552 research outputs found

    Geodesic Flow on the Normal Congruence of a Minimal Surface

    Full text link
    We study the geodesic flow on the normal line congruence of a minimal surface in R3{\Bbb{R}}^3 induced by the neutral K\"ahler metric on the space of oriented lines. The metric is lorentz with isolated degenerate points and the flow is shown to be completely integrable. In addition, we give a new holomorphic description of minimal surfaces in R3{\Bbb{R}}^3 and relate it to the classical Weierstrass representation.Comment: AMS-LATEX 8 pages 2, figure

    Weyl-type Fields with Geodesic Lines of Force

    Get PDF
    The static electrogravitational equations are studied and it is shown that an aligned type D metric which has a Weyl-type relationship between the gravitational and electric potential has shearfree geodesic lines of force. All such fields are then found and turn out to be the fields of a charged sphere, charged infinite rod and charged infinite plate. A further solution is also found with shearing geodesic lines of force. This new solution can have m>em>|e| or m<em<|e|, but cannot be in the Majumdar-Papapetrou class (in which m=em = |e|). It is algebraically general and has flat equipotential surfaces.Comment: 13 pages, RevTe

    Recruitment and Retention of Childhood Bereavement Center Facilitators

    Get PDF
    When I first visited FRIENDS Way (the only childhood bereavement center in Rhode Island) to fulfill a class requirement for Honors 119- Loss in the Lives of Children and Adolescents, I realized that I had come across an incredible group of individuals. The facilitators at the center were volunteers; people who gave their time and talent to help grieving children. Many of the children had lost a parent, sibling or grandparent and I thought about how important and special the work of the facilitators is. A number of questions ran through my mind: what makes people want to do this type of work? What do these volunteers have in common with each other? What rewards do they feel this work gives them? While meeting with Professor Carolyn Hames to discuss an honors project on bereavement, I casually mentioned interviewing facilitators. We discussed this idea and my senior honors project, “Recruitment and Retention of Childhood Bereavement Center Facilitators” was born. I developed a questionnaire with seven questions that asks about the participant’s experience as a facilitator, the rewards their volunteer work provides, the qualities facilitators have in common and how a center can increase recruitment and retention. We have received answered questionnaires from facilitators in Australia, Canada, Washington, Texas, Florida, New York and Rhode Island. I first contacted center coordinators, and then sent questionnaires, a letter and informed consent paperwork to each facilitator. They returned the questionnaires and the signed informed consent in separate envelopes, which were separated for confidentiality purposes. I am analyzing the responses by grouping them and looking for similarities. For example, preliminary data suggests that the highest occurring answers for what qualities they felt they and other volunteer facilitators possess were 1) good listening skills, 2) compassion and 3) empathy. Many, but certainly not all of the volunteer facilitators, have chosen to work with children after they suffered a loss in their own lives. Preliminary data also indicates that the most frequently stated reward received for volunteering as a facilitator has been seeing children and their families enter the program “broken” and “feeling hopeless,” and watching them transition to a point where they feel they can smile and laugh again and move on with their lives. I will be relaying the full results of the study to the participating childhood bereavement centers at the conclusion so that they may increase the recruitment and retention of caring volunteer facilitators. I will also be sharing the results to a national audience as the project has been accepted for presentation at the 11th Annual National Symposium for Children’s Grief Support that will be held this June in Birmingham, Alabama

    Towards an Evaluation-Based Framework of Collaborative Archaeology

    Get PDF
    Collaborative archaeology is a growing field within the discipline, albeit one that is rarely analyzed. Although collaborative approaches are varied and diverse, we argue that they can all share a single methodological framework. Moreover, we suggest that collaborative archaeology projects can be evaluated to determine the variety among projects and to identify the elements of engaged research. We provide two case studies emphasizing project evaluation: (1) inter-project evaluation of community-engagement in British Columbia archaeology and (2) intra-project evaluation of co-management archaeology projects in Western Australia. The two case studies highlight that project evaluation is possible and that a single framework can be applied to many different types of projects. Collaborative archaeology requires analysis and evaluation to determine what facilitates engagement to further the discipline and to create better connections between archaeologists and community members. The discussed case studies illustrate two shared methods for accomplishing this. The paper argues that collaborative approaches are necessary for advancing archaeological practice

    Level sets of functions and symmetry sets of smooth surface sections

    Full text link
    We prove that the level sets of a real C^s function of two variables near a non-degenerate critical point are of class C^[s/2] and apply this to the study of planar sections of surfaces close to the singular section by the tangent plane at hyperbolic points or elliptic points, and in particular at umbilic points. We also analyse the cases coming from degenerate critical points, corresponding to elliptic cusps of Gauss on a surface, where the differentiability is now reduced to C^[s/4]. However in all our applications to symmetry sets of families of plane curves, we assume the C^infty smoothness.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, 6 grouped figures. The final version will appear in Mathematics of Surfaces. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (2005

