285 research outputs found
Graduate Recital:Adam Bergeron, Trumpet
Kemp Recital Hall Sunday Evening October 24, 2004 7:00p.m
Trumpet Ensemble
Center for the Performing Arts Tuesday Morning April 12, 2005 11:00a.m
Etude ellipsométrique de l'interface entre des substrats polymériques et des couches optiques déposées par plasma
Bases expérimentales et théoriques -- L'interaction du plasma avec une surface polymérique -- L'ellipsométrie spectroscopique et la caractérisation optique -- Méthodologie expérimentale et caractérisations préliminaires -- Mesures optiques effectuées -- La caractérisation optique des substrats -- Le réacteur plasma -- L'étude ellipsométrique des prétraitements -- L'étude ellipsométriques in-situ -- Les techniques complémentaires -- Étude des prétraitements -- Caractérisation optique -- Étude in-situ de prétraitements sur polycarbonate -- Autres techniques de caractérisation -- Discussion globale de l'étude des prétraitements -- Étude de l'Interface Couche/Substrat -- Caractérisation optique -- Observations TEM -- Étude in-situ de dépôts de SiN1.3 sur polycarbonate -- Discussion de la structure de l'interface -- Effets de l'Interface sur les filtres optiques -- Les filtres interférentiels -- Simulations -- Tests avec des couches antiréfléchissantes
Signs of Binary Evolution in 7 Magnetic DA White Dwarfs
We present our findings on the spectral analysis of seven magnetic white
dwarfs that were presumed to be double degenerates. We obtained time-resolved
spectroscopy at the Gemini Observatory to look for evidence of binarity or fast
rotation. We find three of our targets have rotation periods of less than an
hour based on the shifting positions of the Zeeman-split H components:
13, 35, and 39 min, and we find one more target with a ~hour long period that
is currently unconstrained. We use offset dipole models to determine the
inclination, magnetic field strength, and dipole offset of each target. The
average surface field strengths of our fast rotators vary by 1-2 MG between
different spectra. In all cases, the observed absorption features are too
shallow compared to our models. This could be due to extra flux from a
companion for our three low-mass targets, but the majority of our sample likely
requires an inhomogeneous surface composition. Including an additional magnetic
white dwarf with similar properties presented in the literature, we find that 5
of the 8 targets in this sample show field variations on minute/hour
timescales. A crystallization driven dynamo can potentially explain the
magnetic fields in three of our targets with masses above but
another mechanism is still needed to explain their rapid rotation. We suggest
that rapid rotation or low-masses point to binary evolution as the likely
source of magnetism in 7 of these 8 targets.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A Holocene landscape dynamic multiproxy reconstruction: How do interactions between fire and insect outbreaks shape an ecosystem over long time scales?
At a multi-millennial scale, various disturbances shape boreal forest stand mosaics and the distribution of species. Despite the importance of such disturbances, there is a lack of studies focused on the long-term dynamics of spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana (Clem.)) (SBW) outbreaks and the interaction of insect outbreaks and fire. Here, we combine macrocharcoal and plant macrofossils with a new proxy-lepidopteran scalesto describe the Holocene ecology around a boreal lake. Lepidopteran scales turned out to be a more robust proxy of insect outbreaks than the traditional proxies such as cephalic head capsules and feces. We identified 87 significant peaks in scale abundance over the last 10 000 years. These results indicate that SBW outbreaks were more frequent over the Holocene than suggested by previous studies. Charcoal accumulation rates match the established fire history in eastern Canada: A more fire-prone early and late Holocene and reduced fire frequency during the mid-Holocene. Although on occasion, both fire and insect outbreaks were coeval, our results show a generally inverse relationship between fire frequency and insect outbreaks over the Holocene
Holocene variations of wildfire occurrence as a guide for sustainable management of the northeastern Canadian boreal forest
Background
Cumulative impacts of wildfires and forest harvesting can cause shifts from closed-crown forest to open woodland in boreal ecosystems. To lower the probability of occurrence of such catastrophic regime shifts, forest logging must decrease when fire frequency increases, so that the combined disturbance rate does not exceed the Holocene maximum. Knowing how climate warming will affect fire regimes is thus crucial to sustainably manage the forest. This study aimed to provide a guide to determine sustainable forest harvesting levels, by reconstructing the Holocene fire history at the northern limit of commercial forestry in Quebec using charcoal particles preserved in lake sediments.
Methods
Sediment cores were sampled from four lakes located close to the northern limit of commercial forestry in Quebec. The cores were sliced into consecutive 0.5 cm thick subsamples from which 1 cm3 was extracted to count and measure charcoal particles larger than 150 microns. Age-depth models were obtained for each core based on accelerator mass spectroscopy (AMS) radiocarbon dates. Holocene fire histories were reconstructed by combining charcoal counts and age-depth models to obtain charcoal accumulation rates and, after statistical treatment, long-term trends in fire occurrence (expressed as number of fires per 1000 years).
Results
Fire occurrence varied between the four studied sites, but fires generally occurred more often during warm and dry periods of the Holocene, especially during the Holocene Thermal Maximum (7000–3500 cal. BP), when fire occurrence was twice as high as at present.
