Results 241 to 250 of about 8,984,201 (303)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Weak-scale effective supersymmetry
Physical Review Letters, 1990The idea of supersymmetry at the weak scale should be tested without regard to the Planck-scale origin of any specific model. A class of low-energy effective supersymmetric theories is derived from four assumptions: minimal field content, {ital R}-parity conservation, absence of quadratic divergences, and naturalness of near-flavor conservation ...
, Hall, , Randall
openaire +2 more sources
Scaling Effects in Sublaminate-Level Scaled Composite Laminates
AIAA Journal, 1998A series of tensile tests has been performed to determine the effect of specimen size on the mechanical response of composite laminates that were scaled at the sublaminate level. The two material systems studied were AS4/3502 and APC-2. In the case of AS4/3502, three generic layups were considered: (±30/902L,, (±45/0/90)™, and (90/0/90/0)™ deg, where n
David P. Johnson +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Chaos, Solitons & Fractals, 2004
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +1 more source
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
openaire +1 more source
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1941
Maintenance of constant body temperature equilibrium over a wide variety of activities and environmental conditions constitutes one of the most important problems in the physiology of life. Normal temperature is maintained through a balance between heat production by metabolism and heat loss to the surroundings.
MURRAY B. FERDERBER, F. C. HOUGHTEN
openaire +1 more source
Maintenance of constant body temperature equilibrium over a wide variety of activities and environmental conditions constitutes one of the most important problems in the physiology of life. Normal temperature is maintained through a balance between heat production by metabolism and heat loss to the surroundings.
MURRAY B. FERDERBER, F. C. HOUGHTEN
openaire +1 more source
Applied Economics, 2011
A key feature of early endogenous growth models is their prediction of scale effects – the larger the economy, as measured by population, the number of firms or employment, the faster the economy should grow. However, empirical work has failed to support the existence of scale effects. As a result, much human capital has been expended in order to ‘fix’
Timothy C. Ford, Bruce T. Elmslie
openaire +1 more source
A key feature of early endogenous growth models is their prediction of scale effects – the larger the economy, as measured by population, the number of firms or employment, the faster the economy should grow. However, empirical work has failed to support the existence of scale effects. As a result, much human capital has been expended in order to ‘fix’
Timothy C. Ford, Bruce T. Elmslie
openaire +1 more source

