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Gender Gaps in the Measurement of Public Opinion About Homosexuality in Cross-national Surveys: A Question-Wording Experiment
Measures of attitudes towards homosexuality in cross-national studies have received criticism for not being âgender-sensitiveâ. The current study used a split-ballot design allowing for separate analyses of the attitudes towards âgay men and lesbian womenâ, âgay menâ, and âlesbian womenâ in a pooled sample of 3,381 participants from Great Britain, Hungary, and Portugal. Analyses controlling for sociodemographics showed that differences in attitudes towards male and female targets were generally small and did not interact with the gender of the rater. In addition, results showed that menâs attitudes towards homosexuality were more strongly related to their gender ideology than womenâs attitudes. Implications of these findings for cross-national studies measuring attitudes towards homosexuality are discussed
Evaluation of a contact-analog display in landing approaches with a helicopter
Evaluation of contact analog display in landing approaches with helicopter
The chemical evolution of gas-rich dwarf galaxies
A numerical double burst model of the chemical evolution of gas-rich dwarf
galaxies has been developed. The model is fitted to a sample of N/O, O/H, Y and
gas fraction observations, where N/O and O/H are the relative abundances by
number of nitrogen to oxygen and oxygen to hydrogen, respectively. Y is the
abundance by mass of helium. Closed models as well as models including enriched
outflow, ordinary outflow and ordinary outflow combined with inflow are
considered.The bursts are assumed to be instantaneous but ordered in pairs to
explain the scatter in N/O-O/H. The method of gas fraction fitting is revised,
and it is found that it is very important to specify whether dwarf irregulars
(dIrrs) or blue compact galaxies (BCGs) are considered. Effective enriched
winds fail when fitting N/O, whereas closed models, models with ordinary winds
or a combination of ordinary winds and inflow are all viable.Comment: 22 pages, 25 figures, MNRAS LaTeX forma
Laser microprobe study of cosmic dust (IDPs) and potential source materials
The study of cosmic dust or interplanetary dust particles (IDP) can provide vital information about primitive materials derived primarily from comets and asteroids along with a small unknown fraction from the nearby interstellar medium. The study of these particles can enhance our understanding of comets along with the decoding of the history of the early solar system. In addition the study of the cosmic dust for IDP particles can assist in the elucidation of the cosmic history of the organogenic elements which are vital to life processes. Studies to date on these particles have shown that they are complex, heterogeneous assemblages of both amorphous and crystalline components. In order to understand the nature of these particles, any analytical measurements must be able to distinguish between the possible sources of these particles. A study was undertaken using a laser microprobe interfaced to a quadrupole mass spectrometer for the analysis of the volatile components present in cosmic dust particles, terrestrial contaminants present in the upper atmosphere, and primitive carbonaceous chondrites. From the study of the volatiles released from the carbonaceous materials it is hoped that one could distinguish between components and sources in the IDP particles analyzed. The technique is briefly described and results for the CI, CM, and CV chondrites and cosmic dust particle W7027B8 are presented
A dynamical and kinematical model of the Galactic stellar halo and possible implications for galaxy formation scenarios
We re-analyse the kinematics of the system of blue horizontal branch field
(BHBF) stars in the Galactic halo (in particular the outer halo), fitting the
kinematics with the model of radial and tangential velocity dispersions in the
halo as a function of galactocentric distance r proposed by Sommer-Larsen,
Flynn & Christensen (1994), using a much larger sample (almost 700) of BHBF
stars. The basic result is that the character of the stellar halo velocity
ellipsoid changes markedly from radial anisotropy at the sun to tangential
anisotropy in the outer parts of the Galactic halo (r greater than approx 20
kpc). Specifically, the radial component of the stellar halo's velocity
ellipsoid decreases fairly rapidly beyond the solar circle, from approx 140 +/-
10 km/s at the sun, to an asymptotic value of 89 +/- 19 km/s at large r. The
rapid decrease in the radial velocity dispersion is matched by an increase in
the tangential velocity dispersion, with increasing r.
Our results may indicate that the Galaxy formed hierarchically (partly or
fully) through merging of smaller subsystems - the 'bottom-up' galaxy formation
scenario, which for quite a while has been favoured by most theorists and
recently also has been given some observational credibility by HST observations
of a potential group of small galaxies, at high redshift, possibly in the
process of merging to a larger galaxy (Pascarelle et al 1996).Comment: Latex, 16 pages. 2 postscript figures. Submitted to the Astrophysical
Journal. also available at http://astro.utu.fi/~cflynn/outerhalo.htm
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