Conclusions
The current fire regime in the study area is still within the natural range of variability observed over the Holocene. However, climatic conditions comparable to the Holocene Thermal Maximum could be reached within the next few decades, thus substantially reducing the amount of wood available to the forest industry
Chandra Detection of X-ray Absorption Associated with a Damped Lyman Alpha System
We have observed three quasars, PKS 1127-145, Q 1331+171 and Q0054+144, with
the ACIS-S aboard the Chandra X-ray Observatory, in order to measure soft X-ray
absorption associated with intervening 21-cm and damped Ly absorbers.
For PKS 1127-145, we detect absorption which, if associated with an intervening
z_{abs}=0.312 absorber, implies a metallicity of 23% solar. If the absorption
is not at z_{abs}=0.312, then the metallicity is still constrained to be less
than 23% solar. The advantage of the X-ray measurement is that the derived
metallicity is insensitive to ionization, inclusion of an atom in a molecule,
or depletion onto grains. The X-ray absorption is mostly due to oxygen, and is
consistent with the oxygen abundance of 30% solar derived from optical nebular
emission lines in a foreground galaxy at the redshift of the absorber.
For Q1331+171 and Q 0054+144, only upper limits were obtained, although the
exposure times were intentionally short, since for these two objects we were
interested primarily in measuring flux levels to plan for future observations.
The imaging results are presented in a companion paper.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Spitzer Planet Limits around the Pulsating White Dwarf GD66
We present infrared observations in search of a planet around the white
dwarf, GD66. Time-series photometry of GD66 shows a variation in the arrival
time of stellar pulsations consistent with the presence of a planet with mass >
2.4Mj. Any such planet is too close to the star to be resolved, but the
planet's light can be directly detected as an excess flux at 4.5um. We observed
GD66 with the two shorter wavelength channels of IRAC on Spitzer but did not
find strong evidence of a companion, placing an upper limit of 5--7Mj on the
mass of the companion, assuming an age of 1.2--1.7Gyr.Comment: 10 pages, accepted by Ap
Faculty Brass Quintet
Center for the Performing Arts Tuesday Evening October 21, 2003 8:00p.m
Élargir les mandats de responsabilité sociale à la recherche biomédicale dans les facultés canadiennes
Background: Social accountability (SA), as defined by Boelen and Heck, is the obligation of medical schools to address the needs of communities through education, research and service activities. While SA is embedded within health profession education frameworks in medicine, they are rarely taught within graduate-level (MSc/PhD) education.
Methods: As these programs train future medical researchers, we invited first-year graduate students enrolled in a mandatory professionalism class at our institution (n = 111) to complete a survey on their perceptions of the importance of SA in their research, training, and future careers.
Results: Over 80% (n = 87) of respondents agreed that SA is relevant and felt committed to integrating it into their future research activities, only a limited number of students felt confident and/or supported in their abilities to integrate SA into their research.
Conclusions: Specific SA training in graduate education is necessary for students to effectively incorporate elements of SA into their research, and as such support the SA mandates of their training institutions. We posit that awareness of SA principles formalizes the professional standards for biomedical researchers and is thus foundational for developing a professionalism curriculum in graduate education programs in medicine. We propose an expansion of the World Health Organization (WHO) partnership pentagon to include partners within the research ecosystem (funding partners, certification bodies) that collaborate with biomedical researchers to make research socially accountable.Contexte : La responsabilité sociale (RS), telle que définie par Boelen et Heck, est l'obligation pour les facultés de médecine de répondre aux besoins des communautés par l’entremise de l'éducation, de la recherche et des activités de service. Bien que la responsabilité sociale soit intégrée dans les cadres de formation des professionnels de santé en médecine, elle est rarement enseignée au niveau des études supérieures (MSc/PhD).
Méthodes : Étant donné que ces programmes forment les futurs chercheurs médicaux, nous avons invité les étudiants de première année inscrits à un cours obligatoire sur le professionnalisme dans notre établissement (n = 111) à participer à une enquête sur leurs perceptions de l'importance de la RS dans leur recherche, leur formation et leur future carrière.
Résultats : Plus de 80 % (n = 87) des répondants ont reconnu la pertinence de la RS et se sont engagés à l'intégrer dans leurs futures activités de recherche, mais seul un nombre limité d'étudiants se sont sentis confiants et/ou soutenus dans leurs capacités à intégrer la RS dans leur recherche.
Conclusions : Une formation propre à la RS dans le cadre des études supérieures est nécessaire pour que les étudiants puissent intégrer efficacement des éléments de la RS dans leur recherche, et ainsi promouvoir les mandats de RS de leurs établissements de formation. Nous estimons que la sensibilisation aux principes de la RS formalise les normes professionnelles des chercheurs biomédicaux et qu'elle est donc fondamentale pour l'élaboration d'un programme de professionnalisme dans les programmes d'études supérieures en médecine. Nous proposons d'élargir le pentagone du partenariat de l'Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS) pour y inclure les partenaires de l'écosystème de la recherche (partenaires financiers, organismes de certification) qui collaborent avec les chercheurs biomédicaux pour rendre la recherche socialement responsable
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