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Cultures within a culture: the role of nationality and religion for environmentally significant behaviour in students living in university accommodation
Reducing global warming cannot be achieved through technological interventions alone; it requires a change in human behaviour. Households are a major contributor to carbon emissions, and thus play an integral part in strategies aiming at a more sustainable living. Behaviour changes in the household can make a significant contribution towards reducing CO2 emissions. However, people vary strongly in their household practices; differences in behaviour account for a substantial amount of variance in heat, electricity, and water consumption (Gill et al., 2010). What causes these differences? In addition to age and education, nationality and religion play a role: They impact on physical aspects of well-being and on environmental attitudes (e.g., Isaacs et al., 2010; Guth et al., 1995). The physical aspect such as perception of warmth is of importance insofar as that comfort practices could influence on environmentally significant behaviour. The Eurobarometer 295 (2008), a study on the attitudes of European citizens towards the environment, also revealed differences in attitudes and behaviour of Europeans towards the environment.
Therefore, steps to promote more sustainable living have to be adapted to different cultures. Rising globalization brings about more heterogeneous populations, meaning that there will be increasingly "cultures within a culture." An important question is what happens to cultural differences in environmentally significant behaviour in such a setting. It could be that differences are diluted by a largely shared environment, or that they continue to persist, thanks to being deeply rooted in one’s origin and to the non-shared part of the environment.
Our study:
The aim of this study was to examine the variation in pro-environmental attitudes, behaviour, and values in members of a community now living in a very similar setting but coming from diverse backgrounds. If personal background accounts for differences in the variables at stake, then this has important implications, e.g. for all national interventions launched to change behaviour.
Data was collected through a web-based survey. The survey was sent out to first-year students living in university accommodation at the University of Greenwich. Religion, strength of religion, nationality, years living in the UK, program studied, gender and age were recorded and the impact of these variables on a variety of measures such as pro- environmental attitudes, values, and actual behaviour was assessed.
Results are currently being analysed but preliminary data suggest that sub-culture does play a role and thus needs to be considered when developing carbon reduction interventions. The implications of these findings for the University and national policies are discussed
Vortex lattice of a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a rotating anisotropic trap
We study the vortex lattices in a Bose-Einstein Condensate in a rotating
anisotropic harmonic trap. We first investigate the single particle
wavefunctions obtained by the exact solution of the problem and give simple
expressions for these wavefunctions in the small anisotropy limit. Depending on
the strength of the interactions, a few or a large number of vortices can be
formed. In the limit of many vortices, we calculate the density profile of the
cloud and show that the vortex lattice stays triangular. We also find that the
vortex lattice planes align themselves with the weak axis of the external
potential. For a small number of vortices, we numerically solve the
Gross-Pitaevskii equation and find vortex configurations that are very
different from the vortex configurations in an axisymmetric rotating trap.Comment: 15 pages,4 figure
Relativistic Calculations for Photonuclear Reactions (III): A Consistent Relativistic Analysis of the (e,e'p) and (gamma,p) Reactions
Relativistic calculations for the quasifree electron scattering process (e,
e'p) and the direct knockout contribution to (gamma, p) reactions are
presented. The spectroscopic factors determined from the former reaction are
used to fix the magnitude of the knockout contribution to the (gamma, p)
reaction at 60 MeV. The results obtained for several nuclei indicate that the
knockout contributions are much larger in magnitude and hence closer to the
data than predicted in an earlier comparison based on non-relativistic
calculations. We discuss the sensitivity of the results to the choice of
parameters for the binding and final state interactions. We find these
uncertainties to be more pronounced at the larger missing momenta explored by
the (gamma, p) reaction. The implications of the present results for the size
of contributions due to meson exchange currents are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 21 pages including 5 figures, submitted to Nuc. Phys.
