835 research outputs found

    Major Concerns? A Longitudinal Analysis of Student- Athletes’ Academic Majors in Comparative Perspective

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    This paper investigates the over-representation of student-athletes in academic majors, a pattern known as clustering. Three issues are examined. The first is whether clustering occurs at college entrance or later. The second is whether some athletes are at extra risk of clustering. The third is whether clustering contributes to future income inequalities. Analyses of a major university’s student records revealed that athletes clustered at the start of college but the tendency to do so was moderated by race, sex, and type of sport played. Clustering also intensified greatly over time, particularly for African American athletes. By the eighth semester, 64% of African American athletes were social science majors. In the short-term, clustering lowered athletes’ projected incomes, but long-term income projections based on academic major slightly favored groups of athletes who clustered within the social sciences

    Age-Dependent Autonomic Changes Following Immersion in Cool, Neutral, and Warm Water Temperatures

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    Aquatic immersion has been reported to produce a significant number of physiological changes in blood pressure, heart rate variability (HRV), autonomic nervous system (ANS), and core temperature in young healthy subjects. The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of water immersion in younger and older populations, determining whether there are age related differences for ANS regulation measures in cool, neutral and warm water. Vitals and ANS measures were collected from two samples representing different age-groups in the general population. It was found that water immersion produced a significant number of important physiologic responses such as decreased blood pressure and increased SVB during the warm water cycle. These changes are important components of ANS bioregulation and clearly seem to be influenced by water temperature during immersion. There was a statistically significant relationship between ANS activity manifested by heart rate variability and water temperatures

    Abundance of Delta Resonances in 58Ni+58Ni Collisions between 1 and 2 AGeV

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    Charged pion spectra measured in 58Ni-58Ni collisions at 1.06, 1.45 and 1.93 AGeV are interpreted in terms of a thermal model including the decay of Delta resonances. The transverse momentum spectra of pions are well reproduced by adding the pions originating from the Delta-resonance decay to the component of thermal pions, deduced from the high transverse momentum part of the pion spectra. About 10 and 18% of the nucleons are excited to Delta states at freeze-out for beam energies of 1 and 2 AGeV, respectively.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX with 3 included figures; submitted to Physics Letters

    Two-proton small-angle correlations in central heavy-ion collisions: a beam-energy and system-size dependent study

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    Small-angle correlations of pairs of protons emitted in central collisions of Ca + Ca, Ru + Ru and Au + Au at beam energies from 400 to 1500 MeV per nucleon are investigated with the FOPI detector system at SIS/GSI Darmstadt. Dependences on system size and beam energy are presented which extend the experimental data basis of pp correlations in the SIS energy range substantially. The size of the proton-emitting source is estimated by comparing the experimental data with the output of a final-state interaction model which utilizes either static Gaussian sources or the one-body phase-space distribution of protons provided by the BUU transport approach. The trends in the experimental data, i.e. system-size and beam energy dependences, are well reproduced by this hybrid model. However, the pp correlation function is found rather insensitive to the stiffness of the equation of state entering the transport model calculations.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted at Eur. Phys. Journ.

    Measurement of K(892)0K^*(892)^0 and K0K^0 mesons in Al+Al collisions at 1.9AA GeV

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    New measurement of sub-threshold K(892)0K^*(892)^0 and K0K^0 production is presented. The experimental data complete the measurement of strange particles produced in Al+Al collisions at 1.9AA GeV measured with the FOPI detector at SIS/GSI. The K(892)0K^*(892)^0 / K0K^0 yield ratio is found to be 0.0315±0.006(stat.)±0.012(syst.)0.0315\pm 0.006 (\mathrm{stat.})\pm 0.012 (\mathrm{syst.}) and is in good agreement with the UrQMD model prediction. These measurements provide information on in-medium cross section of K+K^+ - π\pi^- fusion which is the dominant process on sub-threshold K(892)0K^*(892)^0 production.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Strange meson production in Al+Al collisions at 1.9A GeV

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    The production of K+^+, K^- and φ\varphi(1020) mesons is studied in Al+Al collisions at a beam energy of 1.9A GeV which is close or below the production threshold in NN reactions. Inverse slopes, anisotropy parameters, and total emission yields of K±^{\pm} mesons are obtained. A comparison of the ratio of kinetic energy distributions of K^- and K+^+ mesons to the HSD transport model calculations suggests that the inclusion of the in-medium modifications of kaon properties is necessary to reproduce the ratio. The inverse slope and total yield of ϕ\phi mesons are deduced. The contribution to K^- production from ϕ\phi meson decays is found to be [17 ±\pm 3 (stat) 7+2^{+2}_{-7} (syst)] %. The results are in line with previous K±^{\pm} and ϕ\phi data obtained for different colliding systems at similar incident beam energies.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure

    Isospin dependence of relative yields of K+K^+ and K0K^0 mesons at 1.528 AGeV

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    Results on K+K^+ and K0K^0 meson production in 4496^{96}_{44}Ru + 4496^{96}_{44}Ru and 4096^{96}_{40}Zr + 4096^{96}_{40}Zr collisions at a beam kinetic energy of 1.528AA GeV, measured with the FOPI detector at GSI-Darmstadt, are investigated as a possible probe of isospin effects in high density nuclear matter. The measured double ratio (K+/K0K^+/K^0)Ru_{Ru}/(K+/K0K^+/K^0)Zr_{Zr} is compared to the predictions of a thermal model and a Relativistic Mean Field transport model using two different collision scenarios and under different assumptions on the stiffness of the symmetry energy. We find a good agreement with the thermal model prediction and the assumption of a soft symmetry energy for infinite nuclear matter while more realistic transport simulations of the collisions show a similar agreement with the data but also exhibit a reduced sensitivity to the symmetry term.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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