5,026 research outputs found
Dynamical Monte Carlo Study of Equilibrium Polymers : Static Properties
We report results of extensive Dynamical Monte Carlo investigations on
self-assembled Equilibrium Polymers (EP) without loops in good solvent. (This
is thought to provide a good model of giant surfactant micelles.) Using a novel
algorithm we are able to describe efficiently both static and dynamic
properties of systems in which the mean chain length \Lav is effectively
comparable to that of laboratory experiments (up to 5000 monomers, even at high
polymer densities). We sample up to scission energies of over
nearly three orders of magnitude in monomer density , and present a
detailed crossover study ranging from swollen EP chains in the dilute regime up
to dense molten systems. Confirming recent theoretical predictions, the
mean-chain length is found to scale as \Lav \propto \phi^\alpha \exp(\delta
E) where the exponents approach
and in the
dilute and semidilute limits respectively. The chain length distribution is
qualitatively well described in the dilute limit by the Schulz-Zimm
distribution \cN(s)\approx s^{\gamma-1} \exp(-s) where the scaling variable
is s=\gamma L/\Lav. The very large size of these simulations allows also an
accurate determination of the self-avoiding walk susceptibility exponent
. ....... Finite-size effects are discussed in
detail.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, LATE
A new species of Lampropholis (Lacertilia: Scincidae) from the rainforests of northeastern Queensland
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/57127/1/OP691.pd
Enhancing the work of the Islington Integrated Gangs Team: A pilot study on the response to serious youth violence in Islington
This report is the result of research conducted by the Centre for City Criminology at City, University of London, in partnership with Islington’s Integrated Gangs Team (IGT) and the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS). The research was co-funded by MPS and the School of Arts and Social Sciences, City, University of London. Following a collaborative research event in October 2017, City Criminologists were commissioned to carry out a small-scale research project to capture the work of the IGT and to make recommendations regarding its operations, coherence, effectiveness and sustainability. The research team conducted semi-structured interviews over several months with 23 practitioners across the services that constitute the IGT. This report presents the findings and recommendations
The effect on engine performance of change in jacket-water outlet temperature
Tests made on a Curtiss D-12 engine in the Altitude Laboratory at the Bureau of Standards show the following effects on engine performance of change in jacket-water outlet temperature: 1) Friction at all altitudes is a linear function of the jacket-water temperature, decreasing with increasing temperature. 2) The brake horsepower below an altitude of about 9,000 feet decreases, and at higher altitudes increases, with jacket-water temperature. 3) The brake specific fuel consumption tends to decrease, at all altitudes, with increasing jacket-water temperature. 4) The percentage change in brake power output is roughly equal to the algebraic sum of the percentage change in volumetric efficiency and mechanical efficiency
The Ultrasensitivity of Living Polymers
Synthetic and biological living polymers are self-assembling chains whose
chain length distributions (CLDs) are dynamic. We show these dynamics are
ultrasensitive: even a small perturbation (e.g. temperature jump) non-linearly
distorts the CLD, eliminating or massively augmenting short chains. The origin
is fast relaxation of mass variables (mean chain length, monomer concentration)
which perturbs CLD shape variables before these can relax via slow chain growth
rate fluctuations. Viscosity relaxation predictions agree with experiments on
the best-studied synthetic system, alpha-methylstyrene.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Teaching climate change and sustainability: A survey of teachers in England
This report shares detailed findings as to the current state of climate change and
sustainability education in England in 2022-23, with a particular focus on teachers’ practice
and professional development. The results reveal both strengths and gaps in the provision of
climate change and sustainability education in England. The report serves as an evidence
base for researchers, policymakers and practitioners who seek to support teachers to fulfil
their important roles in society’s transformation to a sustainable future.
UCL’s Centre for Climate Change and Sustainability Education (CCCSE) conducted a survey
of teachers in England entitled ‘What do climate change and sustainability education have
to do with me?’. Between October and December 2022, teachers were invited to respond to
an online questionnaire about their views and experiences. Teachers were recruited through
email lists, professional networks, social media and via the CCCSE website. The questionnaire
investigated their teaching practice, professional development, and sense of confidence and
preparedness to incorporate climate change and sustainability into their teaching. It included
a range of question types and generated quantitative and qualitative data.
The survey gathered 870 responses, with over two thirds (70.7%) teaching at secondary level,
and geography (41.3%) and science (37.2%) being the most frequently reported subjects
taught. Those who responded represented a wide range of teaching experience, from one
year to 20+ years, with university-led PGCE programmes the most commonly reported route
into teaching (87.2%). The significant majority of respondents were female (73.9%) and from
white backgrounds (90.5%)
Labelling, Deviance and Media
Labelling theory is a perspective that emerged as a distinctive approach to criminology during the 1960s, and was a major seedbed of the radical and critical perspectives that became prominent in the 1970s. It represented the highpoint of an epistemological shift within the social sciences away from positivism – which had dominated criminological enquiry since the late-1800s – and toward an altogether more relativistic stance on the categories and concepts of crime and control. It inspired a huge amount of work throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and still resonates powerfully today. This short chapter maps out some of the ways in which labelling, deviance, media and justice interact at the levels of definition and process. It presents an overview and analysis of key mediatised labelling processes, such as the highly influential concept of moral panics. It discusses how the interconnections between labelling, crime and criminal justice are changing in a context of technological development, cultural change and media proliferation. The conclusion offers an assessment and evaluation of labelling theory’s long-term impact on criminology
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