15,938 research outputs found
The Lanczos potential for Weyl-candidate tensors exists only in four dimensions
We prove that a Lanczos potential L_abc for the Weyl candidate tensor W_abcd
does not generally exist for dimensions higher than four. The technique is
simply to assume the existence of such a potential in dimension n, and then
check the integrability conditions for the assumed system of differential
equations; if the integrability conditions yield another non-trivial
differential system for L_abc and W_abcd, then this system's integrability
conditions should be checked; and so on. When we find a non-trivial condition
involving only W_abcd and its derivatives, then clearly Weyl candidate tensors
failing to satisfy that condition cannot be written in terms of a Lanczos
potential L_abc.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, Heavily revised April 200
A Grounded theory study of the job-seeking experiences of foreign graduates on the German job market
Dynamics of alliance formation and the egalitarian revolution
Arguably the most influential force in human history is the formation of
social coalitions and alliances (i.e., long-lasting coalitions) and their
impact on individual power. In most great ape species, coalitions occur at
individual and group levels and among both kin and non-kin. Nonetheless, ape
societies remain essentially hierarchical, and coalitions rarely weaken social
inequality. In contrast, human hunter-gatherers show a remarkable tendency to
egalitarianism, and human coalitions and alliances occur not only among
individuals and groups, but also among groups of groups. Here, we develop a
stochastic model describing the emergence of networks of allies resulting from
within-group competition for status or mates between individuals utilizing
dyadic information. The model shows that alliances often emerge in a phase
transition-like fashion if the group size, awareness, aggressiveness, and
persuasiveness of individuals are large and the decay rate of individual
affinities is small. With cultural inheritance of social networks, a single
leveling alliance including all group members can emerge in several
generations. Our results suggest that a rapid transition from a hierarchical
society of great apes to an egalitarian society of hunter-gatherers (often
referred to as "egalitarian revolution") could indeed follow an increase in
human cognitive abilities. The establishment of stable group-wide egalitarian
alliances creates conditions promoting the origin of cultural norms favoring
the group interests over those of individuals.Comment: 37 pages, 15 figure
Green's functions technique for calculating the emission spectrum in a quantum dot-cavity system
We introduce the Green's functions technique as an alternative theory to the
quantum regression theorem formalism for calculating the two-time correlation
functions in open quantum systems. In particular, we investigate the potential
of this theoretical approach by its application to compute the emission
spectrum of a dissipative system composed by a single quantum dot inside of a
semiconductor cavity. We also describe a simple algorithm based on the Green's
functions technique for calculating the emission spectrum of the quantum dot as
well as of the cavity which can easily be implemented in any numerical linear
algebra package. We find that the Green's functions technique demonstrates a
better accuracy and efficiency in the calculation of the emission spectrum and
it allows to overcome the inherent theoretical difficulties associated to the
direct application of the quantum regression theorem approach
Homoclinic snaking of localized states in doubly diffusive convection
Numerical continuation is used to investigate stationary spatially localized states in two-dimensional thermosolutal convection in a plane horizontal layer with no-slip boundary conditions at top and bottom. Convectons in the form of 1-pulse and 2-pulse states of both odd and even parity exhibit homoclinic snaking in a common Rayleigh number regime. In contrast to similar states in binary fluid convection, odd parity convectons do not pump concentration horizontally. Stable but time-dependent localized structures are present for Rayleigh numbers below the snaking region for stationary convectons. The computations are carried out for (inverse) Lewis number \tau = 1/15 and Prandtl numbers Pr = 1 and Pr >> 1
Obtaining a class of Type O pure radiation metrics with a cosmological constant, using invariant operators
Using the generalised invariant formalism we derive a class of conformally
flat spacetimes whose Ricci tensor has a pure radiation and a Ricci scalar
component. The method used is a development of the methods used earlier for
pure radiation spacetimes of Petrov types O and N respectively. In this paper
we demonstrate how to handle, in the generalised invariant formalism,
spacetimes with isotropy freedom and rich Killing vector structure. Once the
spacetimes have been constructed, it is straightforward to deduce their
Karlhede classification: the Karlhede algorithm terminates at the fourth
derivative order, and the spacetimes all have one degree of null isotropy and
three, four or five Killing vectors.Comment: 29 page
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Healthy shopper? Blood pressure testing in a shopping centre Pop-Up in England
Background: Improving detection of elevated blood pressure (BP) remains a public health need. We present results from a Pop-Up health check stationed in shopping centres in England. We hypothesise the rate of case detection is related to measurable ‘unhealthiness’ of the shopping centres.
Methods: A Pop-Up health check was sited in four and three shopping centres sampled from the top ten unhealthiest and top 15 healthiest shopping regions respectively, following a report ranking towns/cities based on their unhealthy and healthy retail outlets. On one day in each shopping centre, people were approached and consented to BP testing. Outcome measure was people flagged with BP ≥ 140/90 mmHg (cases).
Results: We detected 45 (22.6%) and 20 (13.1%) cases from testing 199 and 152 adults in the unhealthy and healthy locations respectively (relative risk 1.72; 95% confidence interval: 1.06 to 2.78). A measure of unhealthy retail outlets (e.g. fast-food outlets) within each shopping centre was associated with detection rate (R2 = 0.61; p = 0.04).
Conclusion: An association exists between cases of suspect hypertension found in a health check Pop-Up and measured ‘unhealthiness’ of the shopping centre site. Results hint at strategies for public testing of BP, potentially in the context of reducing health inequalities
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