7,178 research outputs found
Securing the built environment : an analysis of crime prevention through environmental design
Crime or even the perception of crime affects people everywhere directly and indirectly. Because a permanent solution in stopping crime has not been found, there should be a constant search for new ideas in controlling it. This study analyzes the theory of Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED). The basic theory of CPTED is that manipulating the built environment in certain ways can lessen crime in almost any setting. In trying to gain a greater knowledge of the subject, several works were delved into, many of which are considered to be critical pieces to the CPTED field including Oscar Newman’s Defensible Space among others. Changing some aspects of the environment to control crime can prove to be a very time consuming and costly task. However, many things can be done effectively to lessen crime while also being very economical. Simply changing the placement of certain amenities such as landscaping or windows in an area or adding lighting to a poorly lit area is as little as it may take. Entire neighborhoods have seen crime rates drop thanks to CPTED while something as small as convenience store can benefit using proven techniques.Department of Urban PlanningStrategies for crime prevention -- Examples of CPTED strategies and applications -- Public and review process.Thesis (M.U.R.P.
Plasticity in current-driven vortex lattices
We present a theoretical analysis of recent experiments on current-driven
vortex dynamics in the Corbino disk geometry. This geometry introduces
controlled spatial gradients in the driving force and allows the study of the
onset of plasticity and tearing in clean vortex lattices. We describe plastic
slip in terms of the stress-driven unbinding of dislocation pairs, which in
turn contribute to the relaxation of the shear, yielding a nonlinear response.
The steady state density of free dislocations induced by the applied stress is
calculated as a function of the applied current and temperature. A criterion
for the onset of plasticity at a radial location in the disk yields a
temperature-dependent critical current that is in qualitative agreement with
experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Problematising international placements as a site of intercultural learning
This paper theorises some of the learning outcomes of a three-year project concerning student learning in international social work placements in Malaysia. The problematic issue of promoting cultural and intercultural competence through such placements is examined, where overlapping hegemonies are discussed in terms of isomorphism of social work models, that of the nation state, together with those relating to professional values and knowledge, and the tyrannies of received ideas. A critical discussion of cultural competence as the rationale for international placements is discussed in terms of the development of the graduating social worker as a self-reflexive practitioner. The development of sustainable international partnerships able to support student placement and the issue of non-symmetrical reciprocation, typical of wide socio-economic differentials across global regions, is additionally discussed
Solar energy conversion
If solar energy is to become a practical alternative to fossil fuels, we must have efficient ways to convert photons into electricity, fuel, and heat. The need for better conversion technologies is a driving force behind many recent developments in biology, materials, and especially nanoscience
A sociological examination of international placement learning by British social work students in children's services in Malaysia
This paper discusses research findings into a study of UK student learning on international social work placements in Malaysia in collaboration with two Malaysian universities: Universiti Sains Malaysia and Universiti Malaysia Sarawak. The discussion focuses on those placements taking place in children’s services: residential
care and community-based support programmes. The aim of the study was to explore how social work students adapt to unfamiliar learning situations in new cultural contexts with the goal of increasing cultural competence. Data were drawn from formal but anonymised student learning exercises as a requirement of the placement. Findings indicated a wide range of responses towards social work practice with vulnerable children in the Malaysian context in terms of student constructions of care and abuse. Subject to an analytical schema, the collision or adaptation of otherwise
normative professional and personal values are examined in detail
Oscillatory dynamics of a superconductor vortex lattice in high amplitude ac magnetic fields
In this work we study by ac susceptibility measurements the evolution of the
solid vortex lattice mobility under oscillating forces. Previous work had
already shown that in YBCO single crystals, below the melting transition, a
temporarily symmetric magnetic ac field (e.g. sinusoidal, square, triangular)
can heal the vortex lattice (VL) and increase its mobility, but a temporarily
asymmetric one (e.g. sawtooth) of the same amplitude can tear the lattice into
a more pinned disordered state. In this work we present evidence that the
mobility of the VL is reduced for large vortex displacements, in agreement with
predictions of recent simulations. We show that with large symmetric
oscillating fields both an initially ordered or an initially disordered VL
configuration evolve towards a less mobile lattice, supporting the scenario of
plastic flow.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
The Effect of Large Amplitude Fluctuations in the Ginzburg-Landau Phase Transition
The lattice Ginzburg-Landau model in d=3 and d=2 is simulated, for different
values of the coherence length in units of the lattice spacing , using
a Monte Carlo method. The energy, specific heat, vortex density , helicity
modulus and mean square amplitude are measured to map the phase
diagram on the plane . When amplitude fluctuations, controlled by the
parameter , become large () a proliferation of vortex
excitations occurs changing the phase transition from continuous to first
order.Comment: 4 pages, 5 postscript (eps) figure
Doping and Irradiation Controlled Vortex Pinning Behavior in BaFe2(As1-xPx)2 Single Crystals
We report on the systematic evolution of vortex pinning behavior in isovalent
doped single crystals of BaFe2(As1-xPx)2. Proceeding from optimal doped to
ovedoped samples, we find a clear transfor- mation of the magnetization
hysteresis from a fishtail behavior to a distinct peak effect followed by a
reversible magnetization and Bean Livingston surface barriers. Strong point
pinning dominates the vortex behavior at low fields whereas weak collective
pinning determines the behavior at higher fields. In addition to doping
effects, we show that particle irradiation by energetic protons can tune vortex
pinning in these materials.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures,significant change of eraly version, accepted by
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