83,770 research outputs found
A Catalog of Galaxy Clusters Observed by XMM-Newton
Aims: We present a uniform catalog of the images and radial profiles of the
temperature, abundance, and brightness for 70 clusters of galaxies observed by
XMM-Newton.
Methods: We use a new "first principles" approach to the modeling and removal
of the background components; the quiescent particle background, the cosmic
diffuse emission, the soft proton contamination, and the solar wind charge
exchange emission. Each of the background components demonstrate significant
spectral variability, several have spatial distributions that are not described
by the photon vignetting function, and all except for the cosmic diffuse
emission are temporally variable. Because these backgrounds strongly affect the
analysis of low surface brightness objects, we provide a detailed description
our methods of identification, characterization, and removal.
Results: We have applied these methods to a large collection of XMM-Newton
observations of clusters of galaxies and present the resulting catalog. We find
significant systematic differences between the Chandra and XMM-Newton
temperatures.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 55 pages with 42 figure
Health informatics education for clinicians and managers - What's holding up progress?
This paper reports outcomes of a national survey of health informatics (HI) education and training carried out in the UK. A questionnaire to elicit details of HI and IT skills teaching was derived from a national consensus document (Learning to Manage Health Information, LtMHI). Forms were sent to all pre-qualification medical and nursing schools and to a stratified sample of postgraduate and post-registration programmes. Three case studies were carried out in acute hospital trusts to gain insight into opportunities for continuing professional development in health informatics and IT. Our evidence suggests that in the UK, health informatics is not yet integrated into the clinical curriculum. Nearly all the pre-qualification courses made some provision for teaching IT skills. Nonetheless, many respondents felt that students did not receive sufficient training. There was considerable variation in the amount of HI teaching provided in the different educational sectors. The case studies suggested very little HI training was provided for clinical staff and take-up of provision was not monitored. A number of factors are holding up progress, the most important being a lack of staff with the knowledge and skills to provide academic leadership. The paper outlines some steps that need to be taken to ensure health informatics is embedded in all clinical curricula. © 2003 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved
Magnetoresistance in the superconducting state at the (111) LaAlO/SrTiO interface
Condensed matter systems that simultaneously exhibit superconductivity and
ferromagnetism are rare due the antagonistic relationship between conventional
spin-singlet superconductivity and ferromagnetic order. In materials in which
superconductivity and magnetic order is known to coexist (such as some
heavy-fermion materials), the superconductivity is thought to be of an
unconventional nature. Recently, the conducting gas that lives at the interface
between the perovskite band insulators LaAlO (LAO) and SrTiO (STO) has
also been shown to host both superconductivity and magnetism. Most previous
research has focused on LAO/STO samples in which the interface is in the (001)
crystal plane. Relatively little work has focused on the (111) crystal
orientation, which has hexagonal symmetry at the interface, and has been
predicted to have potentially interesting topological properties, including
unconventional superconducting pairing states. Here we report measurements of
the magnetoresistance of (111) LAO/STO heterostructures at temperatures at
which they are also superconducting. As with the (001) structures, the
magnetoresistance is hysteretic, indicating the coexistence of magnetism and
superconductivity, but in addition, we find that this magnetoresistance is
anisotropic. Such an anisotropic response is completely unexpected in the
superconducting state, and suggests that (111) LAO/STO heterostructures may
support unconventional superconductivity.Comment: 6 Pages 4 figure
Superconductivity and Frozen Electronic States at the (111) LaAlO/SrTiO Interface
In spite of Anderson's theorem, disorder is known to affect superconductivity
in conventional s-wave superconductors. In most superconductors, the degree of
disorder is fixed during sample preparation. Here we report measurements of the
superconducting properties of the two-dimensional gas that forms at the
interface between LaAlO (LAO) and SrTiO (STO) in the (111) crystal
orientation, a system that permits \emph{in situ} tuning of carrier density and
disorder by means of a back gate voltage . Like the (001) oriented LAO/STO
interface, superconductivity at the (111) LAO/STO interface can be tuned by
. In contrast to the (001) interface, superconductivity in these (111)
samples is anisotropic, being different along different interface crystal
directions, consistent with the strong anisotropy already observed other
transport properties at the (111) LAO/STO interface. In addition, we find that
the (111) interface samples "remember" the backgate voltage at which they
are cooled at temperatures near the superconducting transition temperature
, even if is subsequently changed at lower temperatures. The low
energy scale and other characteristics of this memory effect ( K)
distinguish it from charge-trapping effects previously observed in (001)
interface samples.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Figure
Pairing mean-field theory for the dynamics of dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates
We develop a pairing mean-field theory to describe the quantum dynamics of
the dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates into their constituent
bosonic or fermionic atoms. We apply the theory to one, two, and
three-dimensional geometries and analyze the role of dimensionality on the atom
production rate as a function of the dissociation energy. As well as
determining the populations and coherences of the atoms, we calculate the
correlations that exist between atoms of opposite momenta, including the column
density correlations in 3D systems. We compare the results with those of the
undepleted molecular field approximation and argue that the latter is most
reliable in fermionic systems and in lower dimensions. In the bosonic case we
compare the pairing mean-field results with exact calculations using the
positive- stochastic method and estimate the range of validity of the
pairing mean-field theory. Comparisons with similar first-principle simulations
in the fermionic case are currently not available, however, we argue that the
range of validity of the present approach should be broader for fermions than
for bosons in the regime where Pauli blocking prevents complete depletion of
the molecular condensate.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Experimental studies of collision and fragmentation phenomena
The reduction and publication of an extensive data set collected in experiments over several years at Ames and PSI is briefly examined. Hartmann has been assembling data sets from his experiments on catastrophic fragmentation of various materials, including basalt, other igneous rock, ice, and weak dirt clods. Weidenschilling and Davis have continued to gather and reduce data on oblique impacts. The data indicate a power law distribution of ejecta mass vs. velocity, with a slope that is independent of azimuth, and does not vary with impact angle from normal impacts to at least 75 deg from vertical. In order to improve models of coagulation of dust aggregates in the solar nebula, SJW developed an apparatus for drop tests of fragile projectiles. Davis and Weidenschilling continued to collect and analyze experimental data on collisional catastrophic disruption at the Ames Vertical Gun Range
FearNot! An Anti-Bullying Intervention: Evaluation of an Interactive Virtual Learning Environment
Original paper can be found at: http://www.aisb.org.uk/publications/proceedings.shtm
- …