11,895 research outputs found
Gravitational Wave - Gauge Field Oscillations
Gravitational waves propagating through a stationary gauge field transform
into gauge field waves and back again. When multiple families of flavor-space
locked gauge fields are present, the gravitational and gauge field waves
exhibit novel dynamics. At high frequencies, the system behaves like coupled
oscillators in which the gravitational wave is the central pacemaker. Due to
energy conservation and exchange among the oscillators, the wave amplitudes lie
on a multidimensional sphere, reminiscent of neutrino flavor oscillations. This
phenomenon has implications for cosmological scenarios based on flavor-space
locked gauge fields.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, 1 animation; replacement matches published
versio
The time evolution of cosmological redshift as a test of dark energy
The variation of the expansion rate of the Universe with time produces an
evolution in the cosmological redshift of distant sources (for example quasar
Lyman- absorption lines), that might be directly observed by future
ultra stable, high-resolution spectrographs (such as CODEX) coupled to
extremely large telescopes (such as European Southern Observatory's Extremely
Large Telescope, ELT). This would open a new window to explore the physical
mechanism responsible for the current acceleration of the Universe. We
investigate the evolution of cosmological redshift from a variety of dark
energy models, and compare it with simulated data. We perform a Fisher matrix
analysis and discuss the prospects for constraining the parameters of these
models and for discriminating among competing candidates. We find that, because
of parameter degeneracies, and of the inherent technical difficulties involved
in this kind of observations, the uncertainties on parameter reconstruction can
be rather large unless strong external priors are assumed. However, the method
could be a valuable complementary cosmological tool, and give important
insights on the dynamics of dark energy, not obtainable using other probes.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. Matching published versio
Plant canopy shape and the influences on UV exposures to the canopy
The solar spectra at selected sites over hemispherical, conical and pinnacle plant canopy models has been evaluated with a dosimetric technique. The irradiance at the sites varies by up to a factor of 0.31 compared to the irradiance on a horizontal plane. The biologically effective (UVBE) exposures evaluated with the dosimetric technique at sites over the plant canopy are up to 19% of that on a horizontal plane. Compared to a spectroradiometer, the technique provides a more practicable method of measuring the UVBE exposures at multiple sites over a plant canopy. Usage of a dosimeter at one site to provide the exposures at that site for different sun angles introduces an error of more than 50%. Knowledge of the spectra allowed the UV and UVBE exposures to be calculated at each site along with the exposures to the entire canopies. These were dependent on the sun angle and the canopy shape. For plant damage, the UVBE was a maximum of about 1.4 mJ cm-2/min. Compared to the hemispherical canopy, the UVBE exposure for generalised plant damage was 45% less for the pinnacle canopy and 23% less for the conical canopy. The canopy exposures could not be determined from measurements of the ambient exposure
Cosmology with velocity dispersion counts: an alternative to measuring cluster halo masses
The evolution of galaxy cluster counts is a powerful probe of several
fundamental cosmological parameters. A number of recent studies using this
probe have claimed tension with the cosmology preferred by the analysis of the
Planck primary CMB data, in the sense that there are fewer clusters observed
than predicted based on the primary CMB cosmology. One possible resolution to
this problem is systematic errors in the absolute halo mass calibration in
cluster studies, which is required to convert the standard theoretical
prediction (the halo mass function) into counts as a function of the observable
(e.g., X-ray luminosity, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich flux, optical richness). Here we
propose an alternative strategy, which is to directly compare predicted and
observed cluster counts as a function of the one-dimensional velocity
dispersion of the cluster galaxies. We argue that the velocity dispersion of
groups/clusters can be theoretically predicted as robustly as mass but, unlike
mass, it can also be directly observed, thus circumventing the main systematic
bias in traditional cluster counts studies. With the aid of the BAHAMAS suite
of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, we demonstrate the potential of the
velocity dispersion counts for discriminating even similar CDM models.
These predictions can be compared with the results from existing redshift
surveys such as the highly-complete Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey, and
upcoming wide-field spectroscopic surveys such as the Wide Area Vista
Extragalactic Survey (WAVES) and the Dark Energy Survey Instrument (DESI).Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. New section
on cosmological forecasts adde
Home accidents amongst elderly people: A locality study in Scotland
Aim
The aim of this locality study was to collect information on reported and unreported accidents amongst elderly people living in one locality in Scotland.
