8,737 research outputs found
Multilingual practices in a disavowed community: The case of new Italian migrants in London
This thesis aims to investigate the linguistic repertoires of new Italian migrants in London and the multilingual practices in which they engage. Italian mass emigration has re-started after the 2008 economic crisis. This new migration continues a long tradition: Italians migrated en masse after the country’s unification and after the Second World War. In the UK, they mainly emigrated after the Second World War to industrial towns, such as Bedford. In contrast, London has become the favourite destination of the post-2008 crisis wave. In the last decade, scholars focused on the social differences between past and new migrants, while the last linguistic study on the Italian community in London was carried out in the 1990s and thus it does not cover the new wave. The research presented here is an attempt to fill this gap. Recorded data collected through ethnographic observations of social gatherings organised by new migrants are presented to show how they engage with translanguaging. Interview data are also used to further explore and better understand participants’ multilingual practices and their ideologies on those. One recurring aspect emerges from both the data sources. Participants’ disavow their national community. They often negotiate the traditional understanding of ethnic and national community by challenging or denying their belonging to the Italian community in London. Nevertheless, informants acknowledge the existence of an in-group style, used by them and by other new migrants, characterised by the possibility of translanguaging. Translanguaging is adopted to negotiate and perform new identities, and to identify the other, who cannot be included in translanguaging practices. Participants demonstrate their membership in (or disaffiliation from) the group through the agreement (or disagreement) with the group style. This seems a challenge to the a priori labelling system based on ethnicity and migratory status, which may be seen as an analytical issue for the study of new transnational and mobile migrant communities
Local Hamiltonians for Maximally Multipartite Entangled States
We study the conditions for obtaining maximally multipartite entangled states
(MMES) as non-degenerate eigenstates of Hamiltonians that involve only
short-range interactions. We investigate small-size systems (with a number of
qubits ranging from 3 to 5) and show some example Hamiltonians with MMES as
eigenstates.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Performing new identities: the community language of post-crisis Italian migrants in London
After the 2008 global crisis, Italy has experienced a relevant resumption of emigration. Tens of thousands of young Italians have chosen London as their favourite destination, giving rise to a new Italian community in the city. This article focuses on the transformation of migrants’ national identity and on a distinctive device of identity expression: language. Sample cases, extracted from a dataset collected for an original doctoral project, are used to explain how the insertion of English elements in speakers’ native language become the expression of the loss of pure national identity and of the renegotiation of transnational and migratory identities
Optimal control theory based design of elasto-magnetic metamaterial
A method to design a new type of metamaterial is presented. A two-step strategy to define an optimal long-range force distribution embedded in an elastic support to control wave propagation is considered.
The first step uses a linear quadratic regulator (LQR) to produce an optimal set of long-range interactions. In the second step, a least square passive approximation of the LQR optimal gains is determined. The paper investigates numerical solutions obtained by the previously described procedure. Finally, we discuss physical and engineering implications and practical use of the present study
Feedback local optimality principle applied to rocket vertical landing VTVL
Vertical landing is becoming popular in the last fifteen years, a technology known under the acronym VTVL, Vertical Takeoff and Vertical Landing [1,2]. The interest in such landing technology is dictated by possible cost reductions [3,4], that impose spaceship’s recycling. The rockets are not generally de- signed to perform landing operations, rather their design is aimed at takeoff operations, guaranteeing a very high forward acceleration to gain the velocity needed to escape the gravitational force. In this paper a new control method based on Feedback Local Optimality Principle, named FLOP is applied to the rocket landing problem. The FLOP belongs to a special class of optimal controllers, developed by the mechatronic and vehicle dynamics lab of Sapienza, named Variational Feedback Controllers - VFC, that are part of an ongoing research and are recently applied in different field: nonlinear system [5], marine and terrestrial autonomous vehicles [6,7,8], multi agents interactions and vibration control [9, 10]. The paper is devoted to show the robustness of the nonlinear controlled system, comparing the performances with the LQR, one of the most acknowledged methods in optimal control
Magma and fluid migration at Yellowstone Caldera in the last three decades inferred from InSAR, leveling and gravity measurements
We studied the Yellowstone caldera geological unrest between 1977 and 2010 by investigating
temporal changes in differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR), precise spirit leveling and
gravity measurements. The analysis of the 1992–2010 displacement time series, retrieved by applying the SBAS
InSAR technique, allowed the identification of three areas of deformation: (i) the Mallard Lake (ML) and Sour
