3,602 research outputs found
Gender, flexibility and opportunity : best use of human resources in UK HE libraries
Aims to give an overview of some recent research into human resource (HR) deployment in library services in UK universities and colleges of higher education. The research findings indicate that staff deployment patterns in the context investigated are suboptimal and that, in consequence, individual libraries should be open to scrutiny in comparison with others not only in terms of their quantifiable patterns of library usage but also in terms of the patterns of their staff provision and staff deployment
Human resourcing in academic libraries : the 'lady librarian', the call for flexible staff and the need to be counted
This paper reports on a recent set of research findings into human resource (HR) deployment in academic, college and national libraries in the UK and Ireland by selectively summarising these findings. The recommendations are that libraries should make available for comparison by others not only their library service provision, i.e. opening hours, but also staff provision, i.e. staffing numbers and demographics and staff deployment, with a view to benchmarking levels of flexibility. This work highlights the lack of existing benchmarking facilities in UK universities and colleges of higher education, relating to HR deployment in libraries, and recommends that Sconul extends the existing data collection in its Annual Statistical return to include this HR area
The Ground Beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) of Stillfork Swamp Nature Preserve, Carroll County, Ohio
Author Institution: Department of Biological Sciences, Youngstown State UniversityOne hundred and one species of Carabidae, including Bembidion incrematum LeConte, Pterostichus caribou Ball, Amara lunicollis Schi0dte, Stenolophus rotundatus LeConte, and Lebia tnoesta LeConte, new state records, representing 32 genera were identified from light trap collections operated during 1984 and 1986-1988 in the open wetland, and from barrier pitfall traps placed in an adjacent swamp oak—hawthorn forest in 1992. Most species are hygrophilous. Species richness was highest in Agonum and Bembidion. Pterostichus hamiltoni Horn, P. permundus (Say), Bembidion graciliforme Hayward were the most abundant species collected by pitfall traps and Stenolophus ochropezus (Say), Agonum tenue (LeConte) and Clivina impressefrons LeConte were the most abundant in light trap collections. Differences in the number and abundance of species collected by light traps and pitfalls suggest both methods be used to survey wetlands
Detection of solvents using a distributed fibre optic sensor
A fibre optic sensor that is capable of distributed detection of liquid solvents is presented. Sensor interrogation using optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR) provides the capability of locating solvent spills to a precision of ±2 m over a total sensor length that may extend to 20 km
An extreme paucity of second population AGB stars in the normal globular cluster M4
Galactic Globular clusters (GCs) are now known to harbour multiple stellar
populations, which are chemically distinct in many light element abundances. It
is becoming increasingly clear that asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars in GCs
show different abundance distributions in light elements compared to those in
the red giant branch (RGB) and other phases, skewing toward more primordial,
field-star-like abundances, which we refer to as subpopulation one (SP1). As
part of a larger program targeting giants in GCs, we obtained high-resolution
spectra for a sample of 106 RGB and 15 AGB stars in Messier 4 (NGC 6121) using
the 2dF+HERMES facility on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. In this Letter we
report an extreme paucity of AGB stars with [Na/O] > -0.17 in M4, which
contrasts with the RGB that has abundances up to [Na/O] =0.55. The AGB
abundance distribution is consistent with all AGB stars being from SP1. This
result appears to imply that all subpopulation two stars (SP2; Na-rich, O-poor)
avoid the AGB phase. This is an unexpected result given M4's horizontal branch
morphology -- it does not have an extended blue horizontal branch. This is the
first abundance study to be performed utilising the HERMES spectrograph.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables (full Table 1 online). Accepted for
publication in MNRAS Letter
Spectroscopy of Sc and ab initio calculations of strengths
The GRIFFIN spectrometer at TRIUMF-ISAC has been used to study excited states
and transitions in Sc following the -decay of Ca.
Branching ratios were determined from the measured -ray intensities,
and angular correlations of rays have been used to firmly assign the
spins of excited states. The presence of an isomeric state that decays by an
transition with a strength of 13.6(7)\,W.u. has been confirmed. We
compare with the first {\it ab initio} calculations of ) strengths in
light and medium-mass nuclei from the valence-space in-medium similarity
renormalization group approach, using consistently derived effective
Hamiltonians and operator. The experimental data are well reproduced for
isoscalar transitions when using bare -factors, but the strength of
isovector transitions are found to be underestimated by an order of
magnitude
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