1,628 research outputs found
Understanding the mental health of doctoral researchers: a mixed methods systematic review with meta-analysis and meta-synthesis.
Data from studies with undergraduate and postgraduate taught students suggest that they are at an increased risk of having mental health problems, compared to the general population. By contrast, the literature on doctoral researchers (DRs) is far more disparate and unclear. There is a need to bring together current findings and identify what questions still need to be answered. We conducted a mixed methods systematic review to summarise the research on doctoral researchers' (DRs) mental health. Our search revealed 52 articles that were included in this review. The results of our meta-analysis found that DRs reported significantly higher stress levels compared with population norm data. Using meta-analyses and meta-synthesis techniques, we found the risk factors with the strongest evidence base were isolation and identifying as female. Social support, viewing the PhD as a process, a positive student-supervisor relationship and engaging in self-care were the most well-established protective factors. We have identified a critical need for researchers to better coordinate data collection to aid future reviews and allow for clinically meaningful conclusions to be drawn. PROSPERO registration CRD42018092867
The Spitzer c2d Survey of Large, Nearby, Interstellar Clouds. XI. Lupus Observed With IRAC and MIPS
We present c2d Spitzer/IRAC observations of the Lupus I, III and IV dark
clouds and discuss them in combination with optical and near-infrared and c2d
MIPS data. With the Spitzer data, the new sample contains 159 stars, 4 times
larger than the previous one. It is dominated by low- and very-low mass stars
and it is complete down to M 0.1M. We find 30-40 % binaries
with separations between 100 to 2000 AU with no apparent effect in the disk
properties of the members. A large majority of the objects are Class II or
Class III objects, with only 20 (12%) of Class I or Flat spectrum sources. The
disk sample is complete down to ``debris''-like systems in stars as small as M
0.2 M and includes sub-stellar objects with larger IR
excesses. The disk fraction in Lupus is 70 -- 80%, consistent with an age of 1
-- 2 Myr. However, the young population contains 20% optically thick accretion
disks and 40% relatively less flared disks. A growing variety of inner disk
structures is found for larger inner disk clearings for equal disk masses.
Lupus III is the most centrally populated and rich, followed by Lupus I with a
filamentary structure and by Lupus IV, where a very high density core with
little star-formation activity has been found. We estimate star formation rates
in Lupus of 2 -- 10 M Myr and star formation efficiencies of a
few percent, apparently correlated with the associated cloud masses.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJS. Contains 101 pages, 23 figures,
and 13 tables. A version with full resolution figures can be found at
http://peggysue.as.utexas.edu/SIRTF/PAPERS/pap102.pub.pd
Infall and Outflow around the HH 212 protostellar system
HH 212 is a highly collimated jet discovered in H2 powered by a young Class 0
source, IRAS 05413-0104, in the L1630 cloud of Orion. We have mapped around it
in 1.33 mm continuum, 12CO (), 13CO (), C18O (), and SO
() emission at \arcs{2.5} resolution with the
Submillimeter Array. A dust core is seen in the continuum around the source. A
flattened envelope is seen in C18O around the source in the equator
perpendicular to the jet axis, with its inner part seen in 13CO. The structure
and kinematics of the envelope can be roughly reproduced by a simple edge-on
disk model with both infall and rotation. In this model, the density of the
disk is assumed to have a power-law index of or -2, as found in other
low-mass envelopes. The envelope seems dynamically infalling toward the source
with slow rotation because the kinematics is found to be roughly consistent
with a free fall toward the source plus a rotation of a constant specific
angular momentum. A 12CO outflow is seen surrounding the H2 jet, with a narrow
waist around the source. Jetlike structures are also seen in 12CO near the
source aligned with the H2 jet at high velocities. The morphological
relationship between the H2 jet and the 12CO outflow, and the kinematics of the
12CO outflow along the jet axis are both consistent with those seen in a
jet-driven bow shock model. SO emission is seen around the source and the H2
knotty shocks in the south, tracing shocked emission around them.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, Accepted by the Ap
