109 research outputs found
Creating Church Online: An Ethnographic Study of Five Internet-Based Christian Communities
“Online churches” are Internet-based Christian communities, seeking to pursue worship, discussion, friendship, teaching, support, proselytisation and other key religious goals through computer-mediated communication. These online churches are one example of “online religion”, a new kind of digital religious practice that promises to transform worship, authority, community and the construction of identity.
This thesis examines five online churches, representing diverse media, theological traditions, leadership structures and forms of external oversight. Each has created a sizeable congregation and offers forms of worship and community online. I used ethnographic methods to examine these churches with particular attention to media, worship, community and leadership.
I conducted long-term participant observation over the three years of my research, taking part in online and offline activities whenever possible, speaking informally with as many people as possible and interviewing over 100 leaders and members. Survey data and other written materials were also studied where available, including media reports, participant accounts and online blog posts.
My research suggested seven important themes present in each group: mass appeal, the formation of community, spiritual experience, the replication of familiar elements of architecture, liturgy and organisation, the prevalence of local churchgoing among online participants, patterns of internal control and systems of external oversight. Each case study demonstrates the very different negotiations of those themes at work in each group.
In my final chapter, I bring together threads and insights from each case study according to four key dimensions of one common theme: the relationship between digital and everyday life. Online churches deliberately replicate familiar elements of everyday activity, become part of the everyday, remain carefully distinct from the everyday and become distinctively digital. We must attend to all four of these layers to adequately understand and evaluate what takes place online, and what role that online activity plays in everyday religious lives
No Heroes: The photographs of Roger Hutchings
An anthology examining the work of the renowned British photojournalist Roger Hutchings, from his early work for The Observer, his extended documentary project on the Kurds in Southern Turkey, his work in the Balkans during the wars in the Former Yugoslavia and his photographs of the fashion industry for Giorgio Armani.
128 page softback in colour and black and white duotone.
Edited by Patrick Sutherland with preface by Sutherland, essay by Stephen Mayes and fifty six photographs by Hutchings
In-shock Cooling in Numerical Simulations
We model a one-dimensional shock-tube using smoothed particle hydrodynamics
and investigate the consequences of having finite shock-width in numerical
simulations. We investigate the cooling of gas during passage through the shock
for different cooling regimes. For a shock temperature of 10^5K, the maximum
temperature of the gas is much reduced and the cooling time was reduced by a
factor of 2. At lower temperatures, we are especially interested in the
production of molecular Hydrogen and so we follow the ionization level and H_2
abundance across the shock. This regime is particularly relevent to simulations
of primordial galaxy formation for halos in which the virial temperature of the
galaxy is sufficiently high to partially re-ionize the gas. The effect of
in-shock cooling is substantial: the maximum temperature the gas reaches
compared to the theoretical temperature was found to vary between 0.15 and 0.81
for the simulations performed. The downstream ionization level is reduced from
the theoretical level by a factor of between 2.4 and 12.5, and the resulting
H_2 abundance was found to be reduced to a fraction of 0.45 to 0.74 of its
theoretical value. At temperatures above 10^5K, radiative shocks are unstable
and will oscillate. We reproduce these oscillations and find good agreement
with the previous work of Chevalier and Imamura (1982), and Imamura, Wolff and
Durisen (1984). The effect of in-shock cooling in such shocks is difficult to
quantify, but is undoubtedly present.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 7 figure
Acervo de mosquitos (Diptera, Culicidae) de Nelson L. Cerqueira na Coleção de Invertebrados do Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Manaus, Brasil