    Surface normal photonic crystal waveguide coupling for N^3 distributed optoelectronic crossbar

    Get PDF
    The realization of the N^3 distributed optoelectronic crossbar requires the incorporation of bidirectional transceiver modules. The current design philosophy of these modules in their single wavelength configuration consist of the integration of VCSEL and RCE detection devices monolithically integrated with a bidirectional common waveguide. Coupling into this common waveguide is currently under investigation utilizing two methods 1.) surface normal coupling using a buried grating coupler external but monolithic surface normal coupling utilizing photonic crystal. This paper will briefly discuss the first method and its drawbacks which motivate the second photonic crystal implementation method. Our initial design work has been accomplished at 980 nm. The measure reflectance spectrum of the VCSEL/PD epitaxy structure prior to the fabrication of the photonic crystal coupler and waveguide layer

    Indigenous child care - leading the way

    Get PDF
    We believe that the Australian early childhood sector is not performing well. The incidence of poor outcomes for children is increasing, and we believe that current service delivery is not capable of addressing this. We argue that, as a sector, there is an abundance of evidence of the kinds of programs and initiatives that could address our national concerns, and review some of that evidence. We also point out that there is considerable knowledge in Australia, based on Australian programmes and experience, that can be used to build a different early childhood sector with the potential to significantly impact on growing disadvantage. We conclude with the principles or themes around which such initiatives should be developed and a call to advocate for the development of such services. Appropriate services supporting all of our young children, their families and their communities, have the potential to make a huge impact on our society, and we can no longer hide from our responsibilities and avoid providing such services

    Principal component analysis of the cytokine and chemokine response to human traumatic brain injury.

    Get PDF
    There is a growing realisation that neuro-inflammation plays a fundamental role in the pathology of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). This has led to the search for biomarkers that reflect these underlying inflammatory processes using techniques such as cerebral microdialysis. The interpretation of such biomarker data has been limited by the statistical methods used. When analysing data of this sort the multiple putative interactions between mediators need to be considered as well as the timing of production and high degree of statistical co-variance in levels of these mediators. Here we present a cytokine and chemokine dataset from human brain following human traumatic brain injury and use principal component analysis and partial least squares discriminant analysis to demonstrate the pattern of production following TBI, distinct phases of the humoral inflammatory response and the differing patterns of response in brain and in peripheral blood. This technique has the added advantage of making no assumptions about the Relative Recovery (RR) of microdialysis derived parameters. Taken together these techniques can be used in complex microdialysis datasets to summarise the data succinctly and generate hypotheses for future study

    Interior Weyl-type Solutions of the Einstein-Maxwell Field Equations

    Full text link
    Static solutions of the electro-gravitational field equations exhibiting a functional relationship between the electric and gravitational potentials are studied. General results for these metrics are presented which extend previous work of Majumdar. In particular, it is shown that for any solution of the field equations exhibiting such a Weyl-type relationship, there exists a relationship between the matter density, the electric field density and the charge density. It is also found that the Majumdar condition can hold for a bounded perfect fluid only if the matter pressure vanishes (that is, charged dust). By restricting to spherically symmetric distributions of charged matter, a number of exact solutions are presented in closed form which generalise the Schwarzschild interior solution. Some of these solutions exhibit functional relations between the electric and gravitational potentials different to the quadratic one of Weyl. All the non-dust solutions are well-behaved and, by matching them to the Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m solution, all of the constants of integration are identified in terms of the total mass, total charge and radius of the source. This is done in detail for a number of specific examples. These are also shown to satisfy the weak and strong energy conditions and many other regularity and energy conditions that may be required of any physically reasonable matter distribution.Comment: 21 pages, RevTex, to appear in General Relativity and Gravitatio

    Movement of \u3ci\u3eHypophthalmichthys\u3c/i\u3e DNA in the Illinois River Watershed by the Double-Crested Cormorant (\u3ci\u3ePhalacrocorax auritus\u3c/i\u3e)

    Get PDF
    Paired throat and cloacal swabs, along with feather samples, from nesting Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) at two sites in Illinois, USA, were tested for presence of invasive bigheaded carp (Hypophthalmichthys spp.) DNA. We also used DNA from the feather calamus to determine cormorant sex. Throat and cloacal swabs from cormorants at both locations tested positive for DNA from silver carp (H. molitrix), but none tested positive for bighead carp (H. nobilis). Hypophthalmichthys DNA was not detected on feathers. There were no significant differences among positive Hypophthalmichthys DNA detection frequencies between cormorant sexes. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of silver carp as part of the Double-crested Cormorant diet in North America. Hypophthalmichthys are major invasive species of concern in this region, the detection of water-borne environmental DNA of Hypophthalmichthys is an important monitoring tool, and the potential movement of DNA via piscivorous birds may have significant implications for interpreting environmental DNA monitoring data
    corecore