1,653 research outputs found
ATTITUDES AND HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS INFLUENCING SOLID WASTE GENERATION: A HOUSEHOLD GARBAGE ANALYSIS
A survey of household decision-makers and an analysis of their garbage was used to suggest factors affecting the weight of household contributions to municipal solid waste. Iterative regression was used to build a model from the data that is hypothesized to explain garbage weight. Food expenditure, environmental attitude, consumption of soft drinks in plastic bottles, and cats in the household were significant for all households. Self-sufficiency and energy-conscious behavioral scales also affected the subgroup with female householders having an educational level of high school graduation or less.Environmental Economics and Policy,
Quasilocal Conservation Laws: Why We Need Them
We argue that conservation laws based on the local matter-only
stress-energy-momentum tensor (characterized by energy and momentum per unit
volume) cannot adequately explain a wide variety of even very simple physical
phenomena because they fail to properly account for gravitational effects. We
construct a general quasi}local conservation law based on the Brown and York
total (matter plus gravity) stress-energy-momentum tensor (characterized by
energy and momentum per unit area), and argue that it does properly account for
gravitational effects. As a simple example of the explanatory power of this
quasilocal approach, consider that, when we accelerate toward a freely-floating
massive object, the kinetic energy of that object increases (relative to our
frame). But how, exactly, does the object acquire this increasing kinetic
energy? Using the energy form of our quasilocal conservation law, we can see
precisely the actual mechanism by which the kinetic energy increases: It is due
to a bona fide gravitational energy flux that is exactly analogous to the
electromagnetic Poynting flux, and involves the general relativistic effect of
frame dragging caused by the object's motion relative to us.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
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The Impact of the P.I.C.K. a Partner Relationship Educational Program on Single Army Soldiers
Educating singles on how to develop healthy, romantic relationships can be beneficial to their subsequent dating and marital satisfaction, and for Army soldiers, their satisfaction with military life. A new relationship program, the P.I.C.K. program, was delivered to single Army soldiers, and at the conclusion of the program participants demonstrated an increase in their understanding of the crucial areas to explore and discuss in a premarital relationship, gained a better understanding of how to pace their relationship, and exhibited more realistic attitudes and beliefs about marriage and mate selection
Effects of Lodgepole Pine Dwarf Mistletoe, Arceuthobium americanum, on Jack Pine, Pinus banksiana, Growth in Manitoba
The Lodgepole Pine Dwarf Mistletoe (Arceuthobium americanum Nutt. ex Engelm.) is an important pathogen of Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.). Dwarf Mistletoe alters tree form, suppresses growth, and reduces volume and overall wood quality of its host. Stem analysis and a 3-parameter logistic regression model were used to compare the growth of heavily and lightly to non infected Jack Pine trees. At the time of sampling, no significant reduction in diameter at breast height and basal area were observed in heavily infected trees. However, a significant reduction in height and volume and an increase in taper were observed in heavily infected trees. Growth models predicted a 21.1% lower basal area, 23.4% lower height and 42.1% lower volume by age 60 for the high infection group
Response of Galium species (cleavers) to herbicides
Non-Peer Reviewe
Properties of the symplectic structure of General Relativity for spatially bounded spacetime regions
We continue a previous analysis of the covariant Hamiltonian symplectic
structure of General Relativity for spatially bounded regions of spacetime. To
allow for near complete generality, the Hamiltonian is formulated using any
fixed hypersurface, with a boundary given by a closed spacelike 2-surface. A
main result is that we obtain Hamiltonians associated to Dirichlet and Neumann
boundary conditions on the gravitational field coupled to matter sources, in
particular a Klein-Gordon field, an electromagnetic field, and a set of
Yang-Mills-Higgs fields. The Hamiltonians are given by a covariant form of the
Arnowitt-Deser-Misner Hamiltonian modified by a surface integral term that
depends on the particular boundary conditions. The general form of this surface
integral involves an underlying ``energy-momentum'' vector in the spacetime
tangent space at the spatial boundary 2-surface. We give examples of the
resulting Dirichlet and Neumann vectors for topologically spherical 2-surfaces
in Minkowski spacetime, spherically symmetric spacetimes, and stationary
axisymmetric spacetimes. Moreover, we show the relation between these vectors
and the ADM energy-momentum vector for a 2-surface taken in a limit to be
spatial infinity in asymptotically flat spacetimes. We also discuss the
geometrical properties of the Dirichlet and Neumann vectors and obtain several
striking results relating these vectors to the mean curvature and normal
curvature connection of the 2-surface. Most significantly, the part of the
Dirichlet vector normal to the 2-surface depends only the spacetime metric at
this surface and thereby defines a geometrical normal vector field on the
2-surface. Properties and examples of this normal vector are discussed.Comment: 46 pages; minor errata corrected in Eqs. (3.15), (3.24), (4.37) and
in discussion of examples in sections IV B,
An Investigation of Online and Face-to-Face Communication in General Chemistry
This exploratory study investigated an online office hour and a face-to-face recitation for similarities and differences. The online office hour and face-to-face recitation were a part of general chemistry courses taught at different universities. The courses covered the same material at the same level. The results of the investigation revealed that in the online environment students must articulate their ideas clearly to convey them in a text-only medium. The written text seemed to help the instructor to identify misinterpretations made by the students. The instructor-dominated hierarchy between instructor and student is present in both environments. When comparing the percentage of total student and instructor events (the sum of questions and statements) in the online environment, studentsβ events were significantly greater than instructorβs events. This finding is an indication that the online environment shows promise for improving student participation
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The visibility of environmental rights in the EU legal order: eurolegalism in action?
The current article responds to a key puzzle and a question. First, why, given the potential for βrights talkβ that has been seen in other countries and other policy areas, have environmental rights in the EU legal order been relatively invisible until recently? And second, with Daniel Kelemenβs influential work on Eurolegalism arguing that the EU has become much more reliant on US-style adversarial legalism, including a shift towards rights-based litigation, do EU environmental rights fit the picture Kelemen has painted, or are they an exception? The article explores the visibility of EU environmental rights at EU level and then seeks to explain the possible reasons for visibility/invisibility
Reverse genetics in Candida albicans predicts ARF cycling is essential for drug resistance and virulence
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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