The Magnetic Field in Taurus Probed by Infrared Polarization
We present maps of the plane-of-sky magnetic field within two regions of the
Taurus molecular cloud: one in the dense core L1495/B213 filament, the other in
a diffuse region to the west. The field is measured from the polarization of
background starlight seen through the cloud. In total, we measured 287
high-quality near-infrared polarization vectors in these regions. In
L1495/B213, the percent polarization increases with column density up to Av ~ 9
mag, the limits of our data. The Radiative Torques model for grain alignment
can explain this behavior, but models that invoke turbulence are inconsistent
with the data. We also combine our data with published optical and
near-infrared polarization measurements in Taurus. Using this large sample, we
estimate the strength of the plane-of-sky component of the magnetic field in
nine subregions. This estimation is done with two different techniques that use
the observed dispersion in polarization angles. Our values range from 5-82
microgauss and tend to be higher in denser regions. In all subregions, the
critical index of the mass-to-magnetic flux ratio is sub-unity, implying that
Taurus is magnetically supported on large scales (~2 pc). Within the region
observed, the B213 filament makes a sharp turn to the north and the direction
of the magnetic field also takes a sharp turn, switching from being
perpendicular to the filament to becoming parallel. This behavior can be
understood if we are observing the rim of a bubble. We argue that it has
resulted from a supernova remnant associated with a recently discovered nearby
gamma-ray pulsar.Comment: Accepted into the Astrophysical Journal. 20 pages in emulateapj
format including 10 figures and 4 table
The Spitzer Survey of Interstellar Clouds in the Gould Belt. VI. The Auriga-California Molecular Cloud observed with IRAC and MIPS
We present observations of the Auriga-California Molecular Cloud (AMC) at
3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8.0, 24, 70 and 160 micron observed with the IRAC and MIPS
detectors as part of the Spitzer Gould Belt Legacy Survey. The total mapped
areas are 2.5 sq-deg with IRAC and 10.47 sq-deg with MIPS. This giant molecular
cloud is one of two in the nearby Gould Belt of star-forming regions, the other
being the Orion A Molecular Cloud (OMC). We compare source counts, colors and
magnitudes in our observed region to a subset of the SWIRE data that was
processed through our pipeline. Using color-magnitude and color-color diagrams,
we find evidence for a substantial population of 166 young stellar objects
(YSOs) in the cloud, many of which were previously unknown. Most of this
population is concentrated around the LkHalpha 101 cluster and the filament
extending from it. We present a quantitative description of the degree of
clustering and discuss the fraction of YSOs in the region with disks relative
to an estimate of the diskless YSO population. Although the AMC is similar in
mass, size and distance to the OMC, it is forming about 15 - 20 times fewer
stars.Comment: (30 pages, 17 figures (2 multipage figures), accepted for publication
in ApJ
An examination of business occupier relocation decision making : distinguishing small and large firm behaviour
This paper explores how business occupiers decide whether and where to relocate. It captures the experience and behaviour of a range of sizes and types of business occupier and subjects their decision-making processes to detailed scrutiny. A linear three-stage decision model is used to sequence and structure interviews with individuals who have intimate involvement with the relocation of 28 firms and organizations in Tyne and Wear, in the north-east of England. The 'constant comparative' method is used to analyse the interview data, from which emerges 18 key concepts, comprising 51 characteristic components. Using an axial approach, these are organized into 10 cross-cutting themes that represent the main areas of consideration or influence on the thinking of the people involved in determining whether a firm or organization should relocate and, if so, where to. The resulting analysis finds that organizations adopt varying degrees of sophistication when making relocation decisions; small firms are more inclined to make decisions based on constrained information; larger organizations adopt a more complex approach. Regardless of firm size, key individuals exert considerable influence over the decision-making process and its outcome
The Luminosities of Protostars in the Spitzer c2d and Gould Belt Legacy Clouds
