20,246 research outputs found
Defining the gap between research and practice in public relations programme evaluation - towards a new research agenda
The current situation in public relations programme evaluation is neatly summarized by McCoy who commented that 'probably the most common buzzwords in public relations in the last ten years have been evaluation and accountability' (McCoy 2005, 3). This paper examines the academic and practitioner-based literature and research on programme evaluation and it detects different priorities and approaches that may partly explain why the debate on acceptable and agreed evaluation methods continues. It analyses those differences and proposes a research agenda to bridge the gap and move the debate forward
Non equilibrium dynamics below the super-roughening transition
The non equilibrium relaxational dynamics of the solid on solid model on a
disordered substrate and the Sine Gordon model with random phase shifts is
studied numerically. Close to the super-roughening temperature our
results for the autocorrelations, spatial correlations and response function as
well as for the fluctuation dissipation ratio (FDR) agree well with the
prediction of a recent one loop RG calculation, whereas deep in the glassy low
temperature phase substantial deviations occur. The change in the low
temperature behavior of these quantities compared with the RG predictions is
shown to be contained in a change of the functional temperature dependence of
the dynamical exponent , which relates the age of the system with a
length scale : changes from a linear -dependence close
to to a 1/T-behavior far away from . By identifying spatial domains
as connected patches of the exactly computable ground states of the system we
demonstrate that the growing length scale is the characteristic
size of thermally fluctuating clusters around ``typical'' long-lived
configurations.Comment: RevTex
Bayesian evidence for two companions orbiting HIP 5158
We present results of a Bayesian analysis of radial velocity (RV) data for
the star HIP 5158, confirming the presence of two companions and also
constraining their orbital parameters. Assuming Keplerian orbits, the
two-companion model is found to be e^{48} times more probable than the
one-planet model, although the orbital parameters of the second companion are
only weakly constrained. The derived orbital periods are 345.6 +/- 2.0 d and
9017.8 +/- 3180.7 d respectively, and the corresponding eccentricities are 0.54
+/- 0.04 and 0.14 +/- 0.10. The limits on planetary mass (m \sin i) and
semimajor axis are (1.44 +/- 0.14 M_{J}, 0.89 +/- 0.01 AU) and (15.04 +/- 10.55
M_{J}, 7.70 +/- 1.88 AU) respectively. Owing to large uncertainty on the mass
of the second companion, we are unable to determine whether it is a planet or a
brown dwarf. The remaining `noise' (stellar jitter) unaccounted for by the
model is 2.28 +/- 0.31 m/s. We also analysed a three-companion model, but found
it to be e^{8} times less probable than the two-companion model.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Added a couple of figures showing the
residuals after one and two companion fits. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
Letter
Evidence Of Dark Matter Annihilations In The WMAP Haze
The WMAP experiment has revealed an excess of microwave emission from the
region around the center of our Galaxy. It has been suggested that this signal,
known as the ``WMAP Haze'', could be synchrotron emission from relativistic
electrons and positrons generated in dark matter annihilations. In this letter,
we revisit this possibility. We find that the angular distribution of the WMAP
Haze matches the prediction for dark matter annihilations with a cusped density
profile, in the inner kiloparsecs. Comparing the
intensity in different WMAP frequency bands, we find that a wide range of
possible WIMP annihilation modes are consistent with the spectrum of the haze
for a WIMP with a mass in the 100 GeV to multi-TeV range. Most interestingly,
we find that to generate the observed intensity of the haze, the dark matter
annihilation cross section is required to be approximately equal to the value
needed for a thermal relic, cm/s. No
boost factors are required. If dark matter annihilations are in fact
responsible for the WMAP Haze, and the slope of the halo profile continues into
the inner Galaxy, GLAST is expected to detect gamma rays from the dark matter
annihilations in the Galactic Center if the WIMP mass is less than several
hundred GeV.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Higher-dimensional resolution of dilatonic black hole singularities
We show that the four-dimensional extreme dilaton black hole with dilaton
coupling constant can be interpreted as a {\it completely
non-singular}, non-dilatonic, black -brane in dimensions provided
that is {\it odd}. Similar results are obtained for multi-black holes and
dilatonic extended objects in higher spacetime dimensions. The non-singular
black -brane solutions include the self-dual three brane of ten-dimensional
N=2B supergravity and a multi-fivebrane solution of eleven-dimensional
supergravity. In the case of a supersymmetric non-dilatonic -brane solution
of a supergravity theory, we show that it saturates a bound on the energy per
unit -volume.Comment: 27 pages, R/94/28, UCSBTH-94-35 (Comments added to the discussion
section
Using Spin Correlations to Distinguish Zh from ZA at the International Linear Collider
We investigate how to exploit the spin information imparted to the Z boson in
associated Higgs production at a future linear collider as an aid in
distinguishing between CP-even and CP-odd Higgs bosons. We apply a generalized
spin-basis analysis which allowsus to study the possibilities offered by
non-traditional choices of spin projection axis. In particular, we find that
the Z bosons produced in association with a CP-even Higgs via polarized
collisions are in a single transverse spin-state (>90% purity) when we use the
Zh-transverse basis, provided that the Z~bosons are not ultra-relativistic
(speed <0.9c). This same basis applied to the associated production of a CP-odd
Higgs yields Z's that are an approximately equal mixture of longitudinal and
transverse polarizations. We present a decay angular distribution which could
be used to distinguish between the CP-even and CP-odd cases. Finally, we make a
few brief remarks about how this distribution would be affected if the Higgs
boson turns out to not be a CP-eigenstate.Comment: 48 pages, 18 figures, revtex
The Character Development Project Final Report
This report consists of three elements. The project outline offers an overview of the intervention and how it was implemented. Sections 3 to 6 include the Principal Investigators’ remarks (Professor Trevor Cooling), and the findings and recommendations of the researcher who designed the questionnaires and worked on data analysis (Dr Sabina Hulbert), and the researchers who undertook school visits and have worked on deriving qualitative case study data from the visits as well as school portfolios (Miss Caroline Thomas and Dr Peter Gregory). Finally, we include a summary of the evaluation report
Characterization of Navassa National Wildlife Refuge: A preliminary report for NF-06-05 (NOAA ship "Nancy Foster", April 18-30, 2006)
Navassa is a small, undeveloped island in the Windward Passage between Jamaica and Haiti. It was designated a National Wildlife Refuge under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1999, but the remote location makes management and enforcement challenging, and the area is regularly fished by artisanal fishermen from Haiti. In April 2006, the NOAA Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research conducted a research cruise to Navassa. The cruise produced the first high-resolution multibeam bathymetry for the area, which will facilitate habitat mapping and assist in refuge management. A major emphasis of the cruise was to study the impact of Haitian fishing gear on benthic habitats and fish communities; however, in 10 days on station only one small boat was observed with five fishermen and seven traps. Fifteen monitoring stations were established to characterize fish and benthic communities along the deep (28-34 m) shelf, as these areas have been largely unstudied by previous cruises. The fish communities included numerous squirrelfishes, triggerfishes, and parrotfishes. Snappers and grouper were also present but no small individuals were observed. Similarly, conch surveys indicated the population was in low abundance and was heavily skewed towards adults. Analysis of the benthic photoquadrats is currently underway. Other cruise activities included installation of a temperature logger network, sample collection for stable isotope analyses to examine trophic structure, and drop camera surveys to ground-truth habitat maps and overhead imagery. (PDF contains 58 pages
A Combinatorial Proof of Vandermonde\u27s Determinant
No abstract provided in this article
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