The Nelson L. Cerqueira Mosquito Collection (Diptera, Culicidae) in the Invertebrate Collection of the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia, Manaus, Brazil. The discovery of mosquito specimens that belonged to Nelson L. Cerqueira, which are being deposited in the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia Invertebrate Collection, is reported. The collection contains 2,046 adult specimens and 387 slide preparations representing 261 species, 22 genera, including 51 paratypes of 34 species. More than 90% of the specimens were collected in Brazil of which half are from the State of Amazonas. A list of the species represented in this collection is provided indicating the number of specimens for each type of preparation and the collecting localities. The type specimens are also listed including their label data and other pertinent information
Culicidae (diptera: Culicomorpha) from the central brazilian amazon: Nhamundá and abacaxis rivers
Mosquito fauna (Culicidae) from remote areas along the geographical limits of the State of Amazonas were assessed by employing CDC, Shannon, Malaise and Suspended traps, together with net sweeping and immature collections. Two hundred and six collections were performed in seven localities along the Nhamundá and Abacaxis Rivers, State of Amazonas, Brazil, during May and June 2008. The northernmost locality was 120 km from Nhamundá, whereas the southernmost locality was 150 km from the mouth of the Abacaxis River. The 5,290 mosquitoes collected are distributed in 16 genera, representing 109 different species, of which eight are new distributional records for the State of Amazonas. Furthermore, there are nine morphospecies which may represent undescribed new taxa, five of which are also new records for the State of Amazonas. Culex presented the highest number of species and the largest number of individuals. Anopheles, which represents 3% of the total sample, had the second highest number of species, followed by Wyeomyia. Psorophora and Aedes, represent the third and fourth largest number of individuals. The most abundant species was Cx. (Mel.) vaxus Dyar, 1920 followed by Cx. (Mel.) eknomios Forattini & Sallum, 1992, Cx. (Cux.) mollis Dyar & Knab, 1906, Cx. (Mel.) theobaldi Lutz, 1904, and Cx. (Cux.) declarator Dyar & Knab, 1906. The epidemiological and ecological implications of mosquito species found are discussed and are compared with other mosquito inventories from the Amazon region. The results presented represent the largest standardized inventory of mosquitoes of the Nhamundá and Abacaxis rivers, with the identification of 118 species level taxa distributed in seven localities, within four municipalities (Nhamundá, Maués, Borba, Nova Olinda do Norte), of which we have only few or no records in the published literature. © 2013 Sociedade Brasileira de Zoologia
Hesperioidea e Papilionoidea (Lepidoptera) coligidos em expedição aos Rios Nhamundá e Abacaxis, Amazonas, Brasil: novos subsídios para o conhecimento da biodiversidade da Amazônia Brasileira
Hesperioidea e Papilionoidea (Lepidoptera) coligidos em expedição aos Rios Nhamundá e Abacaxis, Amazonas, Brasil: novos subsídios para o conhecimento da biodiversidade da Amazônia Brasileira. Objetivando um aprimoramento do conhecimento da lepidopterofauna diurna da Amazônia brasileira, este estudo lista 180 taxa coligidos em cinco pontos distintos de dois afluentes do Rio Amazonas, envolvendo as áreas de endemismo Guiana e Rondônia. As coletas foram passivas e ativas e as diferentes localidades comparadas através de análise de Escalonamento Multidimensional Não-Métrico (NMDS).Hesperioidea and Papilionoidea (Lepidoptera) collected in an expedition to the Nhamundá and Abacaxis rivers, Amazonas, Brazil: new insights for understanding the biodiversity of the Brazilian Amazon. Aiming at improving the knowledge of the diurnal lepidopterofauna of the Amazon rainforest, this study lists 180 taxa collected at five different points along two tributaries of the Amazon River, including the Guyana and Rondonia areas of endemism. The different localities were compared using Non-Metric Multidimensional Scaling analysis (NMDS)
Hardness characterisation of grey cast iron and its tribological performance in a contact lubricated with soybean oil
The effect of hardness of grey cast iron flat specimen on its wear and friction on the
contact were characterised with the presence
of vegetable oil as biolubricant. Prior to the
tribological test, the as
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received grey cast iron flat specimen hardness was characterised. Friction
and wear tests were then conducted using a ball
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on
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flat reciprocating sliding contact.
The one
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way analysis
of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine the significance of friction and wear
data with a 95% significance level.
