43,469 research outputs found

    Creating citizen-consumers? Public service reform and (un)willing selves

    No full text
    About the book: Postmodern theories heralded the "death of the subject", and thereby deeply contested our intuition that we are free and willing selves. In recent times, the (free) will has come under attack yet again. Findings from the neuro- and cognitive sciences claim the concept of will to be scientifically untenable, specifying that it is our brain rather than our 'self' which decides what we want to do. In spite of these challenges however, the willing self has come to take centre stage in our society: juridical and moral practices ascribing guilt, or the organization of everyday life attributing responsibilities, for instance, can hardly be understood without taking recourse to the willing subject. In this vein, the authors address topics such as the genealogy of the concept of willing selves, the discourse on agency in neuroscience and sociology, the political debate on volition within neoliberal and neoconservative regimes, approaches toward novel forms of relational responsibility as well as moral evaluations in conceptualizing autonomy

    Influence of Charge and Energy Imbalances on the Tunneling Current through a Superconductor-Normal Metal Junction

    Full text link
    We consider quasiparticle charge and energy imbalances in a thin superconductor weakly coupled with two normal-metal electrodes via tunnel junctions at low temperatures. Charge and energy imbalances, which can be created by injecting quasiparticles at one junction, induce excess tunneling current IexI_{\rm ex} at the other junction. We numerically obtain IexI_{\rm ex} as a function of the bias voltage VdetV_{\rm det} across the detection junction. We show that IexI_{\rm ex} at the zero bias voltage is purely determined by the charge imbalance, while the energy imbalance causes a nontrivial VdetV_{\rm det}-dependence of IexI_{\rm ex}. The obtained voltage-current characteristics qualitatively agree with the experimental result by R. Yagi [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 73} (2006) 134507].Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure

    Competitive accretion in embedded stellar cluster

    Get PDF
    We investigate the physics of gas accretion in young stellar clusters. Accretion in clusters is a dynamic phenomenon as both the stars and the gas respond to the same gravitational potential. Accretion rates are highly non-uniform with stars nearer the centre of the cluster, where gas densities are higher, accreting more than others. This competitive accretion naturally results in both initial mass segregation and a spectrum of stellar masses. Accretion in gas-dominated clusters is well modelled using a tidal-lobe radius instead of the commonly used Bondi-Hoyle accretion radius. This works as both the stellar and gas velocities are under the influence of the same gravitational potential and are thus comparable. The low relative velocity that results means that the tidal radius is smaller than the Bondi-Hoyle radius in these systems. In contrast, when the stars dominate the potential and are virialised, the Bondi-Hoyle radius is smaller than the tidal radius and thus Bondi-Hoyle accretion is a better fit to the accretion rates.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS in pres

    Absence of strong magnetic fluctuations in the iron phosphide superconductors LaFePO and Sr2ScO3FeP

    Full text link
    We report neutron inelastic scattering measurements on polycrystalline LaFePO and Sr2ScO3FeP, two members of the iron phosphide families of superconductors. No evidence is found for any magnetic fluctuations in the spectrum of either material in the energy and wavevector ranges probed. Special attention is paid to the wavevector at which spin-density-wave-like fluctuations are seen in other iron-based superconductors. We estimate that the magnetic signal, if present, is at least a factor of four (Sr2ScO3FeP) or seven (LaFePO) smaller than in the related iron arsenide and chalcogenide superconductors. These results suggest that magnetic fluctuations are not as influential on the electronic properties of the iron phosphide systems as they are in other iron-based superconductors.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    Transitions in the morphological features, habitat use, and diet of young-of-the-year goosefish (Lophius americanus)

    Get PDF
    This study was designed to improve our understanding of transitions in the early life history and the distribution, habitat use, and diets for young-of-the-year (YOY) goosefish (Lophius americanus) and, as a result, their role in northeastern U.S. continental shelf ecosystems. Pelagic juveniles (>12 to ca. 50 mm total length [TL]) were distributed over most portions of the continental shelf in the Middle Atlantic Bight, Georges Bank, and into the Gulf of Maine. Most individuals settled by 50−85 mm TL and reached approximately 60−120 mm TL by one year of age. Pelagic YOY fed on chaetognaths, hyperiid amphipods, calanoid copepods, and ostracods, and benthic YOY had a varied diet of fishes and benthic crustaceans. Goosefish are widely scattered on the continental shelf in the Middle Atlantic Bight during their early life history and once settled, are habitat generalists, and thus play a role in many continental shelf habi

    Transform-limited X-ray pulse generation from a high-brightness self-amplified spontaneous-emission free-electron laser

    Get PDF
    A method to achieve high-brightness self-amplified spontaneous emission (HB-SASE) in the free-electron laser (FEL) is described. The method uses repeated nonequal electron beam delays to delocalize the collective FEL interaction and break the radiation coherence length dependence on the FEL cooperation length. The method requires no external seeding or photon optics and so is applicable at any wavelength or repetition rate. It is demonstrated, using linear theory and numerical simulations, that the radiation coherence length can be increased by approximately 2 orders of magnitude over SASE with a corresponding increase in spectral brightness. Examples are shown of HB-SASE generating transform-limited FEL pulses in the soft x-ray and near transform-limited pulses in the hard x-ray. Such pulses may greatly benefit existing applications and may also open up new areas of scientific research

    Are there brown dwarfs in globular clusters?

    Full text link
    We present an analytical method for constraining the substellar initial mass function in globular clusters, based on the observed frequency of transit events. Globular clusters typically have very high stellar densities where close encounters are relatively common, and thus tidal capture can occur to form close binary systems. Encounters between main sequence stars and lower-mass objects can result in tidal capture if the mass ratio is > 0.01. If brown dwarfs exist in significant numbers, they too will be found in close binaries, and some fraction of their number should be revealed as they transit their stellar companions. We calculate the rate of tidal capture of brown dwarfs in both segregated and unsegregated clusters, and find that the tidal capture is more likely to occur over an initial relaxation time before equipartition occurs. The lack of any such transits in recent HST monitoring of 47 Tuc implies an upper limit on the frequency of brown dwarfs (< 15 % relative to stars) which is significantly below that measured in the galactic field and young clusters.Comment: MNRAS in pres
    • …
    corecore