24,366 research outputs found
Understanding the True Nature of War: Dr. James Cliftonâs Lecture Mediated War
Wartime artwork allows us to experience certain aspects of battle and its aftermath and yet to also be distanced from it: When viewing the artwork, we get a small visual window into the carnage and devastation of war, but we are spared the affronts to our other senses. This concept was present in Dr. James Cliftonâs lecture, Meditated War. Dr. Clifton, the director of the Sarah Cambell Blaffer Foundation at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, coordinated with Gettysburg College to loan the collection of European war prints for the exhibit, The Plains of Mars. The exhibition is currently on display at Schmucker Art Gallery and will remain so until December 7th. The pieces are comprised of wartime images from 1500 through 1825 and depict battles, individual soldiers, and civilians. Dr. Cliftonâs lecture focused primarily on what one can learn from wartime art, specifically war prints, but also what they lack. [excerpt
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Mental Health of Children and Young People in England, 2017: Trends and characteristics
This survey series provides Englandâs best source of data on trends in child mental health. Emotional, behavioural, hyperactivity, and other types of mental disorder were assessed in 5 to 15 year olds in 1999, 5 to 16 year olds in 2004, and 5 to 19 year olds in 2017.
One in eight (12.8%) 5 to 19 year olds had a mental disorder when assessed in 2017. Rates were similar in boys and girls. Data for 5 to 15 year olds show a slight upward trend over time in the prevalence of emotional disorders.Rates for behavioural, hyperactivity and other disorders have remained broadly stable
States of fermionic atoms in an optical superlattice across a Feshbach resonance
We investigate states of fermionic atoms across a broad Feshbach resonance in
an optical superlattice which allows interaction only among a small number of
lattice sites. The states are in general described by superpositions of atomic
resonating valence bonds and dressed molecules. As one scans the magnetic
field, level crossing is found between states with different symmetry
properties, which may correspond to a quantum phase transition in the many-body
case.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
Test of Particle-Assisted Tunneling for Strongly Interacting Fermions in an Optical Superlattice
Fermions in an optical lattice near a wide Feshbach resonance are expected to
be described by an effective Hamiltonian of the general Hubbard model with
particle-assisted tunneling rates resulting from the strong atomic interaction
[Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 243202 (2005)]. Here, we propose a scheme to
unambiguously test the predictions of this effective Hamiltonian through
manipulation of ultracold atoms in an inhomogeneous optical superlattice. The
structure of the low-energy Hilbert space as well as the particle assisted
tunneling rates can be inferred from measurements of the time-of-flight images.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The government's child poverty target: how much progress has been made?
Before the 2001 election the Treasury said that `tax and benefit reforms announced in this Parliament will lift over 1.2 million children out of relative poverty'. But official figures released on 11 April show a smaller fall in child poverty, of only 0.5 million since 1996-97. This commentary attempts to explain the discrepancy. Using the data that lie behind the official Households Below Average Income publications, we analyse trend in child poverty, measured against various poverty lines, since 1979. We show how the government's choice of a relative poverty line is making its goal to abolish child poverty more difficult and more expensive. We also discuss how easy the government will find it to make further reductions in child poverty
Making Photographs Speak
It has often been said that âa picture is worth a thousand words.â Making that picture spit out those mythical thousand words, as we can all attest, is no easy task. Over the course of the first half of the fall semester, the three of us were tasked with developing brief interpretive captions for two Civil War photographs each, with the end goal to display our work at the Civil War Instituteâs 2019 Summer Conference. What initially appeared as a simple project quickly revealed itself to be a difficult, yet rewarding, challenge that taught us all important lessons concerning history, photography, and writing that we will not soon forget. Producing the photography exhibit enhanced our skills as historical writers, introduced us to the challenge of writing for a popular audience, and deepened our understanding of Civil War photography. [excerpt
Cubic spline prewavelets on the four-directional mesh
In this paper, we design differentiable, two dimensional, piecewise polynomial cubic prewavelets of particularly small compact support. They are given in closed form, and provide stable, orthogonal decompositions of L^2(\RR^2). In particular, the splines we use in our prewavelet constructions give rise to stable bases of spline spaces that contain all cubic polynomials, whereas the more familiar box spline constructions cannot reproduce all cubic polynomials, unless resorting to a box spline of higher polynomial degree
What research we no longer need in neurodegenerative disease at the end of life : The case of research in dementia
A complete silence. That was what we got back from the European experts who had been energetically discussing research priorities in palliative care in neurodegenerative disease (ND) until a short while ago.1 The chair, an entertaining professor with good manners, must have felt the unease and quickly refocused the group to their task. But, wasnât this the best question of all day? What research we no longer need? As scientists able to consider different perspectives, shouldnât we have some idea of what research is, by contrast, no longer necessary? Palliative care research and research with people who have ND and are at the end of their life is, by definition, difficult. Making choices is a sensitive issue, but funds are limited. Therefore, we take a counterpoint to the research agenda recently reported by European Union (EU) Joint Programme â Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND),1 and consider whether there are studies we no longer need or are low priority, taking the example of dementiaPeer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Diffusive Migration of Low-Mass Proto-planets in Turbulent Disks
Torque fluctuations due to magnetorotational turbulence in proto-planetary
disks may greatly influence the migration patterns and survival probabilities
of nascent planets. Provided that the turbulence is a stationary stochastic
process with finite amplitude and correlation time, the resulting diffusive
migration can be described with a Fokker-Planck equation, which we reduce to an
advection-diffusion equation. We calibrate the coefficients with existing
turbulent-disk simulations and mean-migration estimates, and solve the equation
both analytically and numerically. Diffusion tends to dominate over advection
for planets of low-mass and those in the outer regions of proto-planetary
disks, whether they are described by the Minimum Mass Solar Nebula (MMSN) or by
T-Tauri alpha disks. Diffusion systematically reduces the lifetime of most
planets, yet it allows a declining fraction of them to survive for extended
periods of time at large radii. Mean planet lifetimes can even be formally
infinite (e.g. in an infinite steady MMSN), though median lifetimes are always
finite. Surviving planets may linger near specific radii where the combined
effects of advection and diffusion are minimized, or at large radii, depending
on model specifics. The stochastic nature of migration in turbulent disks
challenges deterministic planet formation scenarios and suggests instead that a
wide variety of planetary outcomes are possible from similar initial
conditions. This would contribute to the diversity of (extrasolar) planetary
systems.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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