4,366 research outputs found
Pedagogy and Learning Environment in a Franco-Ontarian Child Care Centre
In order to succeed in French First Language (FFL) schools, students must have a working knowledge of French. For many Anglophone and Allophone students, the journey toward official bilingualism through FFL schooling begins in FFL child care centres. The programs offered in these centres were designed to foster the linguistic and literacy development of Franco-Ontarian children before they enter the FFL K-6 school system (CLR-Net, 2009; Government of Canada, 1982, 2008 & 2012; MinistĂšre de l\u27Ă©ducation, 2004; Ontario MEO, 2005). This paper investigates whether Ă©ducatrices in FFL child care centres can meet all childrenâs French needs and, if so, how
On Bogovski\u{\i} and regularized Poincar\'e integral operators for de Rham complexes on Lipschitz domains
We study integral operators related to a regularized version of the classical
Poincar\'e path integral and the adjoint class generalizing Bogovski\u{\i}'s
integral operator, acting on differential forms in . We prove that these
operators are pseudodifferential operators of order -1. The Poincar\'e-type
operators map polynomials to polynomials and can have applications in finite
element analysis. For a domain starlike with respect to a ball, the special
support properties of the operators imply regularity for the de Rham complex
without boundary conditions (using Poincar\'e-type operators) and with full
Dirichlet boundary conditions (using Bogovski\u{\i}-type operators). For
bounded Lipschitz domains, the same regularity results hold, and in addition we
show that the cohomology spaces can always be represented by
functions.Comment: 23 page
The International Geomagnetic Reference Field (IGRF) generation 12: BGS candidates and final models
The International Geomagnetic Reference Field (IGRF) model is a reference main field magnetic model updated on a quinquennial basis.
The latest revision (generation 12) was released in January 2015. The IGRF-12 consists of a definitive model (DGRF2010) of the main field for 2010.0, a model for the field at 2015.0 (IGRF2015) and a prediction of secular variation (IGRF-12 SV) for the forthcoming five years until 2020.0.
The remaining coefficients of IGRF-12 are unchanged from IGRF-11. Nine candidates were submitted from various international teams for consideration to the IGRF Taskforce led by Erwan Thebault (Nantes) and Chris Finlay (DTU Space). The final models were computed from all candidates using a Huber weighting in space scheme. In this poster, we outline the modelling steps for the three BGS candidate
models and compare them to the other submitted candidates and the final official models released as IGRF-12
Prenatal factors contribute to the emergence of kwoshiorkor or marasmus in severe undernutrition: evidence for the predictive adaptation model
Severe acute malnutrition in childhood manifests as oedematous (kwashiorkor, marasmic kwashiorkor) and non-oedematous (marasmus) syndromes with very different prognoses. Kwashiorkor differs from marasmus in the patterns of protein, amino acid and lipid metabolism when patients are acutely ill as well as after rehabilitation to ideal weight for height. Metabolic patterns among marasmic patients define them as metabolically thrifty, while kwashiorkor patients function as metabolically profligate. Such differences might underlie syndromic presentation and prognosis. However, no fundamental explanation exists for these differences in metabolism, nor clinical pictures, given similar exposures to undernutrition. We hypothesized that different developmental trajectories underlie these clinical-metabolic phenotypes: if so this would be strong evidence in support of predictive adaptation model of developmental plasticity
Climatology of Short-Period Gravity Waves Observed over Northern Australia during the Darwin Area Wave Experiment (DAWEX) and their Dominant Source Regions
The Darwin Area Wave Experiment (DAWEX) was designed to investigate the generation and propagation of gravity waves from intense regions of localized convection that occur regularly over northern Australia (in the vicinity of Darwin) during the premonsoon period. This multinational program was conducted during the austral spring 2001 using a range of coordinated optical, radar, and in situ balloon measurements. As part of this program, all-sky image observations of short-period gravity wave events in the near infrared OH nightglow emission (altitude ~87 km) were made from two well-separated sites in northern Australia: Wyndham (15.5ÂșS, 128.1ÂșE) and Katherine (14.5ÂșS, 132.3ÂșE), over a 10-day period during November 2001. A total of 25 extensive wave events were observed during this period, from which the dominant horizontal wave characteristics were determined to be: wavelength 25â35 km and observed phase speed 27â75 m/s, yielding observed periods from 7 to 14 