1,060 research outputs found
Changes in the Internal Organizational and Administrative Practices in the Elementary School from 1945 to 1950
This study is designed to show what changes have been made in the organization and the administration of the elementary school from 1945 to 1950, as revealed in the literature and to point out possible trends, or indices of trends during this period. The expression or indices of trends is used because it is difficult to point out trends in elementary education in a five-year period.
The elementary school is not perfect, but that it is constantly changing in an effort to improve, is becoming more evident in the field of elementary education. This writer believes that democratic society never remains constant; we are always developing the elementary school, which has made notable progress during the last half century.
Local and world conditions have their influence upon education which cause the internal changes in content and administration of the elementary curriculum. Changes are made in education to stimulate the program of the School, so that it will meet the growing needs of the children during their developmental period
BiSON data preparation: A correction for differential extinction and the weighted averaging of contemporaneous data
The Birmingham Solar Oscillations Network (BiSON) has provided high-quality
high-cadence observations from as far back in time as 1978. These data must be
calibrated from the raw observations into radial velocity and the quality of
the calibration has a large impact on the signal-to-noise ratio of the final
time series. The aim of this work is to maximise the potential science that can
be performed with the BiSON data set by optimising the calibration procedure.
To achieve better levels of signal-to-noise ratio we perform two key steps in
the calibration process: we attempt a correction for terrestrial atmospheric
differential extinction; and the resulting improvement in the calibration
allows us to perform weighted averaging of contemporaneous data from different
BiSON stations. The improvements listed produce significant improvement in the
signal-to-noise ratio of the BiSON frequency-power spectrum across all
frequency ranges. The reduction of noise in the power spectrum will allow
future work to provide greater constraint on changes in the oscillation
spectrum with solar activity. In addition, the analysis of the low-frequency
region suggests we have achieved a noise level that may allow us to improve
estimates of the upper limit of g-mode amplitudes.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 10 pages, 7 figure
The relation between and for solar-like oscillations
Establishing relations between global stellar parameters and asteroseismic
quantities can help improve our understanding of stellar astrophysics and
facilitate the interpretation of observations. We present an observed relation
between the large frequency separation, , and the frequency of
maximum power, . We find that is proportional to
, allowing prediction of to about 15 per cent
given . Our result is further supported by established scaling
relations for and and by extended stellar model
calculations, which confirm that can be estimated using this
relation for basically any star showing solar-like oscillations in the
investigated range (0.5<M/Msol<4.0).Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, Letter accepted by MNRA
Performance of the Birmingham Solar-Oscillations Network (BiSON)
The Birmingham Solar-Oscillations Network (BiSON) has been operating with a
full complement of six stations since 1992. Over 20 years later, we look back
on the network history. The meta-data from the sites have been analysed to
assess performance in terms of site insolation, with a brief look at the
challenges that have been encountered over the years. We explain how the
international community can gain easy access to the ever-growing dataset
produced by the network, and finally look to the future of the network and the
potential impact of nearly 25 years of technology miniaturisation.Comment: 31 pages, 19 figures. Accepted by Solar Physics: 2015 October 20.
