567 research outputs found
Enduring Extremes? Polar Vortex, Drought, and Climate Change Beliefs
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this recordSome extreme weather events may be more likely to affect climate change beliefs than others, in part because schema individuals possess for different events could vary in encouraging such links. Using a representative sample of U.S. adults and geocoded National Weather Service data, we examine how a range of extreme weather event categories relate to climate change beliefs, and the degree to which individuals’ self-reported experiences are shaped by their political views across event types. For tornado, hurricane, and flood events, we find no link with beliefs. For polar vortex and drought events, we find that although self-reported experience is linked with climate beliefs, reporting of these experiences is influenced by political identity and partisan news exposure. These findings underscore a limited role for extreme weather experiences in climate beliefs, and show that events more open to interpretation, such as droughts and polar vortex disturbances, are most likely to be seen through a partisan lens.This work was supported by H2020 European Research Council [grant number 682758]
Conversion messages and attitude change: Strong arguments, not costly signals
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recordA conversion narrative recounts the process that led the speaker to reject one belief for a different, usually incompatible, alternative. However, researchers know little about whether, when, and, if so, how such messages affect audience attitudes about controversial science. Using a general US population-sample experiment, we assessed the attitudinal impact of three versions of a statement by Mark Lynas, an environmental activist who converted from opposing to championing genetically modified crops. Participants were exposed to (1) a one-sided pro-genetically modified message by Lynas, (2) a two-sided pro-genetically modified message in which Lynas indicates but does not detail his conversion, or (3) a two-sided pro-genetically modified message in which Lynas explains the process that prompted his conversion. We find that his conversion messages influenced attitudes by way of perceived argument strength, but not speaker credibility. This finding implies such messages induce greater elaboration, which may lead to durable attitudes that predict behavior.Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of PennsylvaniaEuropean Union Horizon 202
Active and passive multispectral scanner for earth resources applications: An advanced applications flight experiment
The development of an experimental airborne multispectral scanner to provide both active (laser illuminated) and passive (solar illuminated) data from a commonly registered surface scene is discussed. The system was constructed according to specifications derived in an initial programs design study. The system was installed in an aircraft and test flown to produce illustrative active and passive multi-spectral imagery. However, data was not collected nor analyzed for any specific application
Sulfur-Polymer Nanoparticles: Preparation and Antibacterial Activity.
High sulfur content polymers prepared by inverse vulcanization have many reported potential applications, including as novel antimicrobial materials. High sulfur content polymers usually have limited water-solubility and dispersibility due to their hydrophobic nature, which could limit the development of their applications. Herein, we report the formulation of high sulfur content polymeric nanoparticles by a nanoprecipitation and emulsion-based method. High sulfur content polymeric nanoparticles were found to have an inhibitory effect against important bacterial pathogens, including Gram-positive methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Salt-stable particles were formulated with the addition of a surfactant, which did not inhibit the antibacterial activity of the polymeric particles. Furthermore, the polymeric nanoparticles were found to inhibit S. aureus biofilm formation and exhibited low cytotoxicity against mammalian liver cells. Interaction of the polymeric particles with cellular thiols could be a potential mechanism of action against bacterial cells, as demonstrated by reaction with cysteine as a model thiol. The findings presented demonstrate methods of preparing aqueous dispersions of high sulfur content polymeric nanoparticles that could have useful biological applications
Monte Carlo generator ELRADGEN 2.0 for simulation of radiative events in elastic ep-scattering of polarized particles
The structure and algorithms of the Monte-Carlo generator ELRADGEN 2.0
designed to simulate radiative events in polarized ep-scattering are presented.
The full set of analytical expressions for the QED radiative corrections is
presented and discussed in detail. Algorithmic improvements implemented to
provide faster simulation of hard real photon events are described. Numerical
tests show high quality of generation of photonic variables and radiatively
corrected cross section. The comparison of the elastic radiative tail simulated
within the kinematical conditions of the BLAST experiment at MIT BATES shows a
good agreement with experimental data.Comment: 36 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
Porous organic cages for sulfur hexafluoride separation
A series of porous organic cages is examined for the selective adsorption of sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) over nitrogen. Despite lacking any metal sites, a porous cage, CC3, shows the highest SF6/N2 selectivity reported for any material at ambient temperature and pressure, which translates to real separations in a gas breakthrough column. The SF6 uptake of these materials is considerably higher than would be expected from the static pore structures. The location of SF6 within these materials is elucidated by X-ray crystallography, and it is shown that cooperative diffusion and structural rearrangements in these molecular crystals can rationalize their superior SF6/N2 selectivity
The Charge Form Factor of the Neutron at Low Momentum Transfer from the Reaction
We report new measurements of the neutron charge form factor at low momentum
transfer using quasielastic electrodisintegration of the deuteron.
Longitudinally polarized electrons at an energy of 850 MeV were scattered from
an isotopically pure, highly polarized deuterium gas target. The scattered
electrons and coincident neutrons were measured by the Bates Large Acceptance
Spectrometer Toroid (BLAST) detector. The neutron form factor ratio
was extracted from the beam-target vector asymmetry
at four-momentum transfers , 0.20, 0.29 and 0.42
(GeV/c).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
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