114 research outputs found
The prediction of trade center viability in the Great Plains.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of City and Regional Planning. Thesis. 1965. Ph.D.Ph.D
Switching roles:a qualitative study of staff experiences of being dialectical behaviour therapists within the National Health Service in England
Many National Health Service (NHS) Trusts in England have invested in dialectical behavioural therapy (DBT) for mental health service users. The experiences of NHS staff delivering DBT were explored using semi-structured interviews with six dialectical behaviour therapists working in secondary mental health services within the NHS. The aim was to consider the impact on staff of adding the DBT therapist role onto their existing job role. Interview data were analysed using thematic analysis. Six themes were inductively generated from the data: DBT as a useful framework; DBT as the most satisfying part of the job; âWorzel Gummidge headsââ conflicts in roles; âDBT buddiesââ the importance of informal support; uncertainty about the future; and recursivity â using DBT skills personally. Interactions between themes, implications for the service and future research directions are discussed. Key findings suggest that the addition of the DBT therapist role, as well as the recursive nature of DBT, has a positive impact professionally and personally. However, the service context within which participants were working can lead this additional role to cause increased demands and therefore stress, reducing that positive impact
Calibration of the GLAST Burst Monitor detectors
The GLAST Burst Monitor (GBM) will augment the capabilities of GLAST for the
detection of cosmic gamma-ray bursts by extending the energy range (20 MeV to >
300 GeV) of the Large Area Telescope (LAT) towards lower energies by 2
BGO-detectors (150 keV to 30 MeV) and 12 NaI(Tl) detectors (10 keV to 1 MeV).
The physical detector response of the GBM instrument for GRBs is determined
with the help of Monte Carlo simulations, which are supported and verified by
on-ground calibration measurements, performed extensively with the individual
detectors at the MPE in 2005. All flight and spare detectors were irradiated
with calibrated radioactive sources in the laboratory (from 14 keV to 4.43
MeV). The energy/channel-relations, the dependences of energy resolution and
effective areas on the energy and the angular responses were measured. Due to
the low number of emission lines of radioactive sources below 100 keV,
calibration measurements in the energy range from 10 keV to 60 keV were
performed with the X-ray radiometry working group of the
Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) at the BESSY synchrotron radiation
facility, Berlin.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure; to appear in the Proc. of the First Int. GLAST
Symp. (Stanford, Feb. 5-8, 2007), eds. S.Ritz, P.F.Michelson, and C.Meegan,
AIP Conf. Pro
First-year Results of Broadband Spectroscopy of the Brightest Fermi-GBM Gamma-Ray Bursts
We present here our results of the temporal and spectral analysis of a sample
of 52 bright and hard gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed with the Fermi Gamma-ray
Burst Monitor (GBM) during its first year of operation (July 2008-July 2009).
Our sample was selected from a total of 253 GBM GRBs based on each event peak
count rate measured between 0.2 and 40MeV. The final sample comprised 34 long
and 18 short GRBs. These numbers show that the GBM sample contains a much
larger fraction of short GRBs, than the CGRO/BATSE data set, which we explain
as the result of our (different) selection criteria and the improved GBM
trigger algorithms, which favor collection of short, bright GRBs over BATSE. A
first by-product of our selection methodology is the determination of a
detection threshold from the GBM data alone, above which GRBs most likely will
be detected in the MeV/GeV range with the Large Area Telescope (LAT) onboard
Fermi. This predictor will be very useful for future multiwavelength GRB follow
ups with ground and space based observatories. Further we have estimated the
burst durations up to 10MeV and for the first time expanded the duration-energy
relationship in the GRB light curves to high energies. We confirm that GRB
durations decline with energy as a power law with index approximately -0.4, as
was found earlier with the BATSE data and we also notice evidence of a possible
cutoff or break at higher energies. Finally, we performed time-integrated
spectral analysis of all 52 bursts and compared their spectral parameters with
those obtained with the larger data sample of the BATSE data. We find that the
two parameter data sets are similar and confirm that short GRBs are in general
harder than longer ones.Comment: 40 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, Submitted to Ap
Detection of a Thermal Spectral Component in the Prompt Emission of GRB 100724B
Observations of GRB 100724B with the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) find
that the spectrum is dominated by the typical Band functional form, which is
usually taken to represent a non-thermal emission component, but also includes
a statistically highly significant thermal spectral contribution. The
simultaneous observation of the thermal and non-thermal components allows us to
confidently identify the two emission components. The fact that these seem to
vary independently favors the idea that the thermal component is of
photospheric origin while the dominant non-thermal emission occurs at larger
radii. Our results imply either a very high efficiency for the non-thermal
process, or a very small size of the region at the base of the flow, both quite
challenging for the standard fireball model. These problems are resolved if the
jet is initially highly magnetized and has a substantial Poynting flux.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal Letters November, 23 2010 (Submitted October, 20 2010
Expected Performance of the GLAST Burst Monitor
The GLAST Burst Monitor (GBM) will enhance LAT observations of GRBs by extending the spectral coverage from the LAT threshold down to approx. 8 kev, and will provide a trigger for re-orienting the spacecraft to observe delayed emission from selected bursts outside the LAT field of view. GBM consists of twelve NaI scintillation detectors operating in the 8 kev to 1 MeV energy range and two BGO scintillation detectors operating in the 150 keV to 30 MeV energy range. Detector resolution, effective area, and angular response have been determined by calibrations. Analyses indicate that the on-board burst threshold will be approx. 0.7 photon/cm2/s and the on-board burst localization accuracy will typically be better than 8 degrees
Temporal Deconvolution study of Long and Short Gamma-Ray Burst Light curves
The light curves of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are believed to result from
internal shocks reflecting the activity of the GRB central engine. Their
temporal deconvolution can reveal potential differences in the properties of
the central engines in the two populations of GRBs which are believed to
originate from the deaths of massive stars (long) and from mergers of compact
objects (short). We present here the results of the temporal analysis of 42
GRBs detected with the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor onboard the Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope. We deconvolved the profiles into pulses, which we fit with
lognormal functions. The distributions of the pulse shape parameters and
intervals between neighboring pulses are distinct for both burst types and also
fit with lognormal functions. We have studied the evolution of these parameters
in different energy bands and found that they differ between long and short
bursts. We discuss the implications of the differences in the temporal
properties of long and short bursts within the framework of the internal shock
model for GRB prompt emission.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figure
The Fermi GBM Gamma-Ray Burst Spectral Catalog: Four Years Of Data
In this catalog we present the updated set of spectral analyses of GRBs
detected by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) during its first four years
of operation. It contains two types of spectra, time-integrated spectral fits
and spectral fits at the brightest time bin, from 943 triggered GRBs. Four
different spectral models were fitted to the data, resulting in a compendium of
more than 7500 spectra. The analysis was performed similarly, but not
identically to Goldstein et al. 2012. All 487 GRBs from the first two years
have been re-fitted using the same methodology as that of the 456 GRBs in years
three and four. We describe, in detail, our procedure and criteria for the
analysis, and present the results in the form of parameter distributions both
for the observer-frame and rest-frame quantities. The data files containing the
complete results are available from the High-Energy Astrophysics Science
Archive Research Center (HEASARC).Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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