73,901 research outputs found
The interpretive approach to religious education : challenging Thompson's interpretation
In a recent book chapter, Matthew Thompson makes some criticisms of my work, including the interpretive approach to religious education and the research and activity of Warwick Religions and Education Research Unit. Against the background of a discussion of religious education in the public sphere, my response challenges Thompson’s account, commenting on his own position in relation to dialogical approaches to religious education. The article rehearses my long held view that the ideal form of religious education in fully state funded schools of a liberal democracy should be ‘secular’ but not ‘secularist’; there should be no implication of an axiomatic secular humanist interpretation of religions
The effect of starspots on the radii of low-mass pre-main sequence stars
A polytropic model is used to investigate the effects of dark photospheric
spots on the evolution and radii of magnetically active, low-mass (M<0.5Msun),
pre-main sequence (PMS) stars. Spots slow the contraction along Hayashi tracks
and inflate the radii of PMS stars by a factor of (1-beta)^{-N} compared to
unspotted stars of the same luminosity, where beta is the equivalent covering
fraction of dark starspots and N \simeq 0.45+/-0.05. This is a much stronger
inflation than predicted by the models of Spruit & Weiss (1986) for main
sequence stars with the same beta, where N \sim 0.2 to 0.3. These models have
been compared to radii determined for very magnetically active K- and M-dwarfs
in the young Pleiades and NGC 2516 clusters, and the radii of tidally-locked,
low-mass eclipsing binary components. The binary components and ZAMS K-dwarfs
have radii inflated by \sim 10 per cent compared to an empirical
radius-luminosity relation that is defined by magnetically inactive field
dwarfs with interferometrically measured radii; low-mass M-type PMS stars, that
are still on their Hayashi tracks, are inflated by up to \sim 40 per cent. If
this were attributable to starspots alone, we estimate that an effective spot
coverage of 0.35 < beta < 0.51 is required. Alternatively, global inhibition of
convective flux transport by dynamo-generated fields may play a role. However,
we find greater consistency with the starspot models when comparing the loci of
active young stars and inactive field stars in colour-magnitude diagrams,
particularly for the highly inflated PMS stars, where the large, uniform
temperature reduction required in globally inhibited convection models would
cause the stars to be much redder than observed.Comment: MNRAS in press, 13 page
Design method for adsorption beds
Regenerable adsorption beds for long-term life support systems include synthetic geolite to remove carbon dioxide and silica gel to dehumidify the atmospheric gas prior to its passage through the geolite beds. Bed performance is evaluated from adsorption characteristics, heat and mass transfer, and pressure drop
Coatings for directional eutectics
Significant advances have been made in the development of an environmentally stable coating for a very high strength, directionally solidified eutectic alloy designated NiTaC-13. Three duplex (two-layer) coatings survived 3,000 hours on a cyclic oxidation test (1,100 C to 90 C). These coatings were fabricated by first depositing a layer of NiCrAl(Y) by vacuum evaporation from an electron beam heated source, followed by depositing an aluminizing overlayer. The alloy after exposure with these coatings was denuded of carbide fibers at the substrate/coating interface. It was demonstrated that TaC fiber denudation can be greatly retarded by applying a carbon-bearing coating. The coating was applied by thermal spraying followed by aluminization. Specimens coated with NiCrAlCY+Al survived over 2,000 hours in the cyclic oxidation test with essentially no TaC denudation. Coating ductility was studied for coated and heat-treated bars, and stress rupture life at 871 C and 1,100 C was determined for coated and cycled bars
Data catalog series for space science and applications flight missions. Volume 3A: Descriptions of low- and medium-altitude scientific spacecraft and investigations
Earth orbits spacecraft whose apogees are well below geostationary altitude and whose primary purpose is to conduct investigations in the near-Earth environment are considered
High-tip-speed, low-loading transonic fan stage. Part 3: Final report
Tests were conducted on a high-tip-speed, low-loading transonic fan stage to determine the performance and inlet flow distortion tolerance of the design. The fan was designed for high efficiency at a moderate pressure ratio by designing the hub section to operate at minimum loss when the tip operates with an oblique shock. The design objective was an efficiency of 86 percent at a pressure ratio of 1.5, a specific flow (flow per unit annulus area) of 42 lb/sec-sq. ft (205.1 kgm/sec-m sq), and a tip speed of 1600 ft/sec (488.6 m/sec). During testing, a peak efficiency of 84 percent was achieved at design speed and design specific flow. At the design speed and pressure ratio, the flow was 4 percent greater than design, efficiency was 81 percent, and a stall margin of 24 percent was obtained. The stall line was improved with hub radial distortion but was reduced when the stage was tested with tip radial and circumferential flow distortions. Blade-to-blade values of static pressures were measured over the rotor blade tips
Hightip-speed, low-loading transonic fan stage. Part 2: Data compilation
Tests were conducted on a high-tip-speed low-loading transonic fan stage to determine the performance and inlet flow distortion tolerance of the design. Test data were recorded for overall and blade element performance with both uniform and distorted inlet flows. A tabular summary of the data and a representative selection of the computer data reduction sheets are presented
Carrier extraction circuit
Feedback loop extracts demodulated reference signals from IF input and feeds signal back to demodulator. Since reference signal is extracted directly from carrier, no separate reference need be transmitted. Circuit obtains coherent carrier from balanced or unbalanced four-phase signal of varying characteristics
Thermal infrared research: Where are we now?
The use of infrared temperatures in agriculture and hydrology is based on the energy balance equation which is used to estimate evapotranspiration and crop stress over small areas within a field as well as large areas. For its full utilization, this measurement must be combined with other spectral data collected at a time resolution sufficient to detect changes in the agricultural or hydrological systems and at a spatial resolution with enough detail to sample within individual fields. The most stringent requirement is that the data be readily available to the user. The spatial resolution necessary for IR measurements to be incorporated into evapotranspiration models to accurately estimate field and regional transpiration or measure crop stress; methods to estimate crop stress and yield over large areas and different cultivars within a species; the temporal resolution adequate for detecting crop stress or inclusion in evapotranspiration models; and ancillary parameters for estimating thermal IR measurements must be investigated
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