Evaluating the strength of genetic results: Risks and responsibilities
In this issue, we are publishing an Editorial Expression of Concern in connection with a recent article on the genetics of multiple sclerosis (MS). In brief, the authors used exome sequencing of families with multiple individuals diagnosed with MS to identify 21 missense or nonsense mutations in 12 genes, and they then suggest that these 12 genes provide a platform for additional research. Following publication, concerns were raised about the validity of some of the statements made in the manuscript, leading us to a series of discussions, both internally and with the authors. The purpose of this editorial is to describe the sequence of events, the rationale for our eventual publication of the Editorial Expression of Concern, and, in doing so, comment and engender discussion more broadly on the role of scientists as editors in what can sometimes be a grey area: the causal relationship between genetic and phenotypic variation
The Transition to a Giant Vortex Phase in a Fast Rotating Bose-Einstein Condensate
We study the Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) energy functional for a fast rotating
Bose-Einstein condensate on the unit disc in two dimensions. Writing the
coupling parameter as 1 / \eps^2 we consider the asymptotic regime \eps
\to 0 with the angular velocity proportional to
(\eps^2|\log\eps|)^{-1} . We prove that if \Omega = \Omega_0
(\eps^2|\log\eps|)^{-1} and then a minimizer of
the GP energy functional has no zeros in an annulus at the boundary of the disc
that contains the bulk of the mass. The vorticity resides in a complementary
`hole' around the center where the density is vanishingly small. Moreover, we
prove a lower bound to the ground state energy that matches, up to small
errors, the upper bound obtained from an optimal giant vortex trial function,
and also that the winding number of a GP minimizer around the disc is in accord
with the phase of this trial function.Comment: 52 pages, PDFLaTex. Minor corrections, sign convention modified. To
be published in Commun. Math. Phy
Vortex Rings in Fast Rotating Bose-Einstein Condensates
When Bose-Eintein condensates are rotated sufficiently fast, a giant vortex
phase appears, that is the condensate becomes annular with no vortices in the
bulk but a macroscopic phase circulation around the central hole. In a former
paper [M. Correggi, N. Rougerie, J. Yngvason, {\it arXiv:1005.0686}] we have
studied this phenomenon by minimizing the two dimensional Gross-Pitaevskii
energy on the unit disc. In particular we computed an upper bound to the
critical speed for the transition to the giant vortex phase. In this paper we
confirm that this upper bound is optimal by proving that if the rotation speed
is taken slightly below the threshold there are vortices in the condensate. We
prove that they gather along a particular circle on which they are evenly
distributed. This is done by providing new upper and lower bounds to the GP
energy.Comment: to appear in Archive of Rational Mechanics and Analysi
Stress corrosion cracking in Al-Zn-Mg-Cu aluminum alloys in saline environments
Copyright 2013 ASM International. This paper was published in Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A, 44A(3), 1230 - 1253, and is made
available as an electronic reprint with the permission of ASM International. One print or electronic copy may
be made for personal use only. Systematic or multiple reproduction, distribution to multiple locations via
electronic or other means, duplications of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or
modification of the content of this paper are prohibited.Stress corrosion cracking of Al-Zn-Mg-Cu (AA7xxx) aluminum alloys exposed to saline environments at temperatures ranging from 293 K to 353 K (20 °C to 80 °C) has been reviewed with particular attention to the influences of alloy composition and temper, and bulk and local environmental conditions. Stress corrosion crack (SCC) growth rates at room temperature for peak- and over-aged tempers in saline environments are minimized for Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys containing less than ~8 wt pct Zn when Zn/Mg ratios are ranging from 2 to 3, excess magnesium levels are less than 1 wt pct, and copper content is either less than ~0.2 wt pct or ranging from 1.3 to 2 wt pct. A minimum chloride ion concentration of ~0.01 M is required for crack growth rates to exceed those in distilled water, which insures that the local solution pH in crack-tip regions can be maintained at less than 4. Crack growth rates in saline solution without other additions gradually increase with bulk chloride ion concentrations up to around 0.6 M NaCl, whereas in solutions with sufficiently