The wear scars after the test were then characterised by
surface roughness and wear mechanism. The microstructure and elemental analysis we
re also
reported. The average value of hardness was 210 HV with a large difference between minimum
(185 HV) and maximum (250 HV) values.
The friction and wear performance of grey cast iron
specimens with soybean oil varied with its hardness.
The specimens
with higher hardness gave
lower friction coefficient and greater wear resistance than the lower hardness specimens.
The
difference in coefficient of friction produced between high hardness specimens (COF = 0.122)
and low hardness specimens (COF = 0.140) wa
s 17%. In terms of mass loss, the low hardness
2
specimens (mass loss = 50.38 mg) and the high hardness specimens (mass loss = 12.90 mg)
produced a difference of 74%.
It is shown that, with soybean oil lubricant, the grey cast iron
specimen can produce wide
range of tribological data especially on mass loss due to its hardness
distribution. The influence of soybean oil lubrication in this work is less in improving the wear
resistance (about 7%), but greater for friction reduction (about 24%) compared to an un
lubricated
grey cast iron surface. The hardness of grey cast iron specimen is an important parameter that
needs to be specifically measured and controlled on the contact due to wide hardness distribution
of grey cast iron may produce variation in tribologi
cal data
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Comparing methods of measuring sea-ice density in the East Antarctic
Remotely sensed derivation of sea-ice thickness requires sea·ice density. Sea-ice density was estimated with three techniques during the second Sea Ice Physics and Ecosystem eXperiment (SIPEX-II, September-November 2012, East Antarctica). The sea ice was first-year highly deformed, mean thickness 1.2 m with layers, consistent with rafting, and 6-7/10 columnar ice and 3/10 granular ice. Ice density was found to be lower than values (900-920 kg m⁻³ used previously to derive ice thickness, with columnar ice mean density of 870 kg m⁻³. At two different ice stations the mean density of the ice was 870 and 800 kg m⁻³, the lower density reflecting a high percentage of porous granular ice at the second station. Error estimates for mass/volume and liquid/solid water methods are presented. With 0.1 m long, 0.1 m core samples, the error on individual density estimates is 28 kg m⁻³. Errors are larger for smaller machined blocks. Errors increase to 46 kg m⁻³ if the liquid/solid volume method is used. The mass/volume method has a low bias due to brine drainage of at least 5%. Bulk densities estimated from ice and snow measurements along 100 m transects were high, and likely unrealistic as the assumption of isostatic balance is not suitable over these length scales in deformed ice
How big were the first cosmological objects?
We calculate the cooling times at constant density for halos with virial
temperatures from 100 K to 10^5 K that originate from a 3-sigma fluctuation of
a CDM power spectrum in three different cosmologies. Our intention is to
determine the first objects that can cool to low temperatures, but not to
follow their dynamical evolution. We identify two generations of halos: those
with low virial temperatures, Tvir < 9000 K that remain largely neutral, and
those with larger virial temperatures that become ionized. The
lower-temperature, lower-mass halos are the first to cool to 75 percent of
their virial temperature. The precise temperature and mass of the first objects
are dependent upon the molecular hydrogen (H2) cooling function and the
cosmological model. The higher-mass halos collapse later but, in this paradigm,
cool much more efficiently once they have done so, first via electronic
transitions and then via molecular cooling: in fact, a greater residual
ionization once the halos cool below 9000 K results in an enhanced H2
production and hence a higher cooling rate at low temperatures than for the
lower-mass halos, so that within our constant-density model it is the former
that are the first to cool to really low temperatures. We discuss the possible
significance of this result in the context of CDM models in which the shallow
slope of the initial fluctuation spectrum on small scales leads to a wide range
of halo masses (of differing overdensities) collapsing over a small redshift
interval. This ``crosstalk'' is sufficiently important that both high- and
low-mass halos collapse during the lifetimes of the massive stars which may be
formed at these epochs. Further investigation is thus required to determine
which generation of halos plays the dominant role in early structure formation.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Inclusion of
Helium in the reaction networ
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