80 research outputs found

    Solar Effects on Global Climate Due to Cosmic Rays and Solar Energetic Particles

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    Although the work reported here does not directly connect solar variability with global climate change, this research establishes a plausible quantitative causative link between observed solar activity and apparently correlated variations in terrestrial climate parameters. Specifically, we have demonstrated that ion-mediated nucleation of atmospheric particles is a likely, and likely widespread, phenomenon that relates solar variability to changes in the microphysical properties of clouds. To investigate this relationship, we have constructed and applied a new model describing the formation and evolution of ionic clusters under a range of atmospheric conditions throughout the lower atmosphere. The activation of large ionic clusters into cloud nuclei is predicted to be favorable in the upper troposphere and mesosphere, and possibly in the lower stratosphere. The model developed under this grant needs to be extended to include additional cluster families, and should be incorporated into microphysical models to further test the cause-and-effect linkages that may ultimately explain key aspects of the connections between solar variability and climate

    Parent formulation at the Lagrangian level

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    The recently proposed first-order parent formalism at the level of equations of motion is specialized to the case of Lagrangian systems. It is shown that for diffeomorphism-invariant theories the parent formulation takes the form of an AKSZ-type sigma model. The proposed formulation can be also seen as a Lagrangian version of the BV-BRST extension of the Vasiliev unfolded approach. We also discuss its possible interpretation as a multidimensional generalization of the Hamiltonian BFV--BRST formalism. The general construction is illustrated by examples of (parametrized) mechanics, relativistic particle, Yang--Mills theory, and gravity.Comment: 26 pages, discussion of the truncation extended, typos corrected, references adde

    Changing Places and Partners: Associations of Neighborhood Conditions With Sexual Network Turnover Among African American Adults Relocated From Public Housing

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    Neighborhood conditions and sexual network turnover have been associated with the acquisition of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). However, few studies investigate the influence of neighborhood conditions on sexual network turnover. This longitudinal study used data collected across 7 visits from a predominantly substance-misusing cohort of 172 African American adults relocated from public housing in Atlanta, Georgia, to determine whether post-relocation changes in exposure to neighborhood conditions influence sexual network stability, the number of new partners joining sexual networks, and the number of partners leaving sexual networks over time. At each visit, participant and sexual network characteristics were captured via survey, and administrative data were analyzed to describe the census tracts where participants lived. Multilevel models were used to longitudinally assess the relationships of tract-level characteristics to sexual network dynamics over time. On average, participants relocated to neighborhoods that were less economically deprived and violent, and had lower alcohol outlet densities. Post-relocation reductions in exposure to alcohol outlet density were associated with fewer new partners joining sexual networks. Reduced perceived community violence was associated with more sexual partners leaving sexual networks. These associations were marginally significant. No post-relocation changes in place characteristics were significantly associated with overall sexual network stability. Neighborhood social context may influence sexual network turnover. To increase understanding of the social–ecological determinants of HIV/STIs, a new line of research should investigate the combined influence of neighborhood conditions and sexual network dynamics on HIV/STI transmission over time

    Escuela de ayudantes alumnos: arte y parte del ayudante alumno como tutor de pares

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    La preocupaciĂłn por cĂłmo y para quĂ© enseñar y aprender se muestra como una constante a lo largo del tiempo; ello invita a plantear alternativas innovadoras. Las experiencias en Escuelas de Ayudantes resultan alentadoras en capacitaciĂłn docente; inserciĂłn en equipos docentes; mejoramiento en la formaciĂłn de grado; integraciĂłn transversal y vertical; reflexiĂłn crĂ­tica; apropiaciĂłn de conocimientos; etc. Dentro del contexto de las “prĂĄcticas de docencia compartida”, precisamente le cabe a los alumnos compartir los procesos de aprendizaje entre ellos y los docentes. Objetivo: implementar un sistema de TutorĂ­as de Pares en HistologĂ­a en las dimensiones pedagĂłgica y disciplinar. Participan del trabajo: docentes, no docente, asesora pedagĂłgica y alumnos. Se preveen actividades ĂĄulicas y de FormaciĂłn y CapacitaciĂłn PedagĂłgica y CientĂ­fica. Se aspira a estimular el pensamiento reflexivo entre el contenido teĂłrico y la prĂĄctica profesional; generar un espacio de discusiĂłn y formulaciĂłn de propuestas orientadas al mejoramiento del aprendizaje, propiciar el desarrollo de habilidades; capacitar al aspirante en actividades de docencia; ofrecer un ĂĄmbito para el desarrollo de actividades de investigaciĂłn propiamente dichas y como saber cientĂ­fico aplicado a la docencia de grado; fomentar la habilidad para desempeñar tareas en equipo; favorecer la formaciĂłn de recursos humanos desde el grado; abordar la problemĂĄtica de deserciĂłn estudiantil. PIIMEG SECyTUNRC( 2011-2012).Eje temĂĄtico 2: Los cambios e innovaciones en los procesos de formaciĂłn a - Alternativas didĂĄcticas y experiencias de renovaciĂłn de la enseñanzaFacultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestale

