11,174 research outputs found

    The colour of the narrow line Sy1-blazar 0324+3410

    Full text link
    Aims. We investigate the properties of the host galaxy of the blazar J0324+3410 (B2 0321+33) by the analysis of B and R images obtained with the NOT under good photometric conditions. Methods: The galaxy was studied using different methods: Sersic model fitting, unsharp-masked images, B-R image and B-R profile analysis. Results: The images show that the host galaxy has a ring-like morphology. The B-R colour image reveals two bluish zones: one that coincides with the nuclear region, interpreted as the signature of emission related to the active nucleus, the other zone is extended and is located in the host ring-structure. We discuss the hypothesis that the later is thermal emission from a burst of star formation triggered by an interacting/merging process

    Search for β+\beta^+EC and ECEC processes in 112^{112}Sn

    Full text link
    Limits on β+\beta^+EC (here EC denotes electron capture) and ECEC processes in 112^{112}Sn have been obtained using a 380 cm3^3 HPGe detector and an external source consisting of 53.355 g enriched tin (94.32% of 112^{112}Sn). A limit with 90% C.L. on the 112^{112}Sn half-life of 4.7×10204.7\times 10^{20} y for the ECEC(0ν\nu) transition to the 03+0^+_3 excited state in 112^{112}Cd (1871.0 keV) has been established. This transition is discussed in the context of a possible enhancement of the decay rate by several orders of magnitude given that the ECEC(0ν)(0\nu) process is nearly degenerate with an excited state in the daughter nuclide. Prospects for investigating such a process in future experiments are discussed. The limits on other β+\beta^+EC and ECEC processes in 112^{112}Sn were obtained on the level of (0.6−8.7)×1020(0.6-8.7)\times 10^{20} y at the 90% C.L.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure

    Permeability and Protest in Lane 49: Entangling Materialities of Place with Housing Activism in Shanghai

    Get PDF
    Since China’s implementation of a neo-liberal housing regime, housing activism has boomed. Whilst activism is ultimately in place, as increasingly recognised within protest work, there is limited reflection upon how permeable material histories are entangled with the throwntogetherness of place as a site for protest. Employing ethnography over three months, this article follows the emergence, organisation and implementation of housing activism in Lane 49, a public housing community in downtown Shanghai. Utilising feminist geography and feminist political theorisations of material permeability this article contributes to Chinese geographies of protest, providing a local epistemology of housing activism which demonstrates the importance of drawing materiality into understandings of activist tactics. The article also contributes to radical geographies of protest by deconstructing the idea of public protest in a public place and thus offering opportunities to demonstrate how, through blurring public-private binaries, protest can emerge and survive in authoritative governance regimes

    Everyday domestic water and energy consumption in Shanghai homes: The resurgence and persistence of gendered practices in China

    Get PDF
    China's ecological civilization centralises households as a unit of intervention for environmental policy. The household constructed within such policy reduces complex social arrangements and processes and results in efficiency and behaviour change interventions. Such interventions have had limited success and contribute to reproducing inequality. This paper uses ethnographic methods to develop insights into everyday practices that consume energy and water within homes in urban China. In doing so, understandings of both the responsibilities and temporalities of labour for these practices are developed, and the entanglement of these practices across diverse policy arenas is explored. Focusing upon water treatment, cooking, dishwashing, and laundering - this paper demonstrates not only how women have a much greater responsibility for such practices, but that the importance of women's labour is considered greater for practices in which hygiene is considered critical and contributing to health protection. Gendered labour is connected to the resurgence of Confucian gender ideologies within CCP policy and discourse post-1968. The exacerbation of anxieties around the health of children is further connected with parents experiencing pressure in raising their children as ‘high-quality citizens’

    The Co-occurrence of child and intimate partner maltreatment in the family: characteristics of the violent perpetrators

