2,719 research outputs found
Resisting the Far-Right: Indigenous Perspectives, Community Arts and Story-Based Strategy
This article explores how we might resist and confront anti-immigration and anti-refugee politics by addressing the social and historical well-spring from which these discriminatory and damaging politics emerge and take sustenance. In doing this, I draw upon the concept of story-based strategy and the idea that our potential to address this issue relies on our capacity to fundamentally shift the dominant ways in which people understand and engage with it. This discussion occurs with reference to one practical application of story-based strategy â a community-arts project titled Stories of Hope and Migration â which attempted to re-frame the migration and refugee debate in Australia by funnelling it through a localised Indigenous perspective. In so doing, this article challenges the way in which early British migrants and their descendants have continually excised themselves from the rhetoric of migration, and furthermore, suggests that through a more nuanced conversation regarding the migration stories of all non-Aboriginal people, we might better promote a more historically aware, compassionate and inclusive society
Broadband sensitivity enhancement of detuned dual-recycled Michelson interferometers with EPR entanglement
We demonstrate the applicability of the EPR entanglement squeezing scheme for
enhancing the shot-noise-limited sensitivity of a detuned dual-recycled
Michelson interferometers. In particular, this scheme is applied to the
GEO\,600 interferometer. The effect of losses throughout the interferometer,
arm length asymmetries, and imperfect separation of the signal and idler beams
are considered
Imaging the Haro 6-10 Infrared Companion
We present an infrared imaging study of the low-mass pre-main-sequence binary system Haro 6-10. This system is one of a handful in which the optically visible primary has the characteristics of a normal T Tauri star, while the secondary is a so-called "infrared companion" (IRC), a strongly extincted object that emits most of its luminosity in the infrared. A speckle holographic technique was used to produce nearly diffraction-limited images on three nights over a 1 yr period starting in late 1997. The images show that the IRC is obscured and surrounded by a compact, irregular, and variable nebula. This structure is in striking contrast to the well-ordered edge-on disk associated with HK Tauri B, the extincted companion to another T Tauri star of similar age. A new, resolved intensity peak was found 0".4 southwest of the IRC. We suggest that it may represent light scattered by a clump of dusty material illuminated by starlight escaping along an outflow-carved cavity in the IRC envelope. The primary star became fainter and the companion became more extended during the observing period
An 11.6 Micron Keck Search For Exozodiacal Dust
We have begun an observational program to search nearby stars for dust disks
that are analogous to the disk of zodiacal dust that fills the interior of our
solar system. We imaged six nearby main-sequence stars with the Keck telescope
at 11.6 microns, correcting for atmosphere-induced wavefront aberrations and
deconvolving the point spread function via classical speckle analysis. We
compare our data to a simple model of the zodiacal dust in our own system based
on COBE/DIRBE observations and place upper limits on the density of exozodiacal
dust in these systems.Comment: 10 pages, figure1, figure2, figure3, and figures 4a-
Is the Urban Coyote a Misanthropic Synanthrope? The Case from Chicago
Coyotes appear to be one of the few mammalian carnivores that occur in urban areas, although their true relationship with urbanization remains poorly understood. We summarize results from a long-term study of the urban ecology of coyotes in the Chicago metropolitan area to determine the degree of synanthropy for this species and discuss the subsequent management implications for human-coyote conflicts. Local population densities were slightly higher, and survival rates for pups were five times higher compared to rural populations. In contrast to demographic patterns, behavioral responses to urbanization, including home range size, avoidance of developed land cover, activity budget, and diet, were not consistent with synanthropy, even for coyotes located in the urban matrix. We discuss the management implications of the paradoxical relationship coyotes have with people and cities
Magma Mixing in the 874 AD Hrafntinnuhraun Rhyolite Eruption
The exposed Icelandic crust contains ~10% rhyolite and ~90% basalt, and there is ample evidence in both recent and ancient rocks of interactions between rhyolitic and basaltic magmas. A spectacular and little-studied example is the c. 874 AD rhyolite eruption of Hrafntinnuhraun at the Torfajökull volcano, where after an initial explosive (Plinian) phase a large rhyolite lava field formed. In this lava field, one vent produced a hybrid lava which is a mechanically mixed blend of approximately 83% rhyolite and 17% basalt.
Polarized light microscopy was conducted on a suite of Hrafntinnuhraun samples that include flow-banded rhyolites, vesicular basaltic enclaves, and hybrid lavas. The flow-banded rhyolites are nearly aphyric, containing plagioclase and augite phenocrysts, with minor hornblende and biotite. The enclaves contain abundant plagioclase, augite, and olivine. The hybrid lavas contain plagioclase, augite, and olivine, but also contain minor amounts of biotite and hornblende.
