29,561 research outputs found
Detecting a rotation in the epsilon Eridani debris disc
The evidence for a rotation of the epsilon Eridani debris disc is examined.
Data at 850 micron wavelength were previously obtained using the Submillimetre
Common User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) over periods in 1997-1998 and 2000-2002. By
chi-square fitting after shift and rotation operations, images from these two
epochs were compared to recover proper motion and orbital motion of the disc.
The same procedures were then performed on simulated images to estimate the
accuracy of the results.
Minima in the chi-square plots indicate a motion of the disc of approximately
0.6'' per year in the direction of the star's proper motion. This
underestimates the true value of 1'' per year, implying that some of the
structure in the disc region is not associated with epsilon Eridani,
originating instead from background galaxies. From the chi-square fitting for
orbital motion, a counterclockwise rotation rate of ~2.75 degrees per year is
deduced. Comparisons with simulated data in which the disc is not rotating show
that noise and background galaxies result in approximately Gaussian
fluctuations with a standard deviation +/-1.5 degrees per year. Thus
counterclockwise rotation of disc features is supported at approximately a
2-sigma level, after a 4-year time difference. This rate is faster than the
Keplerian rate of 0.65 degrees per year for features at ~65 AU from the star,
suggesting their motion is tracking a planet inside the dust ring.
Future observations with SCUBA-2 can rule out no rotation of the epsilon
Eridani dust clumps with ~4-sigma confidence. Assuming a rate of about 2.75
degrees per year, the rotation of the features after a 10-year period could be
shown to be >1 degree per year at the 3-sigma level.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Living up to our students’ expectations – using student voice to influence the way academics think about their undergraduates learning and their own teaching
Understanding the student learning experience is essential if Higher Education Institutions (HEI) are to provide an education for the 21st century. This study investigated students’ perspectives on their learning experiences and offered undergraduates a chance to influence the way academics think about learning and teaching.Participants were drawn from two UK HEIs and a semi structured focus group approach was adopted. A total of nine focus groups consisting of 3-7 participants were drawn from across all Sport degree year groups in both institutions. Assessment, pedagogy and teacher characteristics emerged as primary concerns across both institutions. Assessment was appreciated by all students as key to their learning but was exposed as being overly traditional and rigid in its application. Students were unanimous in their support for small group pedagogies, rejecting traditional powerpoint dominated lecturing styles. The emphasis on the behaviour of, and delivery by, tutors was noteworthy.Students appraised the development of their academic skills and confidence, linking these to motivation, knowledge, self-awareness and critical reflection. In doing so they understood the impact of inconsistencies in tutors’ teaching practices. The onus is on every tutor to combine imaginative assessment with dynamic and relational experiences in order to provide a strong foundation for flexible, reflective and creative graduates
Tracking career destinations of sports graduates 2000-2015:a longitudinal exploration of destinations and preparedness for the workplace
The advent of the TEF means that universities will be expected to evidence the impact of curriculum interactions on graduate destinations and social mobility. Over a third of sport employees are graduates but little data charts their career journeys. Key objectives: • track all Abertay sport graduates from the programmes’ inception • compare Honours and non-Honours graduates’ destination data • examine career trajectories • explore preparedness for the workplace • utilise demographic data to contextualise findings. 452 graduates were e-mailed.123 responded to the survey, 84% being in identifiable graduate level jobs. Across time, increasing proportions of students were Honours' graduates. Social class, gender and disability did not impact on this but articulation from FE was a significant factor (χ2 =84.68, p<0.01). Very few respondents (n=13) felt that their degree had not equipped them for working life. 'Placement' and 'research methods skills' were of most benefit in preparing for the workplace
Moving to Extremal Graph Parameters
Which graphs, in the class of all graphs with given numbers n and m of edges
and vertices respectively, minimizes or maximizes the value of some graph
parameter? In this paper we develop a technique which provides answers for
several different parameters: the numbers of edges in the line graph, acyclic
orientations, cliques, and forests. (We minimize the first two and maximize the
third and fourth.)
