4,946 research outputs found
The affective quality of human-natural environment relationships
Using a psychometric methodology the present study explored the associations between natural environments and experiential feeling states. The effects of the frequency of participants‟ (N = 90) experience of the natural environment and of the location of their childhood upbringing were also investigated. Ten natural environments mapped on to an orthogonal two-component experiential structure labeled Eudemonia (ostensibly positive feelings) and Apprehension (ostensibly negative feelings). Generally, the more natural environments tended to be associated with higher eudemonia and higher apprehension, the less natural environments with both lower eudemonia and lower apprehension. In line with expectations, participants from rural childhood locations, compared with urban participants, reported less Apprehension and participants with greater experience of the natural environment, compared with participants with less experience, reported greater Eudemonia and less Apprehension. Results are discussed in relation to environmental experiences and affective psychological wellbeing
WFPC2 LRF Imaging of Emission Line Nebulae in 3CR Radio Galaxies
We present HST/WFPC2 Linear Ramp Filter images of high surface brightness
emission lines (either [OII], [OIII], or H-alpha+[NII]) in 80 3CR radio
sources. We overlay the emission line images on high resolution VLA radio
images (eight of which are new reductions of archival data) in order to examine
the spatial relationship between the optical and radio emission. We confirm
that the radio and optical emission line structures are consistent with weak
alignment at low redshift (z < 0.6) except in the Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS)
radio galaxies where both the radio source and the emission line nebulae are on
galactic scales and strong alignment is seen at all redshifts. There are weak
trends for the aligned emission line nebulae to be more luminous, and for the
emission line nebula size to increase with redshift and/or radio power. The
combination of these results suggests that there is a limited but real capacity
for the radio source to influence the properties of the emission line nebulae
at these low redshifts (z < 0.6). Our results are consistent with previous
suggestions that both mechanical and radiant energy are responsible for
generating alignment between the radio source and emission line gas.Comment: 80 pages, 54 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
A Note on Einstein Sasaki Metrics in D \ge 7
In this paper, we obtain new non-singular Einstein-Sasaki spaces in
dimensions D\ge 7. The local construction involves taking a circle bundle over
a (D-1)-dimensional Einstein-Kahler metric that is itself constructed as a
complex line bundle over a product of Einstein-Kahler spaces. In general the
resulting Einstein-Sasaki spaces are singular, but if parameters in the local
solutions satisfy appropriate rationality conditions, the metrics extend
smoothly onto complete and non-singular compact manifolds.Comment: Latex, 13 page
Holographic renormalization and supersymmetry
Holographic renormalization is a systematic procedure for regulating divergences
in observables in asymptotically locally AdS spacetimes. For dual boundary
field theories which are supersymmetric it is natural to ask whether this defines a
supersymmetric renormalization scheme. Recent results in localization have brought
this question into sharp focus: rigid supersymmetry on a curved boundary requires
specific geometric structures, and general arguments imply that BPS observables,
such as the partition function, are invariant under certain deformations of these
structures. One can then ask if the dual holographic observables are similarly invariant.
We study this question in minimal N = 2 gauged supergravity in four and
five dimensions. In four dimensions we show that holographic renormalization precisely
reproduces the expected field theory results. In five dimensions we find that
no choice of standard holographic counterterms is compatible with supersymmetry,
which leads us to introduce novel finite boundary terms. For a class of solutions satisfying
certain topological assumptions we provide some independent tests of these
new boundary terms, in particular showing that they reproduce the expected VEVs
of conserved charges
The holographic supersymmetric Casimir energy
We consider a general class of asymptotically locally AdS5 solutions of minimal gauged supergravity, that are dual to superconformal field theories on curved backgrounds S 1 Ă— M3 preserving two supercharges. We demonstrate that standard holographic renormalization corresponds to a scheme that breaks supersymmetry. We propose new boundary terms that restore supersymmetry, and show that for smooth solutions with topology S 1 Ă—R 4 the improved on-shell action reproduces both the supersymmetric Casimir energy and the field theory BPS relation between charges
Using Critical Integrative Argumentation to Assess Socioscientific Argumentation Across Decision-Making Contexts
Socioscientific issues (SSI) are often used to facilitate students’ engagement in multiple scientific practices such as decision-making and argumentation, both of which are goals of STEM literacy, science literacy, and integrated STEM education. Literature often emphasizes scientific argumentation over socioscientific argumentation, which involves considering social factors in addition to scientific frameworks. Analyzing students’ socioscientific arguments may reveal how students construct such arguments and evaluate pedagogical tools supporting these skills. In this study, we examined students’ socioscientific arguments regarding three SSI on pre- and post-assessments in the context of a course emphasizing SSI-based structured decision-making. We employed critical integrative argumentation (CIA) as a theoretical and analytical framework, which integrates arguments and counterarguments with stronger arguments characterized by identifying and refuting counterarguments. We hypothesized that engaging in structured decision-making, in which students integrate multidisciplinary perspectives and consider tradeoffs of various solutions based upon valued criteria, may facilitate students’ development of integrated socioscientific arguments. Findings suggest that students’ arguments vary among SSI contexts and may relate to students’ identities and perspectives regarding the SSI. We conclude that engaging in structured decision-making regarding personally relevant SSI may foster more integrated argumentation skills, which are critical to engaging in information-laden democratic societies
Supersymmetric AdS_5 Solutions of Type IIB Supergravity
We analyse the most general bosonic supersymmetric solutions of type IIB
supergravity whose metrics are warped products of five-dimensional anti-de
Sitter space AdS_5 with a five-dimensional Riemannian manifold M_5. All fluxes
are allowed to be non-vanishing consistent with SO(4,2) symmetry. We show that
the necessary and sufficient conditions can be phrased in terms of a local
identity structure on M_5. For a special class, with constant dilaton and
vanishing axion, we reduce the problem to solving a second order non-linear
ODE. We find an exact solution of the ODE which reproduces a solution first
found by Pilch and Warner. A numerical analysis of the ODE reveals an
additional class of local solutions.Comment: 33 page
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