12,785 research outputs found
Community learning and development training for professionals engaged in community regeneration and community planning
The study was commissioned by the Scottish Executive Development Department to identify training needs and current provision of community learning and development (CLD) training for a range of professionals (other than those formally qualified in CLD) who are engaged in community regeneration and community planning (Local Government in Scotland Act 2003). It was one of a series of studies emanating from the Scottish Executive response to the review: „Empowered to Practice – the future of community learning and development training in Scotland‟. One of the themes of the report taken up by the Scottish Executive was the need for; „wider opportunities for joint training with other disciplines such as teachers, librarians, college lecturers, health workers and social workers‟
The anthropic principle and the mass scale of the Standard Model
In theories in which different regions of the universe can have different
values of the the physical parameters, we would naturally find ourselves in a
region which has parameters favorable for life. We explore the range of
anthropically allowed values of the mass parameter in the Higgs potential,
. For , the requirement that complex elements be formed
suggests that the Higgs vacuum expectation value must have a magnitude less
than 5 times its observed value. For , baryon stability requires that
, the Planck Mass. Smaller values of may or may not be
allowed depending on issues of element synthesis and stellar evolution. We
conclude that the observed value of is reasonably typical of the
anthropically allowed range, and that anthropic arguments provide a plausible
explanation for the closeness of the QCD scale and the weak scale.Comment: 28 pages, LaTeX. No changes from version originally submitted to
archive, except that problem with figure file has been correcte
Ruling out a higher spin field solution to the cosmological constant problem
We consider the modification of Newton's gravity law in Dolgov's higher spin
models designed to compensate the cosmological constant. We find that the
effective Planck mass is unacceptably large in these models. We also point out
that the properties of gravitational waves are entirely different in these
models as compared to general relativity.Comment: 7 pages, LaTe
Fermion Doubling and a Natural Solution of the Strong CP Problem
We suggest the fermion doubling for all quarks and leptons. It is a
generalization of the neutrino doubling of the seesaw mechanism. The new quarks
and leptons are singlets and carry the electromagnetic charges of their
lighter counterparts. An {\it anomaly free global symmetry} or a
discrete symmetry can be introduced to restrict the Yukawa couplings. The form
of mass matrix is belonging to that of Nelson and Barr even though our model
does not belong to Barr's criterion. The weak CP violation of the
Kobayashi-Maskawa form is obtained through the spontaneous breaking of CP
symmetry at high energy scale. The strong CP solution is through a specific
form of the mass matrix. At low energy, the particle content is the same as in
the standard model. For a model with a global symmetry, in addition there
exists a massless majoron.Comment: SNUTP 93-68, 19 pages 1 TeX figure, ReVTeX 3.
A Classification and Analysis of Higgs-flavor Models
A classification is given of Higgs-flavor models. In these models, there are
several Higgs doublets in an irreducible multiplet R_{Phi} of a non-abelian
symmetry G_{Phi}, under which the quarks and leptons do not transform (thus
giving minimal flavor-changing for the fermions). It is found that different
G_{Phi} and R_{Phi} lead to very distinctive spectra of the extra Higgs
doublets, including different numbers of "sequential Higgs" and of "inert
Higgs" that could play the role of dark matter, different mass relations, and
different patterns of SU(2)_L-breaking splittings within the Higgs doublets.Comment: 35 page
Preliminary Skylab MSS channel evaluation
The author has identified the following significant results. A set of 18 channels which were considered of usable quality were identified. These were channels 1-14, 17, 19-21. Channels 15, 16, 18, and 22 were dropped out because they were of poor quality; channels 7 and 11 were dropped to limit the total channel number to 16. From these 16 channels, a total of 22 signatures were obtained. Eight were developed from uniform blocks of the UMAP, and 14 from use of the DCLUS program. These signatures fell into six basic categories and classified more than 90% of the five scenes mapped: agriculture land (6 signatures); forest aland (4); water (2); open nonagriculture land (2); urban (6); and disturbed land (2)
Visualisation Tools for Multi-Perspective, Cross-Sector, Long-Term Infrastructure Performance Evaluation
Across different infrastructure sectors there are systems that help to monitor the current and near-future operation
and performance of a particular system. Whilst Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) systems are critical
to maintaining acceptable levels of functionality, they do not provide insights over the longer timescales across which
strategic investment decisions play out. To understand how individual or multiple, interdependent, infrastructure
sectors perform over longer timescales, capacity/demand modelling is required. However, the outputs of such
models are often a complex high-dimensionality result-set, and this complexity is further compounded when crosssector
evaluation is required. To maximise utility of such models, tools are required that can process and present
key outputs. In this paper we describe the development of prototype tools for infrastructure performance evaluation
in relation to different strategic decisions and the complex outputs generated from capacity and demand models of
five infrastructure sectors (energy, water, waste water, solid waste, transport) investigated within the UK Infrastructure
Transitions Research Consortium (ITRC). By constructing tools that expose various dimensions of the model outputs,
a user is able to take greater control over the knowledge discovery process
Role of oxygen in the electron-doped superconducting cuprates
We report on resistivity and Hall measurements in thin films of the
electron-doped superconducting cuprate PrCeCuO.
Comparisons between x = 0.17 samples subjected to either ion-irradiation or
oxygenation demonstrate that changing the oxygen content has two separable
effects: 1) a doping effect similar to that of cerium, and 2) a disorder
effect. These results are consistent with prior speculations that apical oxygen
removal is necessary to achieve superconductivity in this compound.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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