min, consistent with previous measurements at other low-latitude sites. A key finding of this study was a marked anisotropy in the wave propagation headings, with over 3/4 of the events exhibiting a strong southward component of motion and a clear preference for wave progression over the azimuthal range SE to SSW. Although this range encompasses gravity waves originating locally from the Darwin area, the majority of the wave events exhibited propagation headings consistent with more distant sources located to the north and northwest of Australia. Assuming deep convection was the dominant mechanism for the waves, the strong asymmetry in their velocity distribution appears to result from a combination of nonuniformity in the geographic occurrence of thunderstorms coupled together with significant wind filtering effects at the source altitude and within the middle atmosphere. These results are consistent with long-range, short-period wave propagation (most probably in the form of ducted waves) possibly from intense convective regions located ~1000 km to the north over the Indonesian Island chain
On the Nature of Singularities in Plane Symmetric Scalar Field Cosmologies
The nature of the initial singularity in spatially compact plane symmetric
scalar field cosmologies is investigated. It is shown that this singularity is
crushing and velocity dominated and that the Kretschmann scalar diverges
uniformly as it is approached. The last fact means in particular that a maximal
globally hyperbolic spacetime in this class cannot be extended towards the past
through a Cauchy horizon. A subclass of these spacetimes is identified for
which the singularity is isotropic.Comment: 7 pages, MPA-AR-94-
Near Infrared Adaptive Optics Imaging of QSO Host Galaxies
We report near-infrared (primarily H-band) adaptive optics (AO) imaging with
the Gemini-N and Subaru Telescopes, of a representative sample of 32 nearby
(z<0.3) QSOs selected from the Palomar-Green (PG) Bright Quasar Survey (BQS),
in order to investigate the properties of the host galaxies. 2D modeling and
visual inspection of the images shows that ~36% of the hosts are ellipticals,
\~39% contain a prominent disk component, and ~25% are of undetermined type.
30% show obvious signs of disturbance. The mean M_H(host) = -24.82 (2.1L_H*),
with a range -23.5 to -26.5 (~0.63 to 10 L_H*). At <L_H*, all hosts have a
dominant disk component, while at >2 L_H* most are ellipticals. "Disturbed"
hosts are found at all M_H(host), while "strongly disturbed" hosts appear to
favor the more luminous hosts. Hosts with prominent disks have less luminous
QSOs, while the most luminous QSOs are almost exclusively in ellipticals or in
mergers (which presumably shortly will be ellipticals). At z<0.13, where our
sample is complete at B-band, we find no clear correlation between M_B(QSO) and
M_H(host). However, at z>0.15, the more luminous QSOs (M_B<-24.7), and 4/5 of
the radio-loud QSOs, have the most luminous H-band hosts (>7L_H*), most of
which are ellipticals. Finally, we find a strong correlation between the
"infrared-excess", L_IR/L_BB, of QSOs with host type and degree of disturbance.
Disturbed and strongly disturbed hosts and hosts with dominant disks have
L_IR/L_BB twice that of non-disturbed and elliptical hosts, respectively. QSOs
with "disturbed" and "strongly-disturbed" hosts are also found to have
morphologies and mid/far-infrared colors that are similar to what is found for
"warm" ultraluminous infrared galaxies, providing further evidence for a
possible evolutionary connection between both classes of objects.Comment: 80 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Supp
Reorganize your blogs: Supporting blog re-visitation with natural language processing and visualization
Temporally-connected personal blogs contain voluminous textual content, presenting challenges in re-visiting and reflecting on experiences. Other data repositories have benefited from natural language processing (NLP) and interactive visualizations (VIS) to support exploration, but little is known about how these techniques could be used with blogs to present experiences and support multimodal interaction with blogs, particularly for authors. This paper presents the effect of reorganizationâreorganizing the large blog set with NLP and presenting abstract topics with VISâto support novel re-visitation experiences to blogs. The BlogCloud tool, a blog re-visitation tool that reorganizes blog paragraphs around user-searched keywords, implements reorganization and similarity-based content grouping. Through a public use session with bloggers who wrote about extended hikes, we observed the effect of NLP-based reorganization in delivering novel re-visitation experiences. Findings suggest that the re-presented topics provide new reflection materials and re-visitation paths, enabling interaction with symbolic items in memory
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