Our technique involves two moves on the class of graphs. A compression move
converts any graph to a form we call fully compressed: the fully compressed
graphs are split graphs in which the neighbourhoods of points in the
independent set are nested. A second consolidation move takes each fully
compressed graph to one particular graph which we call H(n,m). We show
monotonicity of the parameters listed for these moves in many cases, which
enables us to obtain our results fairly simply.
The paper concludes with some open problems and future directions
Rotation in the Orion Nebula Cluster
Eighteen fields in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) have been monitored for one
or more observing seasons from 1990-99 with a 0.6-m telescope at Wesleyan
University. Photometric data were obtained in Cousins I on 25-40 nights per
season. Results from the first 3 years of monitoring were analyzed by Choi &
Herbst (1996; CH). Here we provide an update based on 6 more years of
observation and the extensive optical and IR study of the ONC by Hillenbrand
(1997) and Hillenbrand et al. (1998). Rotation periods are now available for
134 ONC members. Of these, 67 were detected at multiple epochs with identical
periods by us and 15 more were confirmed by Stassun et al. (1999) in their
study of Ori OBIc/d. The bimodal period distribution for the ONC is confirmed,
but we also find a clear dependence of rotation period on mass. This can be
understood as an effect of deuterium burning, which temporarily slows the
contraction and thus spin-up of stars with M <0.25 solar masses and ages of ~1
My. Stars with M <0.25 solar masses have not had time to bridge the gap in the
period distribution at ~4 days. Excess H-K and I-K emission, as well as CaII
infrared triplet equivalent widths (Hillenbrand et al. 1998), show weak but
significant correlations with rotation period among stars with M >0.25 solar
masses. Our results provide new observational support for the importance of
disks in the early rotational evolution of low mass stars. [abridged]Comment: 18 pages of text, 17 figures, and 4 tables; accepted for publication
in The Astronomical Journa
Transport dynamics of ultracold atoms in a triple-well transistor-like potential
The transport of atoms is experimentally studied in a transistor-like
triple-well potential consisting of a narrow gate well surrounded by source and
drain wells. Atoms are initially loaded into the source well with
pre-determined temperature and chemical potential. Energetic atoms flow from
the source, across the gate, and into the drain where they are removed using a
resonant light beam. The manifestation of atom-atom interactions and
dissipation is evidenced by a rapid population growth in the initially vacant
gate well. The transport dynamics are shown to depend strongly on a feedback
parameter determined by the relative heights of the two barriers forming the
gate region. For a range of feedback parameter values, experiments establish
that the gate atoms develop a larger chemical potential and lower temperature
than those in the source.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in NJ
Terrestrial Planet Formation I. The Transition from Oligarchic Growth to Chaotic Growth
We use a hybrid, multiannulus, n-body-coagulation code to investigate the
growth of km-sized planetesimals at 0.4-2 AU around a solar-type star. After a
short runaway growth phase, protoplanets with masses of roughly 10^26 g and
larger form throughout the grid. When (i) the mass in these `oligarchs' is
roughly comparable to the mass in planetesimals and (ii) the surface density in
oligarchs exceeds 2-3 g/sq cm at 1 AU, strong dynamical interactions among
oligarchs produce a high merger rate which leads to the formation of several
terrestrial planets. In disks with lower surface density, milder interactions
produce several lower mass planets. In all disks, the planet formation
timescale is roughly 10-100 Myr, similar to estimates derived from the
cratering record and radiometric data.Comment: Astronomical Journal, accepted; 22 pages + 15 figures in ps format;
eps figures at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~kenyon/dl/ revised version
clarifies evolution and justifies choice of promotion masse
Hydrological Investigations at Biafo Glacier, Karakoram Range, Himalaya; an Important Source of Water For the Indus River