First online: 2015 December 7. Open Acces
Acoustic power absorption and enhancement generated by slow and fast MHD waves
We used long duration, high quality, unresolved (Sun-as-a star) observations
collected by the ground based network BiSON and by the instruments GOLF and
VIRGO on board the ESA/NASA SOHO satellite to search for solar-cycle-related
changes in mode characteristics in velocity and continuum intensity for the
frequency range between 2.5mHz < nu < 6.8mHz. Over the ascending phase of solar
cycle 23 we found a suppression in the p-mode amplitudes both in the velocity
and intensity data between 2.5mHz <nu< 4.5mHz with a maximum suppression for
frequencies in the range between 2.5mHz <nu< 3.5mHz. The size of the amplitude
suppression is 13+-2 per cent for the velocity and 9+-2 per cent for the
intensity observations. Over the range 4.5mHz <nu< 5.5mHz the findings hint
within the errors to a null change both in the velocity and intensity
amplitudes. At still higher frequencies, in the so called High-frequency
Interference Peaks (HIPs) between 5.8mHz <nu < 6.8mHz, we found an enhancement
in the velocity amplitudes with the maximum 36+-7 per cent occurring for 6.3mHz
<nu< 6.8mHz. However, in intensity observations we found a rather smaller
enhancement of about 5+-2 per cent in the same interval. There is evidence that
the frequency dependence of solar-cycle velocity amplitude changes is
consistent with the theory behind the mode conversion of acoustic waves in a
non-vertical magnetic field, but there are some problems with the intensity
data, which may be due to the height in the solar atmosphere at which the VIRGO
data are taken.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 10 pages, 9 figures
Changing the Scaling Relation: The Need For a Mean Molecular Weight Term
The scaling relations that relate the average asteroseismic parameters
and to the global properties of stars are used quite
extensively to determine stellar properties. While the scaling
relation has been examined carefully and the deviations from the relation have
been well documented, the scaling relation has not been examined
as extensively. In this paper we examine the scaling relation
using a set of stellar models constructed to have a wide range of mass,
metallicity, and age. We find that as with , does not
follow the simple scaling relation. The most visible deviation is because of a
mean molecular weight term and a term that are commonly ignored. The
remaining deviation is more difficult to address. We find that the influence of
the scaling relation errors on asteroseismically derived values of are
well within uncertainties. The influence of the errors on mass and radius
estimates is small for main sequence and subgiants, but can be quite large for
red giants.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Parametrizing the time-variation of the "surface term" of stellar p-mode frequencies: application to helioseismic data
The solar-cyle variation of acoustic mode frequencies has a frequency
dependence related to the inverse mode inertia. The discrepancy between model
predictions and measured oscillation frequencies for solar and solar-type
stellar acoustic modes includes a significant frequency-dependent term known as
the surface term that is also related to the inverse mode inertia. We
parametrize both the surface term and the frequency variations for low-degree
solar data from Birmingham Solar-Oscillations Network (BiSON) and medium-degree
data from the Global Oscillations Network Group (GONG) using the mode inertia
together with cubic and inverse frequency terms. We find that for the central
frequency of rotationally split multiplets the cubic term dominates both the
average surface term and the temporal variation, but for the medium-degree case
the inverse term improves the fit to the temporal variation. We also examine
the variation of the even-order splitting coefficients for the medium-degree
data and find that, as for the central frequency, the latitude-dependent
frequency variation, which reflects the changing latitudinal distribution of
magnetic activity over the solar cycle, can be described by the combination of
a cubic and an inverse function of frequency scaled by inverse mode inertia.
The results suggest that this simple parametrization could be used to assess
the activity-related frequency variation in solar-like asteroseismic targets.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. Accepted by MNRAS 13 October 201
Changes in the sensitivity of solar p-mode frequency shifts to activity over three solar cycles
Low-degree solar p-mode observations from the long-lived Birmingham Solar
Oscillations Network (BiSON) stretch back further than any other single
helioseismic data set. Results from BiSON have suggested that the response of
the mode frequency to solar activity levels may be different in different
cycles. In order to check whether such changes can also be seen at higher
degrees, we compare the response of medium-degree solar p-modes to activity
levels across three solar cycles using data from Big Bear Solar Observatory
(BBSO), Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG), Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI)
and Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager (HMI), by examining the shifts in the mode
frequencies and their sensitivity to solar activity levels. We compare these
shifts and sensitivities with those from radial modes from BiSON. We find that
the medium-degree data show small but significant systematic differences
between the cycles, with solar cycle 24 showing a frequency shift about 10 per
cent larger than cycle 23 for the same change in activity as determined by the
10.7 cm radio flux. This may support the idea that there have been changes in
the magnetic properties of the shallow subsurface layers of the Sun that have
the strongest influence on the frequency shifts.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted by MNRAS 3rd July 201
Why should we correct reported pulsation frequencies for stellar line-of-sight Doppler velocity shifts?
In the age of Kepler and Corot, extended observations have provided estimates
of stellar pulsation frequencies that have achieved new levels of precision,
regularly exceeding fractional levels of a few parts in . These high
levels of precision now in principle exceed the point where one can ignore the
Doppler shift of pulsation frequencies caused by the motion of a star relative
to the observer. We present a correction for these Doppler shifts and use
previously published pulsation frequencies to demonstrate the significance of
the effect. We suggest that reported pulsation frequencies should be routinely
corrected for stellar line-of-sight velocity Doppler shifts, or if a
line-of-sight velocity estimate is not available, the frame of reference in
which the frequencies are reported should be clearly stated.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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