To better evaluate the magma mixing process, one hybrid lava sample (83:17 rhyolite:basalt) was analyzed by EPMA. This sample contains mineral cargos belonging to both the rhyolite and basalt end-member magmas. Plagioclase compositions range from An22 to An87, with anorthite-rich grains displaying resorption textures. Of particular interest are olivine crystals derived from the basalt, which contain Fo-rich (~Fo80) interiors and narrow rims (~5- 10”m) with lower Fo content (~Fo70). Follow-up work on diffusion modelling will hopefully yield a timescale, thus providing valuable and new information on mixing processes in the conduit prior to the eruption and cooling of this hybrid lava
The quick and the dead: when reaction beats intention
Everyday behaviour involves a trade-off between planned actions and reaction to environmental events.Evidence from neurophysiology, neurology and functional brain imaging suggests different neural bases for the control of different movement types. Here we develop a behavioural paradigm to test movement dynamics for intentional versus reaction movements and provide evidence for a âreactive advantageâ in movement execution, whereby the same action is executed faster in reaction to an opponent. We placed pairs of participants in competition with each other to make a series of button presses. Within subject analysis of movement times revealed a 10 per cent benefit for reactive actions. This was maintained when opponents performed dissimilar actions, and when participants competed against a computer, suggesting that the effect is not related to facilitation produced by action observation. Rather, faster ballistic movements may be a general property of reactive motor control, potentially providing a useful means of promoting survival
A controlled study of virtual reality in first-year magnetostatics
Stereoscopic virtual reality (VR) has experienced a resurgence due to
flagship products such as the Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and smartphone-based VR
solutions like Google Cardboard. This is causing the question to resurface: how
can stereoscopic VR be useful in instruction, if at all, and what are the
pedagogical best practices for its use? To address this, and to continue our
work in this sphere, we performed a study of 289 introductory physics students
who were sorted into three different treatment types: stereoscopic virtual
reality, WebGL simulation, and static 2D images, each designed to provide
information about magnetic fields and forces. Students were assessed using
preliminary items designed to focus on heavily-3D systems. We report on
assessment reliability, and on student performance. Overall, we find that
students who used VR did not significantly outperform students using other
treatment types. There were significant differences between sexes, as other
studies have noted. Dependence on students' self-reported 3D videogame play was
observed, in keeping with previous studies, but this dependence was not
restricted to the VR treatment.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the 2019 Physics Education Research
Conferenc
âYour Picture Looks the Same as My Pictureâ: An Examination of Passing in Transgender Communities
Transgender people remain one of the groups most susceptible to discrimination in the U.S. Previous studies have examined the discrimination and stress transgender people face, but few studies have examined trans identities using existing sociological theories of marginalized groups and identity formation. Using the theories of Dubois and Cooley, this study explores identity formation in conjunction with the phenomenon of passing among transgender people residing in Nebraska. Results suggest that while trans people do pass as a mechanism for subverting discrimination, there are other factors that influence an individualâs choice and strategy to pass or not. The current investigation lends a sociological perspective on the social aspect of gender presentation and gender visibility for trans individuals in a largely conservative Midwestern state
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Integrated crop pollination to buffer spatial and temporal variability in pollinator activity
Insect pollination improves the yield and quality of many crops, yet there is increasing evidence of insufficient insect pollinators limiting crop production. Effective Integrated Crop Pollination (ICP) involves adaptable, targeted and cost effective management of crop pollination and encourages the use of both wild and managed pollinators where appropriate. In this study we investigate how the
addition of honeybee hives affects the community of insects visiting oilseed rape, and if hive number and location affect pollinator foraging and oilseed rape pollination in order to provide evidence for effective ICP. We found that introducing hives increased overall flower visitor numbers and altered the pollinator community, which became dominated by honeybees. Furthermore a greater number of
hives did not increase bee numbers significantly but did result in honeybees foraging further into fields. The timing of surveys and proximity to the field edge influenced different pollinators in different ways and represents an example of spatial and temporal complementarity. For example dipteran flower visitor numbers declined away from the field edge whereas honeybees peaked at intermediate distances into the field. Furthermore, no significant effects of survey round on wild bees overall was observed but honeybee numbers were relatively lower during peak flowering and dipteran abundance was greater in later survey rounds. Thus combining diverse wild pollinators and managed species for
crop pollination buffers spatial and temporal variation in flower visitation. However we found no effect of insect pollination on seed set or yield of oilseed rape in our trial, highlighting the critical need to understand crop demand for insect pollination before investments are made in managing pollination services
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