24,489 research outputs found

    Setting Children Free: Children’s Independent Movement in the Local Environment

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    Parental concerns about children’s safety and security are restricting children’s independent exploration of the local environment. Children are being denied important opportunities to exercise, to acquire decision-making skills, such as crossing the road safely, and to develop social skills through interaction with their peers. This paper presents findings from the project CAPABLE (Children’s Activities, Perceptions And Behaviour in the Local Environment) being carried out at University College London. Based on findings from fieldwork carried out with children aged 8-11 in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, the paper shows the effect of factors such as the number of adults at home, having an older sibling, having a car or garden at home and living near to a park on the propensity to be allowed out alone. Then it considers how being allowed out alone affects the amount of time children spend outdoors, playing with friends and watching television. The paper then uses data from children who have been fitted with physical activity monitors and GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) monitors and asked to keep diaries, to show how children’s travel behaviour differs when they are with adults from when they are not

    Noisy Classical Field Theories with Two Coupled Fields: Dependence of Escape Rates on Relative Field Stiffnesses

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    Exit times for stochastic Ginzburg-Landau classical field theories with two or more coupled classical fields depend on the interval length on which the fields are defined, the potential in which the fields deterministically evolve, and the relative stiffness of the fields themselves. The latter is of particular importance in that physical applications will generally require different relative stiffnesses, but the effect of varying field stiffnesses has not heretofore been studied. In this paper, we explore the complete phase diagram of escape times as they depend on the various problem parameters. In addition to finding a transition in escape rates as the relative stiffness varies, we also observe a critical slowing down of the string method algorithm as criticality is approached.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure

    Learning the Roots of Visual Domain Shift

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    In this paper we focus on the spatial nature of visual domain shift, attempting to learn where domain adaptation originates in each given image of the source and target set. We borrow concepts and techniques from the CNN visualization literature, and learn domainnes maps able to localize the degree of domain specificity in images. We derive from these maps features related to different domainnes levels, and we show that by considering them as a preprocessing step for a domain adaptation algorithm, the final classification performance is strongly improved. Combined with the whole image representation, these features provide state of the art results on the Office dataset.Comment: Extended Abstrac

    Sustainability of multi-field inflation and bound on string scale

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    We study the effects of the interaction terms between the inflaton fields on the inflationary dynamics in multi-field models. With power law type potential and interactions, the total number of e-folds may get considerably reduced and can lead to unacceptably short period of inflation. Also we point out that this can place a bound on the characteristic scale of the underlying theory such as string theory. Using a simple multi-field chaotic inflation model from string theory, the string scale is constrained to be larger than the scale of grand unified theory.Comment: (v1) 9 pages, 1 figure;(v2) 10 pages, references added; (v3) 15 pages, 4 figures, more discussions about parameters and observable quantities, references added, to appear in Modern Physics Letters

    The Holographic dark energy reexamined

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    We have reexamined the holographic dark energy model by considering the spatial curvature. We have refined the model parameter and observed that the holographic dark energy model does not behave as phantom model. Comparing the holographic dark energy model to the supernova observation alone, we found that the closed universe is favored. Combining with the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) data, we obtained the reasonable value of the spatial curvature of our universe.Comment: divided into sections, add one figure, some typos corrected, references added, Accepted for publication in PRD; v3: some typos corrected, title change

    New constraints on the observable inflaton potential from WMAP and SDSS

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    We derive some new constraints on single-field inflation from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 3-year data combined with the Sloan Luminous Red Galaxy survey. Our work differs from previous analyses by focusing only on the observable part of the inflaton potential, or in other words, by making absolutely no assumption about extrapolation of the potential from its observable region to its minimum (i.e., about the branch of the potential responsible for the last ~50 inflationary e-folds). We only assume that inflation starts at least a few e-folds before the observable Universe leaves the Hubble radius, and that the inflaton rolls down a monotonic and regular potential, with no sharp features or phase transitions. We Taylor-expand the inflaton potential at order v=2, 3 or 4 in the vicinity of the pivot scale, compute the primordial spectra of scalar and tensor perturbations numerically and fit the data. For v>2, a large fraction of the allowed models is found to produce a large negative running of the scalar tilt, and to fall in a region of parameter space where the second-order slow-roll formalism is strongly inaccurate. We release a code for the computation of inflationary perturbations which is compatible with CosmoMC.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, codes available at http://wwwlapp.in2p3.fr/~lesgourgues/inflation/. Version to be published in Phys.Rev.

