4,292 research outputs found

    Reply to discussion by G. Carosi and H. Chanson on "Turbulence characteristics in skimming flows on stepped spillways"

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    A main technical issue seems to be associated with the structure of the two-phase air–water flow skimming over the pseudo-bottom formed by the step edges. This is a difficult topic. In the air–water skimming flow, the microscopic structure of the gas–liquid mixture is closely linked with the interactions between turbulent vortices and air–water entities (bubbles, droplets, packets) (e.g., Chanson and Toombes 2002; Carosi and Chanson 2008; Gonzalez and Chanson 2008). In the high-velocity free-surface flow, the strong interactions between the turbulent waters and the atmosphere lead to a complete deformation at the interface. Through the free-surface, air is continuously trapped, and the resulting air–water mixture extends through the entire flow (Rao and Kobus 1971; Wood 1991; Chanson 1997). The air–water flow is characterized a complicated two-phase turbulent motion with void fractions ranging from some small, often nonzero values close to the invert to 100% above a pseudo "free-surface" that is usually defined as the location where the void fraction equals 90% (Cain and Wood 1981; Wood 1991; Chanson 1997; Matos 2000). The notion of "effective homogenous flow" contradicts detailed measurements conducted with accurate instrumentations in large-size facilities with well-controlled flow conditions and it is obsolete. Recent findings (Carosi and Chanson 2008) demonstrated in fact a marked changed in flow properties for C ~ 0.95 to 0.97, that is consistent with earlier studies suggesting the use of Y95 or even Y98 as the characteristic air–water flow thickness (Jevdjevich and Levin 1953; Aivazyan 1986)

    On the informational content of wage offers

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    This article investigates signaling and screening roles of wage offers in a single-play matching model with two-sided unobservable characteristics. It generates the following predictions as matching equilibrium outcomes: (i) “good” jobs offer premia if “high-quality” worker population is large; (ii) “bad” jobs pay compensating differentials if the proportion of “good” jobs to “low-quality” workers is large; (iii) all firms may offer a pooling wage in markets dominated by “high-quality” workers and firms; or (iv) Gresham’s Law prevails: “good” types withdraw if “bad” types dominate the population. The screening/signaling motive thus has the potential of explaining a variety of wage patterns

    Improved control of exogenous attention in action video game players

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    Action video game players (VGPs) have demonstrated a number of attentional advantages over non-players. Here, we propose that many of those benefits might be underpinned by improved control over exogenous (i.e., stimulus-driven) attention. To test this we used an anti-cueing task, in which a sudden-onset cue indicated that the target would likely appear in a separate location on the opposite side of the fixation point. When the time between the cue onset and the target onset was short (40 ms), non-players (nVGPs) showed a typical exogenous attention effect. Their response times were faster to targets presented at the cued (but less probable) location compared with the opposite (more probable) location. VGPs, however, were less likely to have their attention drawn to the location of the cue. When the onset asynchrony was long (600 ms), VGPs and nVGPs were equally able to endogenously shift their attention to the likely (opposite) target location. In order to rule out processing-speed differences as an explanation for this result, we also tested VGPs and nVGPs on an attentional blink (AB) task. In a version of the AB task that minimized demands on task switching and iconic memory, VGPs and nVGPs did not differ in second target identification performance (i.e., VGPs had the same magnitude of AB as nVGPs), suggesting that the anti-cueing results were due to flexible control over exogenous attention rather than to more general speed-of-processing differences

    2-[N-(2,4-Difluoro­phen­yl)carbamo­yl]-3,4,5,6-tetra­fluoro­benzoic acid

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    The title compound, C14H5F6NO3, was synthesized by condensation of tetra­fluoro­phthalic anhydride and 2,4-difluoro­aniline. It was then recrystallized from hexane to give a nonmerohedral twin with two crystallographically unique mol­ecules in the asymmetric unit. The refined twin fraction is 0.460 (3). Torsional differences between the aryl rings and the central amide group account for the presence of two unique mol­ecules. The compound packs as double tapes formed by O—H⋯O and N—H⋯O hydrogen-bonding inter­actions between each unique mol­ecule and its symmetry equivalents

    In the Interests of clients or commerce? Legal aid, supply, demand, and 'ethical indeterminacy' in criminal defence work

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    As a professional, a lawyer's first duty is to serve the client's best interests, before simple monetary gain. In criminal defence work, this duty has been questioned in the debate about the causes of growth in legal aid spending: is it driven by lawyers (suppliers) inducing unnecessary demand for their services or are they merely responding to increased demand? Research reported here found clear evidence of a change in the handling of cases in response to new payment structures, though in ways unexpected by the policy's proponents. The paper develops the concept of 'ethical indeterminacy' as a way of understanding how defence lawyers seek to reconcile the interests of commerce and clients. Ethical indeterminacy suggests that where different courses of action could each be said to benefit the client, the lawyer will tend to advise the client to decide in the lawyer's own interests. Ethical indeterminacy is mediated by a range of competing conceptions of 'quality' and 'need'. The paper goes on to question the very distinction between 'supply' and 'demand' in the provision of legal services

    Simultaneous dynamic electrical and structural measurements of functional materials

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    A new materials characterization system developed at the XMaS beamline, located at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in France, is presented. We show that this new capability allows to measure the atomic structural evolution (crystallography) of piezoelectric materials whilst simultaneously measuring the overall strain characteristics and electrical response to dynamically (ac) applied external stimuli

    Re-evaluating Passive Research Involvement in the Undergraduate Curriculum

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    In recent years, advocates for research-based education have publicized many examples of passive research involvement, defined as undergraduates learning about the content and lived experience of research at their institution. But the qualitative dimensions of passive research involvement remain unknown. The authors’ study uses Diana Laurillard’s “conversational framework” to analyze reports from 367 undergraduate students at a UK researchintensive university who met researchers and learned about their work. The results show a range of experiences in student learning about faculty research. These findings make the case that passive research involvement has its own integrity and cannot be characterized as an absence of participation. The authors suggest ways that the students as audience category can enhance undergraduate connections with research
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