4,595 research outputs found
Historical Records and Relics from the North Greenland Coast
Reports recovery of nine records during geological reconnaissance by the Danish party of Operation Grant Land 1966, organized by the Geological Survey of Canada. The oldest is an 1876 copy of a record from 1871, the youngest dates from 1921. Records and relics from the US North Polar Expedition, 1871-73, British Arctic Expedition, 1875-76, US Lady Franklin Bay Expedition, 1881-84, Danish 2nd Thule Expedition, 1916-18, and Danish Bicentenary Jubilee Expedition, 1920-23, are included.Documents et historiques de la côte nord du Groënland. L'auteur rapporte la découverte récente, sur la côte peu fréquentée du nord du Groënland, de neuf documents historiques et de vestiges qui leur sont associés. Le matériel provient de cinq expéditions arctiques de la fin du 19e siècle et du début du 20e, dans la région du chenal de Robeson. On a reproduit en facsimilé des pages de deux de ces documents. 
The Nyeboe Land fault zone: a major dislocation on the Greenland coast along northern Nares Strait
The name Nyeboe Land fault zone is proposed for a major dislocation zone in the western part of the North Greenland fold belt, traceable along the outer coast for 300 km. Two other names are introduced: 1) the Hand Bugt fault, a reverse fault that juxtaposes strata at least as old as Cambrian to the north, against Silurian rocks to the south, and 2) the Wulff Land anticline, a major fold structure that parallels the fault zone and the outer coast. The Wulff Land anticline is regarded as having formed during the main diastrophism of the Franklinian geosyncline in Devonian time; the Nyeboe Land fault zone is considered an expression of later Tertiary reactivation.
Stratigraphic data are presented that define more accurately than hitherto the Franklinian Cambro-Ordovician platform margin. This roughly coincides with the Nyeboe Land fault zone that probably had a history dating back at least to the early Palaeozoic. The location of a steep Bouguer gravity gradient in the coastal area of Nyeboe Land suggests that a deep-seated crustal structure controlled the margin of the Franklinian trough and the site of the Nyeboe Land fault zone.
The Nyeboe Land fault zone, the Wulff Land anticline and the platform margin can be correlated across Nares Strait with on-line features on Judge Daly Promontory within the central Ellesmere fold belt. This indicates that any strike-slip movement along Nares Strait has only resulted in minor net displacement between Greenland and Ellesmere Island.
The Nyeboe Land fault zone is correlated with the Judge Daly fault zone of Ellesmere Island to define an extensive fracture line that is oblique to Nares Strait. It is concluded that main crustal displacements in the late Phanerozoic probably took place along fracture systems oblique to Nares Strait rather than affecting the separation of Greenland and Ellesmere Island as separate plates
Pressure Shifts in High-Precision Hydrogen Spectroscopy: I. Long-Range Atom-Atom and Atom-Molecule Interactions
We study the theoretical foundations for the pressure shifts in
high-precision atomic beam spectrosopy of hydrogen, with a particular emphasis
on transitions involving higher excited P states. In particular, the long-range
interaction of an excited hydrogen atom in a 4P state with a ground-state and
metastable hydrogen atom is studied, with a full resolution of the hyperfine
structure. It is found that the full inclusion of the 4P_1/2 and 4P_3/2
manifolds becomes necessary in order to obtain reliable theoretical
predictions, because the 1S ground state hyperfine frequency is commensurate
with the 4P fine-structure splitting. An even more complex problem is
encountered in the case of the 4P-2S interaction, where the inclusion of
quasi-degenerate 4S-2P_1/2 state becomes necessary in view of the dipole
couplings induced by the van der Waals Hamiltonian. Matrices of dimension up to
40 have to be treated despite all efforts to reduce the problem to irreducible
submanifolds within the quasi-degenerate basis. We focus on the
phenomenologically important second-order van der Waals shifts, proportional to
1/R^6 where R is the interatomic distance, and obtain results with full
resolution of the hyperfine structure. The magnitude of van der Waals
coefficients for hydrogen atom-atom collisions involving excited P states is
drastically enhanced due to energetic quasi-degeneracy; we find no such
enhancement for atom-molecule collisions involving atomic nP states, even if
the complex molecular spectrum involving ro-vibrational levels requires a
deeper analysis.Comment: 32 pages; 2 figures; this is part 1 of a series of two papers; part 1
carries article number 075005, while part 2 carries article number 075006 in
the journal (online journal version has been rectified). arXiv admin note:
text overlap with arXiv:1711.1003
Why I became a chemistry teacher: identifying turning points in chemistry teacher narratives of their trajectories into teaching
BACKGROUND: Currently there are international concerns over teacher recruitment and attrition rates, especially in mathematics and the physical sciences. Much has been written about the recruitment of student teachers and the reasons people give for going into teaching, but little on the broader context of these people’s lives and the complex influences on their career decisions. PURPOSE: The narrative approach used in this study is a complement to larger scale quantitative studies into teacher recruitment as it seeks to consider the wider picture of a person’s life and, through a defended participant perspective, expose influences that may not have been obvious to the participants themselves. Sample: Eight current UK chemistry teachers. SAMPLE: Eight current UK chemistry teachers. DESIGN AND METHODS: Stories of becoming teachers are told through interviews and these narratives examined to consider the key influences upon their becoming chemistry teachers. Two analytic lenses were used: inductive thematic analysis and deductive analysis considering psychoanalytical defences. These lenses were used to both exemplify and challenge each other, providing triangulation of interpretation to determine participants’ trajectories into chemistry teaching. RESULTS: Family background and interest in, and utility of, studying chemistry were found to influence career life decisions. Some participants experienced moments where their career trajectory changed towards teaching whereas others followed a smooth path towards this end. For two, changes in their relationship with chemistry resulted in a teaching career. Particularly influential appears to be prior teaching experience which led to changes of trajectory for half of the participants in this study. CONCLUSION: The chemistry teachers’ relationship with the subject discipline and prior teaching experience were important in them entering the profession, whilst the influence of their own teachers is more nuanced than wider larger scale quantitative studies suggest. Findings suggest that increasing the opportunity for classroom experience for undergraduates may improve teacher recruitment
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