Motivated by the long-standing "luminosity problem" in low-mass star
formation whereby protostars are underluminous compared to theoretical
expectations, we identify 230 protostars in 18 molecular clouds observed by two
Spitzer Space Telescope Legacy surveys of nearby star-forming regions. We
compile complete spectral energy distributions, calculate Lbol for each source,
and study the protostellar luminosity distribution. This distribution extends
over three orders of magnitude, from 0.01 Lsun - 69 Lsun, and has a mean and
median of 4.3 Lsun and 1.3 Lsun, respectively. The distributions are very
similar for Class 0 and Class I sources except for an excess of low luminosity
(Lbol < 0.5 Lsun) Class I sources compared to Class 0. 100 out of the 230
protostars (43%) lack any available data in the far-infrared and submillimeter
(70 um < wavelength < 850 um) and have Lbol underestimated by factors of 2.5 on
average, and up to factors of 8-10 in extreme cases. Correcting these
underestimates for each source individually once additional data becomes
available will likely increase both the mean and median of the sample by 35% -
40%. We discuss and compare our results to several recent theoretical studies
of protostellar luminosities and show that our new results do not invalidate
the conclusions of any of these studies. As these studies demonstrate that
there is more than one plausible accretion scenario that can match
observations, future attention is clearly needed. The better statistics
provided by our increased dataset should aid such future work.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. 21 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
The Spitzer c2d Survey of Large, Nearby, Interstellar Clouds. VIII. Serpens Observed with MIPS
We present maps of 1.5 deg^2 of the Serpens dark cloud at 24, 70, and 160 ÎŒm observed with the Spitzer Space Telescope MIPS camera. We describe the observations and briefly discuss the data processing carried out by the c2d team on these data. More than 2400 compact sources have been extracted at 24 ÎŒm, nearly 100 at 70 ÎŒm, and four at 160 ÎŒm. We estimate completeness limits for our 24 ÎŒm survey from Monte Carlo tests with artificial sources inserted into the Spitzer maps. We compare source counts, colors, and magnitudes in the Serpens cloud to two reference data sets: a 0.50 deg^2 set on a low-extinction region near the dark cloud, and a 5.3 deg^2 subset of the SWIRE ELAIS N1 data that was processed through our pipeline. These results show that there is an easily identifiable population of young stellar object candidates in the Serpens cloud that is not present in either of the reference data sets. We also show a comparison of visual extinction and cool dust emission illustrating a close correlation between the two and find that the most embedded YSO candidates are located in the areas of highest visual extinction
The Structure of IR Luminous Galaxies at 100 Microns
We have observed twenty two galaxies at 100 microns with the Kuiper Airborne
Observatory in order to determine the size of their FIR emitting regions. Most
of these galaxies are luminous far-infrared sources, with L_FIR > 10^11 L_sun.
This data constitutes the highest spatial resolution ever achieved on luminous
galaxies in the far infrared. Our data includes direct measurements of the
spatial structure of the sources, in which we look for departures from point
source profiles. Additionally, comparison of our small beam 100 micron fluxes
with the large beam IRAS fluxes shows how much flux falls beyond our detectors
but within the IRAS beam. Several sources with point- like cores show evidence
for such a net flux deficit. We clearly resolved six of these galaxies at 100
microns and have some evidence for extension in seven others. Those galaxies
which we have resolved can have little of their 100 micron flux directly
emitted by a point-like active galactic nucleus (AGN). Dust heated to ~40 K by
recent bursts of non-nuclear star formation provides the best explanation for
their extreme FIR luminosity. In a few cases, heating of an extended region by
a compact central source is also a plausible option. Assuming the FIR emission
we see is from dust, we also use the sizes we derive to find the dust
temperatures and optical depths at 100 microns which we translate into an
effective visual extinction through the galaxy. Our work shows that studies of
the far infrared structure of luminous infrared galaxies is clearly within the
capabilities of new generation far infrared instrumentation, such as SOFIA and
SIRTF.Comment: 8 tables, 23 figure
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