    Get PDF
    This study considers the characteristics associated with mothers and fathers who maltreat their child and each other in comparison to parents who only maltreat their child. One hundred and sixty-two parents who had allegations of child maltreatment made against them were considered. The sample consisted of 43 fathers (Paternal Family—PF) and 23 mothers (Maternal Family—MF) who perpetrated both partner and child maltreatment, together with 23 fathers (Paternal Child—PC) and 26 mothers (Maternal Child—MC) who perpetrated child maltreatment only. In addition, 2 fathers (Paternal Victim—PV) and 23 mothers (Maternal Victim—MV) were victims of intimate partner maltreatment and perpetrators of child maltreatment and 7 fathers (Paternal Non-abusive Carer—PNC) and 15 mothers (Maternal Non-abusive Carer—MNC) did not maltreat the child but lived with an individual who did. Within their family unit, 40.7% of parents perpetrated both intimate partner and child maltreatment. However, fathers were significantly more likely to maltreat both their partner and child than mothers and mothers were significantly more likely to be victims of intimate partner violence than fathers. PF fathers conducted the highest amount of physical and/or sexual child maltreatment while MC and MV mothers perpetrated the highest amount of child neglect. Few significant differences between mothers were found. PF fathers had significantly more factors associated with development of a criminogenic lifestyle than PC fathers. Marked sex differences were demonstrated with PF fathers demonstrating significantly more antisocial characteristics, less mental health problems and fewer feelings of isolation than MF mothers. MC mothers had significantly more childhood abuse, mental health problems, parenting risk factors and were significantly more likely to be biologically related to the child than PC fathers. This study suggests that violent families should be assessed and treated in a holistic manner, considering the effects of partner violence upon all family members, rather than exclusively intervening with the violent man

    Fast linear-space computations of longest common subsequences

    Get PDF
    AbstractSpace saving techniques in computations of a longest common subsequence (LCS) of two strings are crucial in many applications, notably, in molecular sequence comparisons. For about ten years, however, the only linear-space LCS algorithm known required time quadratic in the length of the input, for all inputs. This paper reviews linear-space LCS computations in connection with two classical paradigms originally designed to take less than quadratic time in favorable circumstances. The objective is to achieve the space reduction without alteration of the asymptotic time complexity of the original algorithm. The first one of the resulting constructions takes time O(n(m−l)), and is thus suitable for cases where the LCS is expected to be close to the shortest input string. The second takes time O(ml log(min[s, m, 2nl])) and suits cases where one of the inputs is much shorter than the other. Here m and n (m⩽n) are the lengths of the two input strings, l is the length of the longest common subsequences and s is the size of the alphabet. Along the way, a very simple O(m(m−l)) time algorithm is also derived for the case of strings of equal length

    Harnessing elastic instabilities for enhanced mixing and reaction kinetics in porous media

    Full text link
    Turbulent flows have been used for millennia to mix solutes; a familiar example is stirring cream into coffee. However, many energy, environmental, and industrial processes rely on the mixing of solutes in porous media where confinement suppresses inertial turbulence. As a result, mixing is drastically hindered, requiring fluid to permeate long distances for appreciable mixing and introducing additional steps to drive mixing that can be expensive and environmentally harmful. Here, we demonstrate that this limitation can be overcome just by adding dilute amounts of flexible polymers to the fluid. Flow-driven stretching of the polymers generates an elastic instability (EI), driving turbulent-like chaotic flow fluctuations, despite the pore-scale confinement that prohibits typical inertial turbulence. Using in situ imaging, we show that these fluctuations stretch and fold the fluid within the pores along thin layers (``lamellae'') characterized by sharp solute concentration gradients, driving mixing by diffusion in the pores. This process results in a 3×3\times reduction in the required mixing length, a 6×6\times increase in solute transverse dispersivity, and can be harnessed to increase the rate at which chemical compounds react by 3×3\times -- enhancements that we rationalize using turbulence-inspired modeling of the underlying transport processes. Our work thereby establishes a simple, robust, versatile, and predictive new way to mix solutes in porous media, with potential applications ranging from large-scale chemical production to environmental remediation

    On Computing Longest Common Subsequences in Linear Space

    Get PDF

    A survey of polarization in the JVAS/CLASS flat-spectrum radio source surveys: I. The data and catalogue production

    Get PDF
    We have used the very large JVAS/CLASS 8.4-GHz surveys of flat-spectrum radio sources to obtain a large, uniformly observed and calibrated, sample of radio source polarizations. These are useful for many investigations of the properties of radio sources and the interstellar medium. We discuss comparisons with polarization measurements from this survey and from other large-scale surveys of polarization in flat-spectrum sources.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 8 pages, 5 figures. Full version of Table 2 available at http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~njj/classqu_po
    • …
    corecore