low dichromate (or chromate), inhibitor additions are insensitive to the bulk chloride concentration and are typically at least double those observed without the additions. DCB specimens, fatigue pre-cracked in air before immersion in a saline environment, show an initial period with no detectible crack growth, followed by crack growth at the distilled water rate, and then transition to a higher crack growth rate typical of region 2 crack growth in the saline environment. Time spent in each stage depends on the type of pre-crack (“pop-in” vs fatigue), applied stress intensity factor, alloy chemistry, bulk environment, and, if applied, the external polarization. Apparent activation energies (E a) for SCC growth in Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys exposed to 0.6 M NaCl over the temperatures ranging from 293 K to 353 K (20 °C to 80 °C) for under-, peak-, and over-aged low-copper-containing alloys (~0.8 wt pct), they are typically ranging from 20 to 40 kJ/mol for under- and peak-aged alloys, and based on limited data, around 85 kJ/mol for over-aged tempers. This means that crack propagation in saline environments is most likely to occur by a hydrogen-related process for low-copper-containing Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys in under-, peak- and over-aged tempers, and for high-copper alloys in under- and peak-aged tempers. For over-aged high-copper-containing alloys, cracking is most probably under anodic dissolution control. Future stress corrosion studies should focus on understanding the factors that control crack initiation, and insuring that the next generation of higher performance Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys has similar longer crack initiation times and crack propagation rates to those of the incumbent alloys in an over-aged condition where crack rates are less than 1 mm/month at a high stress intensity factor
PLOS Genetics Data Sharing Policy: In Pursuit of Functional Utility
About a year ago, PLOS implemented a new process intended to further the overarching principle that data used in the work we publish should be accessible and reusable. The motivation goes hand-in-hand with both our open access ethos and the scientific method itself: the validity of a conclusion depends on the ability to reproduce the underlying results
Supersymmetric solutions of PT-/non-PT-symmetric and non-Hermitian Screened Coulomb potential via Hamiltonian hierarchy inspired variational method
The supersymmetric solutions of PT-symmetric and Hermitian/non-Hermitian
forms of quantum systems are obtained by solving the Schrodinger equation for
the Exponential-Cosine Screened Coulomb potential. The Hamiltonian hierarchy
inspired variational method is used to obtain the approximate energy
eigenvalues and corresponding wave functions.Comment: 13 page
Coexistence or Separation of the Superconducting, Antiferromagnetic, and Paramagnetic Phases in Quasi One-Dimensional (TMTSF)2PF6 ?
We report on experimental studies of the character of phase transitions in
the quasi-1D organic compound (TMTSF)2PF6 in the close vicinity of the borders
between the paramagnetic metal PM, antiferromagnetic insulator AF, and
superconducting SC states. In order to drive the system through the phase
border P_0(T_0), the sample was maintained at fixed temperature T and pressure
P, whereas the critical pressure P_0 was tuned by applying the magnetic field
B. In this approach, the magnetic field was used (i) for tuning (P-P_0), and
(ii) for identifying the phase composition (due to qualitatively different
magnetoresistance behavior in different phases). Experimentally, we measured
R(B) and its temperature dependence R(B,T) in the pressure range (0 - 1)GPa.
Our studies focus on the features of the magnetoresistance at the phase
transition between the PM and AF phases, in the close vicinity to the
superconducting transition at T~1K. We found pronounced history effects arising
when the AF/PM phase border is crossed by sweeping the magnetic field: the
resistance depends on a trajectory which the system arrives at a given point of
the P-B-T phase space. In the transition from the PM to AF phase, the features
of the PM phase extends well into the AF phase. At the opposite transition from
the AF to PM phase, the features of the AF phase are observed in the PM phase.
These results evidence for a macroscopically inhomogeneous state, which
contains macroscopic inclusions of the minority phase. When the system is
driven away from the transition, the homogeneous state is restored; upon a
return motion to the phase boundary, no signatures of the minority phase are
observed up to the very phase boundary.Comment: 10 figures, 23 page
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