7,631 research outputs found
Aharonov-Bohm Problem for Spin-One
The basic AB problem is to determine how an unshielded tube of magnetic flux
affects arbitrarily long-wavelength charged particles impinging on it.
For spin-1 at almost all the particles do not penetrate the tube, so the
interaction essentially is periodic in (AB effect). Below-threshold
bound states move freely only along the tube axis, and consequent induced
vacuum currents supplement rather than screen . For a pure magnetic
interaction the tube must be broader than the particle Compton wavelength,
i.e., only the nonrelativistic spin-1 AB problem exists.Comment: 15 pages, Late
Ejecta types on Ganymede and Callisto
Ejecta types on Ganymede and Callisto have been identified from Voyager 1 and 2 images. Image resolution used range from approx. 0.6 to approx. 4 km/pxl, which allowed the surveying of almost all of the mappable surface of the two satellites. Seven ejecta classes were identified on Voyager images of Ganymede on the basis of albedo pattern and type of terminus. The ejecta of different terrains on ejecta characteristics were investigated for the most populated ejecta types. Two major ejecta types were identified on Callisto; both have counterparts on Ganymede. Type C1 has a uniformly high albedo and a sharp terminus. Type C2 has a gradational terminus and a moderate albedo. The similarity in ejecta types on Ganymede and Callisto may indicate similarities in the near surface environment of the two satellites, with different ejecta types representing several possible conditions for the impact environment
Mediation, arbitration and negotiation
We compare three common dispute resolution processes { negotiation, mediation, and arbitration { in the framework of Crawford and Sobel (1982). Under negotiation, the two parties engage in (possibly arbitrarily long) face-to-face cheap talk. Under mediation, the parties communicate with a neutral third party who makes a non-binding recommendation. Under arbitration, the two parties commit
to conform to the third party recommendation. We characterize and compare the optimal mediation and arbitration procedures. Both mediators and arbitrators should optimally filter information, but mediators should also add noise to it. We find that unmediated negotiation performs as well as mediation if and only if the degree of
conflict between the parties is low
Simulations of the Population of Centaurs II: Individual Objects
Detailed orbit integrations of clones of five Centaurs -- namely, 1996 AR20,
2060 Chiron, 1995 SN55, 2000 FZ53 and 2002 FY36 -- for durations of 3 Myr are
presented. One of our Centaur sample starts with perihelion initially under the
control of Jupiter (1996 AR20), two start under the control of Saturn (Chiron
and 1995 SN55) and one each starts under the control of Uranus (2000 FZ53) and
Neptune (2002 FY36) respectively. A variety of interesting pathways are
illustrated with detailed examples including: capture into the Jovian Trojans,
repeated bursts of short-period comet behaviour, capture into mean-motion
resonances with the giant planets and into Kozai resonances, as well as
traversals of the entire Solar system. For each of the Centaurs, we provide
statistics on the numbers (i) ejected, (ii) showing short-period comet
behaviour and (iii) becoming Earth and Mars crossing. For example, Chiron has
over 60 % of its clones becoming short-period objects, whilst 1995 SN55 has
over 35 %. Clones of these two Centaurs typically make numerous close
approaches to Jupiter. At the other extreme, 2000 FZ53 has roughly 2 % of its
clones becoming short-period objects. In our simulations, typically 20 % of the
clones which become short-period comets subsequently evolve into
Earth-crossers.Comment: 10 pages, in press at MNRA
Twin Raphides in the Vitaceae and Araceae and a Model for Their Growth
Several optical tests were employed to demonstrate twinning in raphides from 10 species in the family Vitaceae and one species in the Araceae. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that twin raphides differ from the reported shape of twin styloids and that raphides of the Vitaceae are barbed along two sides. A model is proposed to describe in vivo raphide production under saturated to supersaturated conditions of directional nutrient flow
Some investigations of refractory metal systems of thermionic interest
Investigating interdiffusion of W-Ta, W-Mo, and W-Nb systems in refractory temperature rang
Multiple Intelligence Theory Activities in the Middle School English as a Second Language (ESL) Classroom and the Impact on Student Perception and Engagement
In 1983, Howard Gardner published his Theory of Multiple Intelligences and detailed seven distinct intelligence areas. He extended his theory into the classroom and asserted that every student has their own unique gifts and talents which they bring to the classroom. Despite these contributions to pedagogy, schools continue to mainly focus on teaching curriculum standards concerned with matriculating pupils to the next grade level or getting them ready for the next standardized test.
Authentic educational experiences accommodated to student needs are infrequently used in the modern classroom. Educational institutions largely cater to verbal-linguistic and mathematical intelligence profiles, despite many students having strengths in other areas. As a result, participation and student involvement in class are frequently low. The need to increase student involvement in the Year 9 ESL classroom and, more particularly, to consider closely students whose intelligence strengths were neither verbal-linguistic nor logical-mathematical, gave rise to the motivation for this project.
The questions addressed for this action research were:
What are student perceptions of multiple intelligence theory activities in the Year 9 ESL classroom?
What is the impact of multiple intelligence activities on student engagement
Developing missional identity through small group spiritual formation
https://place.asburyseminary.edu/ecommonsatsdissertations/1287/thumbnail.jp
The Populations of Comet-Like Bodies in the Solar system
A new classification scheme is introduced for comet-like bodies in the Solar
system. It covers the traditional comets as well as the Centaurs and
Edgeworth-Kuiper belt objects. At low inclinations, close encounters with
planets often result in near-constant perihelion or aphelion distances, or in
perihelion-aphelion interchanges, so the minor bodies can be labelled according
to the planets predominantly controlling them at perihelion and aphelion. For
example, a JN object has a perihelion under the control of Jupiter and aphelion
under the control of Neptune, and so on. This provides 20 dynamically distinct
categories of outer Solar system objects in the Jovian and trans-Jovian
regions. The Tisserand parameter with respect to the planet controlling
perihelion is also often roughly constant under orbital evolution. So, each
category can be further sub-divided according to the Tisserand parameter. The
dynamical evolution of comets, however, is dominated not by the planets nearest
at perihelion or aphelion, but by the more massive Jupiter. The comets are
separated into four categories -- Encke-type, short-period, intermediate and
long-period -- according to aphelion distance. The Tisserand parameter
categories now roughly correspond to the well-known Jupiter-family comets,
transition-types and Halley-types. In this way, the nomenclature for the
Centaurs and Edgeworth-Kuiper belt objects is based on, and consistent with,
that for comets.Comment: MNRAS, in press, 11 pages, 6 figures (1 available as postscript, 5 as
gif). Higher resolution figures available at
http://www-thphys.physics.ox.ac.uk/users/WynEvans/preprints.pd
- …