Over 80% of the flow of the Upper Indus River is derived from less than 20% of its area: essentially from zones of heavy snowfall and glacierized basins above 3500 m elevation. The trans-Himalaya n contribution comes largely from an area of some 20000 km2 of glacierized basins, mostly along the axis of the Greater Karakoram range and especially from 20-30 of the largest glacier basins. Very few glaciological investigations have so far been undertaken in this the major glacierized region of Central Asia. Biafo Glacier, one of the largest of the Karakoram glaciers, drains south-eastwards from the central Karakoram crest. Its basin covers a total area of 853 km2 , 628 km2 of which are permanent snow and ice, with 68% of the glacier area forming the accumulation zone. This paper describes investigations of snow accumulation, ablation , glacier movement, and glacier depth undertaken in the period 1985-87 , set against a background of investigations carried out over the last 130 yea rs. Biafo Glacier differs from most of the other Karakoram glaciers in being nourished mainly by direct snowfall rather than by avalanching; this has the advantage of allowing extensive investigation of accumulation over a broad range of altitude. Snow-accumulation studies in the Biafo Glacier basin have indicated that annual accumulation varies from 0.9 to 1.9 m of water equivalent between 4650 and 5450 m a .. s.l. This suggests an annual moisture input above the equilibrium line of approximately 0.6 km3. Monopulse radar measurements indicate the presence of ice thickness as great as 1400 m at the equilibrium line, although these results may not be completely reliable . Mean surface velocity during the summer of 0.8 m d -I has been measured near to the equilibrium line. Calculations of annual ice flux through the vertical cross-profile at the equilibrium line indicate a throughput of 0.7 km3 a-I Estimates from stake ablation measurements also suggest that ice loss on Biafo Glacier is about 0.7 km3 a-I. The close agreement between these three sets of measurements is reassuring, indicating that the ablation zone of Biafo Glacier, whose area covers 0.09% of the whole Upper Indus basin, produces approximately 0.9% of the total run-off. However. it should be mentioned that this estimate does not include water originating from seasonal snow melt, e either above or below the equilibrium line, or from rainfall. Net annual ice losses due to wastage of the glacier since 1910 are probably of the order of 0.4-{).5 m a-I; this would represent between 12 and 15% of annual water yield from melting ice
Skeletal status and soft tissue composition in astronauts. Tissue and fluid changes by radionuclide absorptiometry in vivo
A device has been constructed and tested which provides immediate readout of bone mineral content and bone width from absorptiometric scans with low energy radionuclides. The basis of this analog system is a logarithmic converter-integrator coupled with a precision linear ratemeter. The system provided accurate and reliable results on standards and ashed bone sections. Clinical measurements were made on about 100 patients with the direct readout system, and these were highly correlated with the results from digital scan data on the same patients. The direct readout system has been used successfully in field studies and surveys as well as for clinical observations
Doppler-beaming in the Kepler light curve of LHS 6343 A
Context. Kepler observations revealed a brown dwarf eclipsing the M-type star
LHS 6343 A with a period of 12.71 days. In addition, an out-of-eclipse light
modulation with the same period and a relative semi-amplitude of 2 x 10^-4 was
observed showing an almost constant phase lag to the eclipses produced by the
brown dwarf. In a previous work, we concluded that this was due to the light
modulation induced by photospheric active regions in LHS 6343 A. Aims. In the
present work, we prove that most of the out-of-eclipse light modulation is
caused by the Doppler-beaming induced by the orbital motion of the primary
star. Methods. We introduce a model of the Doppler-beaming for an eccentric
orbit and also considered the ellipsoidal effect. The data were fitted using a
Bayesian approach implemented through a Monte Carlo Markov chain method. Model
residuals were analysed by searching for periodicities using a Lomb-Scargle
periodogram. Results. For the first seven quarters of Kepler observations and
the orbit previously derived from the radial velocity measurements, we show
that the light modulation of the system outside eclipses is dominated by the
Doppler-beaming effect. A period search performed on the residuals shows a
significant periodicity of 42.5 +- 3.2 days with a false-alarm probability of 5
x 10^-4, probably associated with the rotational modulation of the primary
component.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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