2,927 research outputs found
Interactions between teaching assistants and students boost engagement in physics labs
Through in-class observations of teaching assistants (TAs) and students in
the lab sections of a large introductory physics course, we study which TA
behaviors can be used to predict student engagement and, in turn, how this
engagement relates to learning. For the TAs, we record data to determine how
they adhere to and deliver the lesson plan and how they interact with students
during the lab. For the students, we use observations to record the level of
student engagement and pre- and post-tests of lab skills to measure learning.
We find that the frequency of TA-student interactions, especially those
initiated by the TAs, is a positive and significant predictor of student
engagement. Interestingly, the length of interactions is not significantly
correlated with student engagement. In addition, we find that student
engagement was a better predictor of post-test performance than pre-test
scores. These results shed light on the manner in which students learn how to
conduct inquiry and suggest that, by proactively engaging students, TAs may
have a positive effect on student engagement, and therefore learning, in the
lab.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures. v2: Revised for clarity and concision. Version
accepted to Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Researc
The Price Responsiveness of Salmon Supply in the Short and Long Run
Productivity growth and competitiveness indicate that salmon supply is price responsive. However, in the short run supply is likely to be constrained by the biological production process, regulations, and capacity constraints. In this article, we estimate a restricted profit function for Norwegian salmon producers, which allows us to examine the industry’s short-run and long-run supply responsiveness separately. Using data spanning 1985 to 2004, we find that there is close to zero, own-price supply responsiveness in the short run. In the long run, this changes substantially as supply becomes elastic. This result can contribute to explaining the observed cyclical profitability in the salmon farming industry.Restricted profit function, supply, salmon farming, profit cycles, Demand and Price Analysis, Productivity Analysis, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, D24, Q21, Q22,
VETA x ray data acquisition and control system
We describe the X-ray Data Acquisition and Control System (XDACS) used together with the X-ray Detection System (XDS) to characterize the X-ray image during testing of the AXAF P1/H1 mirror pair at the MSFC X-ray Calibration Facility. A variety of X-ray data were acquired, analyzed and archived during the testing including: mirror alignment, encircled energy, effective area, point spread function, system housekeeping and proportional counter window uniformity data. The system architecture is presented with emphasis placed on key features that include a layered UNIX tool approach, dedicated subsystem controllers, real-time X-window displays, flexibility in combining tools, network connectivity and system extensibility. The VETA test data archive is also described
Calidad de carne en broilers alimentados con dietas a base de maíz o arroz integral suplementados cona-tocoferol y Selenio orgánico.
Evaluating Greek equity funds using data envelopment analysis
This study assesses the relative performance of Greek equity funds employing a non-parametric method, specifically Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA). Using an original sample of cost and operational attributes we explore the e¤ect of each variable on funds' operational efficiency for an oligopolistic and bank-dominated fund industry. Our results have significant implications for the investors' fund selection process since we are able to identify potential sources of inefficiencies for the funds. The most striking result is that the percentage of assets under management affects performance negatively, a conclusion which may be related to the structure of the domestic stock market. Furthermore, we provide evidence against the notion of funds' mean-variance efficiency
The Equivalence Principle in the Non-baryonic Regime
We consider the empirical validity of the equivalence principle for
non-baryonic matter. Working in the context of the TH\epsilon\mu formalism, we
evaluate the constraints experiments place on parameters associated with
violation of the equivalence principle (EVPs) over as wide a sector of the
standard model as possible. Specific examples include new parameter constraints
which arise from torsion balance experiments, gravitational red shift,
variation of the fine structure constant, time-dilation measurements, and
matter/antimatter experiments. We find several new bounds on EVPs in the
leptonic and kaon sectors.Comment: 22 pages, late
New Upper Limit of Terrestrial Equivalence Principle Test for Rotating Extended Bodies
Improved terrestrial experiment to test the equivalence principle for
rotating extended bodies is presented, and a new upper limit for the violation
of the equivalence principle is obtained at the level of 1.6, which is limited by the friction of the rotating gyroscope. It
means the spin-gravity interaction between the extended bodies has not been
observed at this level.Comment: 4 page
Alternativas e consequências da debicagem em galinhas reprodutoras e poedeiras comerciais.
bitstream/item/58241/1/doc128.pd
Surveying the Inner Halo of the Galaxy with 2MASS-Selected Horizontal Branch Candidates
We use 2MASS photometry to select blue horizontal branch (BHB) candidates
covering the sky |b|>15 deg. A 12.5<J<15.5 sample of BHB stars traces the thick
disk and inner halo to d<9 kpc, with a density comparable to that of M giant
stars. We base our sample selection strategy on the Century Survey Galactic
Halo Project, a survey that provides a complete, spectroscopically-identified
sample of blue stars to a similar depth as the 2MASS catalog. We show that a
-0.20<(J-H)_0<0.10, -0.10<(H-K)_0<0.10 color-selected sample of stars is 65%
complete for BHB stars, and is composed of 47% BHB stars. We apply this
photometric selection to the full 2MASS catalog, and see no spatial
overdensities of BHB candidates at high Galactic latitude |b|>50 deg. We insert
simulated star streams into the data and conclude that the high Galactic
latitude BHB candidates are consistent with having no ~5 deg wide star stream
with density greater than 0.33 objects deg^-2 at the 95% confidence level. The
absence of structure suggests there have been no major accretion events in the
inner halo in the last few Gyr. However, at low Galactic latitudes a two-point
angular correlation analysis reveals structure on angular scales <1 deg. This
structure is apparently associated with stars in the thick disk, and has a
physical scale of 10-100 pc. Interestingly, such structures are expected by
cosmological simulations that predict the majority of the thick disk may arise
from accretion and disruption of satellite mergers.Comment: 11 pages, including figures. Accepted by AJ with minor revision
Quantum fluctuations for drag free geodesic motion
The drag free technique is used to force a proof mass to follow a geodesic
motion. The mass is protected from perturbations by a cage, and the motion of
the latter is actively controlled to follow the motion of the proof mass. We
present a theoretical analysis of the effects of quantum fluctuations for this
technique. We show that a perfect drag free operation is in principle possible
at the quantum level, in spite of the back action exerted on the mass by the
position sensor.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX, minor change
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