Creek (SC) resurgent domes, (ii) a region close to the Northern Caldera Rim (NCR), and (iii) the eastern Snake
River Plain (SRP). While the eastern SRP shows a signal related to tectonic deformation, the other two regions
are influenced by the caldera unrest. We removed the tectonic signal from the InSAR displacements, and we
modeled the InSAR, leveling, and gravity measurements to retrieve the best fitting source parameters. Our
findings confirmed the existence of different distinct sources, beneath the brittle-ductile transition zone, which
have been intermittently active during the last three decades. Moreover, we interpreted our results in the light
of existing seismic tomography studies. Concerning the SC dome, we highlighted the role of hydrothermal
fluids as the driving force behind the 1977–1983 uplift; since 1983–1993 the deformation source transformed
into a deeper one with a higher magmatic component. Furthermore, our results support the magmatic nature
of the deformation source beneath ML dome for the overall investigated period. Finally, the uplift at NCR is
interpreted as magma accumulation, while its subsidence could either be the result of fluids migration outside
the caldera or the gravitational adjustment of the source from a spherical to a sill-like geometr
A MATLAB GEODETIC SOFTWARE FOR PROCESSING AIRBORNE LIDAR BATHYMETRY DATA
The ability to build three-dimensional models through technologies based on satellite navigation systems GNSS and the continuous development of new sensors, as Airborne Laser Scanning Hydrography (ALH), data acquisition methods and 3D multi-resolution representations, have contributed significantly to the digital 3D documentation, mapping, preservation and representation of landscapes and heritage as well as to the growth of research in this fields. However, GNSS systems led to the use of the ellipsoidal height; to transform this height in orthometric is necessary to know a geoid undulation model. The latest and most accurate global geoid undulation model, available worldwide, is EGM2008 which has been publicly released by the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) EGM Development Team. Therefore, given the availability and accuracy of this geoid model, we can use it in geomatics applications that require the conversion of heights. Using this model, to correct the elevation of a point does not coincide with any node must interpolate elevation information of adjacent nodes. The purpose of this paper is produce a Matlab® geodetic software for processing airborne LIDAR bathymetry data. In particular we want to focus on the point clouds in ASPRS LAS format and convert the ellipsoidal height in orthometric. The algorithm, valid on the whole globe and operative for all UTM zones, allows the conversion of ellipsoidal heights using the EGM2008 model. Of this model we analyse the slopes which occur, in some critical areas, between the nodes of the undulations grid; we will focus our attention on the marine areas verifying the impact that the slopes have in the calculation of the orthometric height and, consequently, in the accuracy of the in the 3-D point clouds. This experiment will be carried out by analysing a LAS APRS file containing topographic and bathymetric data collected with LIDAR systems along the coasts of Oregon and Washington (USA)
Deriving High-Precision Radial Velocities
This chapter describes briefly the key aspects behind the derivation of
precise radial velocities. I start by defining radial velocity precision in the
context of astrophysics in general and exoplanet searches in particular. Next I
discuss the different basic elements that constitute a spectrograph, and how
these elements and overall technical choices impact on the derived radial
velocity precision. Then I go on to discuss the different wavelength
calibration and radial velocity calculation techniques, and how these are
intimately related to the spectrograph's properties. I conclude by presenting
some interesting examples of planets detected through radial velocity, and some
of the new-generation instruments that will push the precision limit further.Comment: Lecture presented at the IVth Azores International Advanced School in
Space Sciences on "Asteroseismology and Exoplanets: Listening to the Stars
and Searching for New Worlds" (arXiv:1709.00645), which took place in Horta,
Azores Islands, Portugal in July 201
Consequences of spectrograph illumination for the accuracy of radial-velocimetry
For fiber-fed spectrographs with a stable external wavelength source,
scrambling properties of optical fibers and, homogeneity and stability of the
instrument illumination are important for the accuracy of radial-velocimetry.
Optical cylindric fibers are known to have good azimuthal scrambling. In
contrast, the radial one is not perfect. In order to improve the scrambling
ability of the fiber and to stabilize the illumination, optical double
scrambler are usually coupled to the fibers. Despite that, our experience on
SOPHIE and HARPS has lead to identified remaining radial-velocity limitations
due to the non-uniform illumination of the spectrograph. We conducted tests on
SOPHIE with telescope vignetting, seeing variation and centering errors on the
fiber entrance. We simulated the light path through the instrument in order to
explain the radial velocity variation obtained with our tests. We then
identified the illumination stability and uniformity has a critical point for
the extremely high-precision radial velocity instruments (ESPRESSO@VLT,
CODEX@E-ELT). Tests on square and octagonal section fibers are now under
development and SOPHIE will be used as a bench test to validate these new feed
optics.Comment: to appear in the Proceedings conference "New Technologies for Probing
the Diversity of Brown Dwarfs and Exoplanets", Shanghai, 200
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