    Main-chain poly(ionic liquid)-derived nitrogen-doped micro/mesoporous carbons for CO<sub>2</sub> capture and selective aerobic oxidation of alcohols

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    Sustainable development and the recent fast-growing global demands for energy and functional chemicals urgently call for effective methods for CO2 remediation and efficient metal-free catalysts for selective oxidation of aromatic alcohol. Herein, a unique main-chain poly(ionic liquid) (PIL) is employed as the precursor to prepare nitrogen-doped micro/mesoporous carbons via simultaneous carbonization and activation, which bear high yield, large specific surface area above 1700 m2 g−1 and rich nitrogen dopant. The porous carbon products deliver a high CO2 adsorption capacity up to 6.2 mmol g−1 at 273 K and 1 bar with outstanding reversibility and satisfactory selectivity. Besides, they work excellently as metal-free carbocatalysts for the selective aerobic oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde with high selectivity. It is believed that this work not only provides a facile approach to prepare nitrogen-doped porous carbon, but also advances the related research in the fields of environment and catalysis

    Phase Control of Nonadiabaticity-induced Quantum Chaos in An Optical Lattice

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    The qualitative nature (i.e. integrable vs. chaotic) of the translational dynamics of a three-level atom in an optical lattice is shown to be controllable by varying the relative laser phase of two standing wave lasers. Control is explained in terms of the nonadiabatic transition between optical potentials and the corresponding regular to chaotic transition in mixed classical-quantum dynamics. The results are of interest to both areas of coherent control and quantum chaos.Comment: 3 figures, 4 pages, to appear in Physical Review Letter

    Improved cosmological constraints on the curvature and equation of state of dark energy

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    We apply the Constitution compilation of 397 supernova Ia, the baryon acoustic oscillation measurements including the AA parameter, the distance ratio and the radial data, the five-year Wilkinson microwave anisotropy probe and the Hubble parameter data to study the geometry of the universe and the property of dark energy by using the popular Chevallier-Polarski-Linder and Jassal-Bagla-Padmanabhan parameterizations. We compare the simple χ2\chi^2 method of joined contour estimation and the Monte Carlo Markov chain method, and find that it is necessary to make the marginalized analysis on the error estimation. The probabilities of Ωk\Omega_k and waw_a in the Chevallier-Polarski-Linder model are skew distributions, and the marginalized 1σ1\sigma errors are Ωm=0.279−0.008+0.015\Omega_m=0.279^{+0.015}_{-0.008}, Ωk=0.005−0.011+0.006\Omega_k=0.005^{+0.006}_{-0.011}, w0=−1.05−0.06+0.23w_0=-1.05^{+0.23}_{-0.06}, and wa=0.5−1.5+0.3w_a=0.5^{+0.3}_{-1.5}. For the Jassal-Bagla-Padmanabhan model, the marginalized 1σ1\sigma errors are Ωm=0.281−0.01+0.015\Omega_m=0.281^{+0.015}_{-0.01}, Ωk=0.000−0.006+0.007\Omega_k=0.000^{+0.007}_{-0.006}, w0=−0.96−0.18+0.25w_0=-0.96^{+0.25}_{-0.18}, and wa=−0.6−1.6+1.9w_a=-0.6^{+1.9}_{-1.6}. The equation of state parameter w(z)w(z) of dark energy is negative in the redshift range 0≤z≤20\le z\le 2 at more than 3σ3\sigma level. The flat Λ\LambdaCDM model is consistent with the current observational data at the 1σ1\sigma level.Comment: 10 figures, 12 pages, Classical and Quantum Gravity in press; v2 to match the pulished versio
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