Method
Postal Survey- A postal questionnaire was sent to 3,757 men and women aged 65+ years living in one locality. The questionnaire asked respondents to indicate how many accidents they had experienced in the past twelve months, plus to indicate type and location. Information was gathered on living arrangements, ethnicity, gender, age and deprivation. Respondents were asked if they would be willing to take part in an interview study.
Interview Study - One hundred elders who had had at least one accident in the previous twelve months were interviewed.
Results
Postal Survey - Over a third of the respondents in the postal survey reported having had an accident in the previous twelve months. Bumps and drops and falls were the most common type of accident. Most accidents happened in the kitchen. Women reported more falls than men and those living alone reported more accidents than those living with others. Age was associated with the prevalence of accidents, but the association was somewhat curvilinear, with accidents decreasing with age and then increasing again.
Interview Study â Interviewees found it hard to differentiate one accident from another. Considerable reluctance to visit the GP after an accident was noted, with many not attending even for serious accidents. Almost forty percent were âveryâ distressed after their accident, and a quarter reported a loss of confidence. However, most did not worry about accidents. Few thought that their age, health or medications were a cause of their accidents
Large-Scale Bulk Motions Complicate the Hubble Diagram
We investigate the extent to which correlated distortions of the luminosity
distance-redshift relation due to large-scale bulk flows limit the precision
with which cosmological parameters can be measured. In particular, peculiar
velocities of type 1a supernovae at low redshifts may prevent a sufficient
calibration of the Hubble diagram necessary to measure the dark energy equation
of state to better than 10%, and diminish the resolution of the equation of
state time-derivative projected for planned surveys. We consider similar
distortions of the angular-diameter distance, as well as the Hubble constant.
We show that the measurement of correlations in the large-scale bulk flow at
low redshifts using these distance indicators may be possible with a cumulative
signal-to-noise ratio of order 7 in a survey of 300 type 1a supernovae spread
over 20,000 square degrees.Comment: 6 pages; 4 figure
Multidisciplinary perspectives on the role of nurses and health care assistants in the rehabilitation of older adults.
Aim. This paper describes the perceptions of nurses, healthcare assistants, doctors and therapists of rehabilitation and the role of nurses and healthcare assistants on an acute older adults ward in a London teaching hospital.
Background. The role perception, education and training and attitudes towards the older adults have been identified as barriers that have an impact upon the nursesâ role within rehabilitation. However, little is known about the role of nurses and healthcare assistants in rehabilitation of older adults in acute health care.
Design. Action research study.
Method. Twenty-four semi-structured interviews were conducted and audio recorded about healthcare professionalsâ understanding of rehabilitation, the type of skills needed and their perceptions of the role of nurses and healthcare assistants in rehabilitation. The interview transcripts were analysed using the thematic content analysis.
Results. The findings suggest that the therapists relied on nurses and healthcare assistants for therapy carry-over. Healthcare assistants were perceived as the professional group who could deliver therapy carry-over. There was an evidence of role hierarchy as healthcare assistants perceived that they were not actively involved in decision-making or discharge planning.
Conclusion. This paper suggests that healthcare assistants and nurses are viewed as the professional group best placed to deliver therapy carry-over. However, whilst there is an acknowledgement of their role, there remains a reluctance to acknowledge healthcare assistants as a professional group and to involve them within decision-making and discharge planning
Relevance to clinical practice. Employers must be seen to advocate, support and implement education and training programs for healthcare assistants. However, whilst nurses and healthcare assistants have an integral role in rehabilitation, there needs to be more research into the how they are supported by therapy professionals
Large Extra Dimensions, Sterile neutrinos and Solar Neutrino Data
Solar, atmospheric and LSND neutrino oscillation results require a light
sterile neutrino, , which can exist in the bulk of extra dimensions.
Solar , confined to the brane, can oscillate in the vacuum to the zero
mode of and via successive MSW transitions to Kaluza-Klein states of
. This new way to fit solar data is provided by both low and
intermediate string scale models. From average rates seen in the three types of
solar experiments, the Super-Kamiokande spectrum is predicted with 73%
probability, but dips characteristic of the 0.06 mm extra dimension should be
seen in the SNO spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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