23,859 research outputs found
Lyme Disease: Prevention, Recognition & Treatment
Cases of Lyme disease have been steadily rising in Vermont every year. Though the public is becoming more aware of its presence, there is a great deal of misinformation regarding its prevention and treatment.https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/fmclerk/1355/thumbnail.jp
Innovation in incapacity: education, technique, subject
Abstract
This essay addresses the question of change as it is expressed in debates on the introduction and use of new digital technologies in contemporary education. It sets out some of the terms of this debate, concerning MOOCs in particular, and puts into question the very conception of change they presume. The essay advocates a distinction between education, which marks the subjective capacity of all for thought, and pedagogy, which, the essay argues, teaches subjective incapacity for all. The case is made that without a formal conception of change MOOCs will only strengthen the contemporary pedagogical project of difference as repetition. In conclusion, the essay attempts to sketch a conception of real change such that a new orientation to the debate is proposed
Recommended from our members
Making English their own: The use of ELF among students of English at the Free University of Berlin
The Planck SZ Cluster Catalog: Expected X-ray Properties
Surveys based on the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect provide a fresh view of
the galaxy cluster population, one that is complementary to X-ray surveys. To
better understand the relation between these two kinds of survey, we construct
an empirical cluster model using scaling relations constrained by current X-ray
and SZ data. We apply our model to predict the X-ray properties of the Planck
SZ Cluster Catalog (PCC) and compare them to existing X-ray cluster catalogs.
We find that Planck should significantly extend the depth of the previous
all-sky cluster survey, performed in the early 1990s by the ROSAT satellite,
and should be particularly effective at finding hot, massive clusters (T > 6
keV) out to redshift unity. These are rare objects, and our findings suggest
that Planck could increase the observational sample at z > 0.6 by an order of
magnitude. This would open the way for detailed studies of massive clusters out
to these higher redshifts. Specifically, we find that the majority of
newly-detected Planck clusters should have X-ray fluxes 10^{-13} ergs/s/cm^2 <
f_X[0.5-2 keV] < 10^{-12} ergs/s/cm^2, i.e., distributed over the decade in
flux just below the ROSAT All Sky Survey limit. This is sufficiently bright for
extensive X-ray follow-up campaigns. Once Planck finds these objects,
XMM-Newton and \textit{Chandra} could measure temperatures to 10% for a sample
of ~ 100 clusters in the range 0.5 < z < 1, a valuable increase in the number
of massive clusters studied over this range.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures submitted to A&A; accepted 29 May 201
Analysis of a Precambrian resonance-stabilized day length
During the Precambrian era, Earth's decelerating rotation would have passed a
21-hour period that would have been resonant with the semidiurnal atmospheric
thermal tide. Near this point, the atmospheric torque would have been
maximized, being comparable in magnitude but opposite in direction to the lunar
torque, halting Earth's rotational deceleration, maintaining a constant day
length, as detailed by Zahnle and Walker (1987). We develop a computational
model to determine necessary conditions for formation and breakage of this
resonant effect. Our simulations show the resonance to be resilient to
atmospheric thermal noise but suggest a sudden atmospheric temperature increase
like the deglaciation period following a possible "snowball Earth" near the end
of the Precambrian would break this resonance; the Marinoan and Sturtian
glaciations seem the most likely candidates for this event. Our model provides
a simulated day length over time that resembles existing paleorotational data,
though further data is needed to verify this hypothesis.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Geophysical Research
Letters on 10 May 201
- …