1,594 research outputs found
Physical Activity, Lesson Context and Teacher Behavior in Large Physical Education Classes
With the advent of national and international concern about children’s decreasing activity levels, a number of interventions have been put in place that aim to promote cardiovascular health. These include national trials such as CATCH (Perry, Sellers, & Johnson, 1997) and SPARK (Sallis, McKenzie, Alcaraz, Kolody, Faucette, & Hovell, 1997). At a more programmatic level, there has been increasing attention towards the expansion of school physical education, dissuading children from pursuing sedentary activities, providing suitable role models for physical activity, and making activity-promoting changes in the environment (Council on Sports Medicine and Fitness, 2006)
Photoelectron spectra of anionic sodium clusters from time-dependent density-functional theory in real-time
We calculate the excitation energies of small neutral sodium clusters in the
framework of time-dependent density-functional theory. In the presented
calculations, we extract these energies from the power spectra of the dipole
and quadrupole signals that result from a real-time and real-space propagation.
For comparison with measured photoelectron spectra, we use the ionic
configurations of the corresponding single-charged anions. Our calculations
clearly improve on earlier results for photoelectron spectra obtained from
static Kohn-Sham eigenvalues
Cosmological Implications of Lyman-Break Galaxy Clustering
We review our analysis of the clustering properties of ``Lyman-break''
galaxies (LBGs) at redshift z~3, previously discussed in Wechsler et al (1998).
We examine the likelihood of spikes found by Steidel et al (1998) in the
redshift distribution of LBGs, within a suite of models for the evolution of
structure in the Universe. Using high-resolution dissipationless N-body
simulations, we analyze deep pencil-beam surveys from these models in the same
way that they are actually observed, identifying LBGs with the most massive
dark matter halos. We find that all the models (with SCDM as a marginal
exception) have a substantial probability of producing spikes similar to those
observed, because the massive halos are much more clumped than the underlying
matter -- i.e., they are biased. Therefore, the likelihood of such a spike is
not a good discriminator among these models. The LBG correlation functions are
less steep than galaxies today (gamma~1.4), but show similar or slightly longer
correlation lengths. We have extened this analysis and include a preliminary
comparison to the new data presented in Adelberger et al (1998). We also
discuss work in progress, in which we use semi-analytic models to identify
Lyman-break galaxies within dark-matter halos.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Latex, uses aipproc.sty; to appear in the
proceedings of the 9th Annual October Maryland Astrophysics Conference,
"After the Dark Ages: When the Galaxies Were Young (the Universe at 2<z<5)
The Gramicidin Dimer Shows Both EX1 and EX2 Mechanisms of H/D Exchange
We describe the use of H/D amide exchange and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to study, in organic solvents, the pentadecapeptide gramicidin as a model for protein self association. In methanol-OD, all active H's in the peptide exchange for D within 5 min, indicating a monomer/dimer equilibrium that is shifted towards the fast-exchanging monomer. H/D exchange in n-propanol-OD, however, showed a partially protected gramicidin that slowly converts to a second species that exchanges nearly all the active hydrogens, indicating EX1 kinetics for the H/D exchange. We propose that this behavior is the result of the slower rate of unfolding in n-propanol compared with that in methanol. The rate constant for the unfolding of the dimer is the rate of disappearance of the partially protected species, and it agrees within a factor of two with a value reported in literature. The rate constant of dimer refolding can be determined from the ratio of the rate constant for unfolding and the affinity constant for the dimer, which we determined in an earlier study. The unfolding activation energy is 20 kcal mol−1, determined by performing the exchange experiments as a function of temperature. To study gramicidin in an even more hydrophobic medium than n-propanol, we measured its H/D exchange kinetics in a phospholipids vesicle and found a different H/D amide exchange behavior. Gramicidin is an unusual peptide dimer that can exhibit both EX1 and EX2 mechanisms for its H/D exchange, depending on the solvent
Open String Star as a Continuous Moyal Product
We establish that the open string star product in the zero momentum sector
can be described as a continuous tensor product of mutually commuting two
dimensional Moyal star products. Let the continuous variable parametrize the eigenvalues of the Neumann matrices; then the
noncommutativity parameter is given by .
For each , the Moyal coordinates are a linear combination of even
position modes, and the Fourier transform of a linear combination of odd
position modes. The commuting coordinate at is identified as the
momentum carried by half the string. We discuss the relation to Bars' work, and
attempt to write the string field action as a noncommutative field theory.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX. One reference adde
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