    Electric and magnetic charges in N=2 conformal supergravity theories

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    General Lagrangians are constructed for N=2 conformal supergravity theories in four space-time dimensions involving gauge groups with abelian and/or non-abelian electric and magnetic charges. The charges are encoded in the gauge group embedding tensor. The scalar potential induced by the gauge interactions is quadratic in this tensor, and, when the embedding tensor is treated as a spurionic quantity, it is formally covariant with respect to electric/magnetic duality. This work establishes a general framework for studying any deformation induced by gauge interactions of matter-coupled N=2 supergravity theories. As an application, full and residual supersymmetry realizations in maximally symmetric space-times are reviewed. Furthermore, a general classification is presented of supersymmetric solutions in AdS2×S2\mathrm{AdS}_2\times S^2 space-times. As it turns out, these solutions allow either eight or four supersymmetries. With four supersymmetries, the spinorial parameters are Killing spinors of AdS2\mathrm{AdS}_2 that are constant on S2S^2, so that they carry no spin, while the bosonic background is rotationally invariant.Comment: 49 pages, typos correcte

    ATLAS pixel detector electronics and sensors

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    The silicon pixel tracking system for the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider is described and the performance requirements are summarized. Detailed descriptions of the pixel detector electronics and the silicon sensors are given. The design, fabrication, assembly and performance of the pixel detector modules are presented. Data obtained from test beams as well as studies using cosmic rays are also discussed

    Search for light resonances decaying to boosted quark pairs and produced in association with a photon or a jet in proton–proton collisions at √s=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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    This Letter presents a search for new light resonances decaying to pairs of quarks and produced in association with a high-pT photon or jet. The dataset consists of proton–proton collisions with an integrated luminosity of 36.1 fb−1at a centre-of-mass energy of √s=13TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Resonance candidates are identified as massive large-radius jets with substructure consistent with a particle decaying into a quark pair. The mass spectrum of the candidates is examined for local excesses above background. No evidence of a new resonance is observed in the data, which are used to exclude the production of a lepto-phobic axial-vector Z boson

    Measurement of dsigma/DM Forward-Backward Charge Asymmetry for High Mass Drell-Yan e+e- Pairs from p-pbar Collisions at sqrt(s)=1.8 TeV

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    We report on a measurement of the mass dependence of the forward-backward charge asymmetry, A_FB, and production cross section dsigma/dM for e+e- pairs with mass M_ee>40 GeV/c2. The data sample consists of 108 pb-1 of p-pbar collisions at sqrt(s)=1.8 TeV taken by the Collider Detector at Fermilab during 1992-1995. The measured asymmetry and dsigma/dM are compared with the predictions of the Standard Model and a model with an extra Z' gauge boson.Comment: 7 pages submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. 1 figure, 2 Table

    Search for Higgs Bosons Decaying into b anti-b and Produced in Association with a Vector Boson in Proton-Antiproton Collisions at 1.8 TeV

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    We present a new search for H0VH^{0}V production, where H0H^0 is a scalar Higgs boson decaying into bbˉb\bar{b} with branching ratio ÎČ\beta, and VV is a Z0Z^{0} boson decaying into e+e−e^{+}e^{-}, ÎŒ+Ό−\mu^{+}\mu^{-}, or ΜΜˉ\nu\bar{\nu}. This search is then combined with previous searches for H0VH^{0}V where VV is a W±W^{\pm} boson or a hadronically decaying Z0Z^{0}. The data sample consists of 106±4106 \pm 4 pb−1^{-1} of ppˉp\bar{p} collisions at s=1.8\sqrt{s}=1.8 TeV accumulated by the Collider Detector at Fermilab. Observing no evidence of a signal, we set 95% Bayesian credibility level upper limits on σ(ppˉ→H0V)×ÎČ\sigma(p\bar{p}\to H^{0}V)\times\beta. For H0H^0 masses of 90, 110 and 130 GeV/c2c^{2}, the limits are 7.8, 7.2, and 6.6 pb respectively.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be submiited to PR
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