparallel to
a subduction zone following the trailing edge of a downgoing plate. Eventually the down-
going plate is too young and small to subduct, and spreading stops. The spreading ridge
stalls many tens of kilometres outboard of the subduction zone. The subducted plate welds
to the outboard plate across the dormant spreading center and is captured by it. The
captured plate then acquires the motion of the plate it welded to. In the southwest Pacific
the Pacific-Phoenix …