7,432 research outputs found
Autopilot? A reflexive review of the piloting process in qualitative e-research
Purpose: This paper examines an oft-neglected aspect of qualitative research practice – conducting a pilot – using the innovative approach of ‘e-research’ to generate both practical and methodological insights.
Approach: Using the authors’ ‘e-research’ pilot as a reflexive case study, key methodological issues are critically reviewed. This review is set in a broader context of the qualitative methods literature in which piloting appears largely as an implicit practice. Using a new and emerging approach (‘e-research’) provides a prompt to review our ‘autopilot’ tendencies and offers a new lens for analysing research practice.
Findings: We find that despite an initial focus on ‘practical’ aspects of data collection within our ‘e-research’, the pilot opened up a range of areas for further consideration. We review research ethics, collaborative research practices and data management issues specifically for e-research but also reflect more broadly on potential implications for piloting within other research designs.
Practical implications: We aim to offer both practical and methodological insights for qualitative researchers, whatever their methodological orientation, so that they might develop approaches for piloting that are appropriate to their own research endeavours. More specifically, we offer tentative guidance to those venturing into the emerging area of ‘e-research’.
Value: This paper offers insight into an oft-ignored aspect of qualitative research, whilst also engaging in emerging area of methodological interest
Recent advances at NASA in calculating the electronic spectra of diatomic molecules
Advanced entry vehicles, such as the proposed Aero-assisted Orbital Transfer Vehicle, provide new and challenging problems for spectroscopy. Large portions of the flow field about such vehicles will be characterized by chemical and thermal nonequilibrium. Only by considering the actual overlap of the atomic and rotational lines emitted by the species present can the impact of radiative transport within the flow field be assessed correctly. To help make such an assessment, a new computer program is described that can generate high-resolution, line-by-line spectra for any spin-allowed transitions in diatomic molecules. The program includes the matrix elements for the rotational energy and distortion to the fourth order; the spin-orbit, spin-spin, and spin-rotation interactions to first order; and the lambda splitting by a perturbation calculation. An overview of the Computational Chemistry Branch at Ames Research Center is also presented
Is space really expanding? A counterexample
In all Friedman models, the cosmological redshift is widely interpreted as a
consequence of the general-relativistic phenomenon of EXPANSION OF SPACE. Other
commonly believed consequences of this phenomenon are superluminal recession
velocities of distant galaxies and the distance to the particle horizon greater
than c*t (where t is the age of the Universe), in apparent conflict with
special relativity. Here, we study a particular Friedman model: empty universe.
This model exhibits both cosmological redshift, superluminal velocities and
infinite distance to the horizon. However, we show that the cosmological
redshift is there simply a relativistic Doppler shift. Moreover, apparently
superluminal velocities and `acausal' distance to the horizon are in fact a
direct consequence of special-relativistic phenomenon of time dilation, as well
as of the adopted definition of distance in cosmology. There is no conflict
with special relativity, whatsoever. In particular, INERTIAL recession
velocities are subluminal. Since in the real Universe, sufficiently distant
galaxies recede with relativistic velocities, these special-relativistic
effects must be at least partly responsible for the cosmological redshift and
the aforementioned `superluminalities', commonly attributed to the expansion of
space. Let us finish with a question resembling a Buddhism-Zen `koan': in an
empty universe, what is expanding?Comment: 12 pages, no figures; added Appendix with a calculation of the
cosmological redshift in `private space
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