9,354 research outputs found
Negotiating equity in UK universities.
Description of the project The research involved six case studies of higher education institutions across England, Scotland and Wales. The project aims were:to explore staff experiences of equity issues and institutional equity policies. Participants were drawn from different occupational backgrounds and a variety of socio-cultural groups paying attention also to gender, sexual orientation, ‘race’/ethnicity, disability, age and religio to conduct a critical discourse analysis of equity policies in the six institution to gather the views of senior manager-academics and administrators on their institutional equality policies, and how these relate to national policie to identify challenges, inadequacies, examples of good practice, and constraints/incentives in relation to equity policies at institutional and sector level
EARLY DIET OF PRETERM INFANTS AND DEVELOPMENT OF ALLERGIC OR ATOPIC DISEASE - RANDOMIZED PROSPECTIVE-STUDY
The Brown-dwarf Atmosphere Monitoring (BAM) Project II: Multi-epoch monitoring of extremely cool brown dwarfs
With the discovery of Y dwarfs by the WISE mission, the population of field
brown dwarfs now extends to objects with temperatures comparable to those of
Solar System planets. To investigate the atmospheres of these newly identified
brown dwarfs, we have conducted a pilot study monitoring an initial sample of
three late T-dwarfs (T6.5, T8 and T8.5) and one Y-dwarf (Y0) for infrared
photometric variability at multiple epochs. With J-band imaging, each target
was observed for a period of 1.0h to 4.5h per epoch, which covers a significant
fraction of the expected rotational period. These measurements represent the
first photometric monitoring for these targets. For three of the four targets
(2M1047, Ross 458C and WISE0458), multi-epoch monitoring was performed, with
the time span between epochs ranging from a few hours to ~2 years. During the
first epoch, the T8.5 target WISE0458 exhibited variations with a remarkable
min-to-max amplitude of 13%, while the second epoch light curve taken ~2 years
later did not note any variability to a 3% upper limit. With an effective
temperature of ~600 K, WISE0458 is the coldest variable brown dwarf published
to-date, and combined with its high and variable amplitude makes it a
fascinating target for detailed follow-up. The three remaining targets showed
no significant variations, with a photometric precision between 0.8% and 20.0%,
depending on the target brightness. Combining the new results with previous
multi-epoch observations of brown dwarfs with spectral types of T5 or later,
the currently identified variables have locations on the colour-colour diagram
better matched by theoretical models incorporating cloud opacities rather than
cloud-free atmospheres. This preliminary result requires further study to
determine if there is a definitive link between variability among late-T dwarfs
and their location on the colour-colour diagram.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
An L Band Spectrum of the Coldest Brown Dwarf
The coldest brown dwarf, WISE 0855, is the closest known planetary-mass,
free-floating object and has a temperature nearly as cold as the solar system
gas giants. Like Jupiter, it is predicted to have an atmosphere rich in
methane, water, and ammonia, with clouds of volatile ices. WISE 0855 is faint
at near-infrared wavelengths and emits almost all its energy in the
mid-infrared. Skemer et al. 2016 presented a spectrum of WISE 0855 from 4.5-5.1
micron (M band), revealing water vapor features. Here, we present a spectrum of
WISE 0855 in L band, from 3.4-4.14 micron. We present a set of atmosphere
models that include a range of compositions (metallicities and C/O ratios) and
water ice clouds. Methane absorption is clearly present in the spectrum. The
mid-infrared color can be better matched with a methane abundance that is
depleted relative to solar abundance. We find that there is evidence for water
ice clouds in the M band spectrum, and we find a lack of phosphine spectral
features in both the L and M band spectra. We suggest that a deep continuum
opacity source may be obscuring the near-infrared flux, possibly a deep
phosphorous-bearing cloud, ammonium dihyrogen phosphate. Observations of WISE
0855 provide critical constraints for cold planetary atmospheres, bridging the
temperature range between the long-studied solar system planets and accessible
exoplanets. JWST will soon revolutionize our understanding of cold brown dwarfs
with high-precision spectroscopy across the infrared, allowing us to study
their compositions and cloud properties, and to infer their atmospheric
dynamics and formation processes.Comment: 19 pages, 21 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
An analytical model for the detection of levitated nanoparticles in optomechanics
Interferometric position detection of levitated particles is crucial for the
centre-of-mass (CM) motion cooling and manipulation of levitated particles. In
combination with balanced detection and feedback cooling, this system has
provided picometer scale position sensitivity, zeptonewton force detection, and
sub-millikelvin CM temperatures. In this article, we develop an analytical
model of this detection system and compare its performance with experimental
results allowing us to explain the presence of spurious frequencies in the
spectra
The role of vaginal hysterectomy in the treatment of endometrial carcinoma
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74755/1/j.1525-1438.1994.04050342.x.pd
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