864 research outputs found
Dr. Snook and the Coed: The Theora Hix Affair and Murder
Dr. James Howard Snook was born in South Lebanon, Ohio in Warren County in 1879. He was both an alumnus and later a faculty member of the Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine. In 1922 Dr. Snook married Helen Marple and had a daughter. In 1926 Dr. Snook began an affair with an OSU medical student, Theora Hix. The affair lasted about 2 years. During a visit in 1929 Theora Hix allegedly threatened to harm Dr. Snook\u27s wife and child. Dr. Snook murdered her and was sentenced to death in February of 1930
Spectroscopy of Quasar Candidates from SDSS Commissioning Data
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey has obtained images in five broad-band colors
for several hundred square degrees. We present color-color diagrams for stellar
objects, and demonstrate that quasars are easily distinguished from stars by
their distinctive colors. Follow-up spectroscopy in less than ten nights of
telescope time has yielded 22 new quasars, 9 of them at , and one with
, the second highest-redshift quasar yet known. Roughly 80% of the
high-redshift quasar candidates selected by color indeed turn out to be
high-redshift quasars.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "After the Dark
Ages: When Galaxies were Young (the Universe at 2<z<5)", 9th Annual October
Astrophysics Conference in Marylan
High Vibration Analysis of Eddy Current Drum Coupled Motor to a Vertical Centrifugal Pump : Solution Based on EMA, ODS and FEA
Case StudyThe 35-year old pump station moves up to 43 MGD of raw wastewater to the cityâs treatment facility via two 1,500-hp high-capacity pumps for wet weather flows. After the motors were refurbished in 2011, excessive motor vibration occurred at certain pump speeds, thereby restricting the pumping systemâs ability to handle various flow ranges. After multiple field balances to the motors and coupling drums, the City of Tampa set out to fix the vibration issue, instead of putting on a âBand-Aidâ (field balancing) every time the vibration levels exceeded their limits. Prior to any finite element analysis (FEA), cladding and extra bracing were added to supporting I-beam structure to reduce vibration. This only made matters worse. The goal became to use FEA to identify and implement a practical fix that worked over the pump operating speed range
Five High-Redshift Quasars Discovered in Commissioning Imaging Data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We report the discovery of five quasars with redshifts of 4.67 - 5.27 and
z'-band magnitudes of 19.5-20.7 M_B ~ -27. All were originally selected as
distant quasar candidates in optical/near-infrared photometry from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and most were confirmed as probable high-redshift
quasars by supplementing the SDSS data with J and K measurements. The quasars
possess strong, broad Lyman-alpha emission lines, with the characteristic sharp
cutoff on the blue side produced by Lyman-alpha forest absorption. Three
quasars contain strong, broad absorption features, and one of them exhibits
very strong N V emission. The amount of absorption produced by the Lyman-alpha
forest increases toward higher redshift, and that in the z=5.27 object (D_A ~
0.7) is consistent with a smooth extrapolation of the absorption seen in lower
redshift quasars. The high luminosity of these objects relative to most other
known objects at z >~ 5 makes them potentially valuable as probes of early
quasar properties and of the intervening intergalactic medium.Comment: 13 pages in LaTex format, two postscirpt figures. Submitted to the
Astronomical Journa
Evidence for Reionization at z ~ 6: Detection of a Gunn-Peterson Trough in a z=6.28 Quasar
We present moderate resolution Keck spectroscopy of quasars at z=5.82, 5.99
and 6.28, discovered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We find that the
Ly Alpha absorption in the spectra of these quasars evolves strongly with
redshift. To z~5.7, the Ly Alpha absorption evolves as expected from an
extrapolation from lower redshifts. However, in the highest redshift object,
SDSSp J103027.10+052455.0 (z=6.28), the average transmitted flux is
0.0038+-0.0026 times that of the continuum level over 8450 A < lambda < 8710 A
(5.95<z(abs)<6.16), consistent with zero flux. Thus the flux level drops by a
factor of >150, and is consistent with zero flux in the Ly Alpha forest region
immediately blueward of the Ly Alpha emission line, compared with a drop by a
factor of ~10 at z(abs)~5.3. A similar break is seen at Ly Beta; because of the
decreased oscillator strength of this transition, this allows us to put a
considerably stronger limit, tau(eff) > 20, on the optical depth to Ly Alpha
absorption at z=6.
This is a clear detection of a complete Gunn-Peterson trough, caused by
neutral hydrogen in the intergalactic medium. Even a small neutral hydrogen
fraction in the intergalactic medium would result in an undetectable flux in
the Ly Alpha forest region. Therefore, the existence of the Gunn-Peterson
trough by itself does not indicate that the quasar is observed prior to the
reionization epoch. However, the fast evolution of the mean absorption in these
high-redshift quasars suggests that the mean ionizing background along the line
of sight to this quasar has declined significantly from z~5 to 6, and the
universe is approaching the reionization epoch at z~6.Comment: Revised version (2001 Sep 4) accepted by the Astronomical Journal
(minor changes
Ethical and methodological issues in engaging young people living in poverty with participatory research methods
This paper discusses the methodological and ethical issues arising from a project that focused on conducting a qualitative study using participatory techniques with children and young people living in disadvantage. The main aim of the study was to explore the impact of poverty on children and young people's access to public and private services. The paper is based on the author's perspective of the first stage of the fieldwork from the project. It discusses the ethical implications of involving children and young people in the research process, in particular issues relating to access and recruitment, the role of young people's advisory groups, use of visual data and collection of data in young people's homes. The paper also identifies some strategies for addressing the difficulties encountered in relation to each of these aspects and it considers the benefits of adopting participatory methods when conducting research with children and young people
High-Redshift Quasars Found in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data IV: Luminosity Function from the Fall Equatorial Stripe Sampl
This is the fourth paper in a series aimed at finding high-redshift quasars
from five-color imaging data taken along the Celestial Equator by the SDSS.
during its commissioning phase. In this paper, we use the color-selected sample
of 39 luminous high-redshift quasars presented in Paper III to derive the
evolution of the quasar luminosity function over the range of 3.6<z<5.0, and
-27.5<M_1450<-25.5 (Omega=1, H_0=50 km s^-1 Mpc^-1). We use the selection
function derived in Paper III to correct for sample incompleteness. The
luminosity function is estimated using three different methods: (1) the 1/V_a
estimator; (2) a maximum likelihood solution, assuming that the density of
quasars depends exponentially on redshift and as a power law in luminosity and
(3) Lynden-Bell's non-parametric C^- estimator. All three methods give
consistent results. The luminous quasar density decreases by a factor of ~ 6
from z=3.5 to z=5.0, consistent with the decline seen from several previous
optical surveys at z<4.5. The luminosity function follows psi(L) ~ L^{-2.5} for
z~4 at the bright end, significantly flatter than the bright end luminosity
function psi(L) \propto L^{-3.5} found in previous studies for z<3, suggesting
that the shape of the quasar luminosity function evolves with redshift as well,
and that the quasar evolution from z=2 to 5 cannot be described as pure
luminosity evolution. Possible selection biases and the effect of dust
extinction on the redshift evolution of the quasar density are also discussed.Comment: AJ accepted, with minor change
Weak Lensing with SDSS Commissioning Data: The Galaxy-Mass Correlation Function To 1/h Mpc
(abridged) We present measurements of galaxy-galaxy lensing from early
commissioning imaging data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We measure
a mean tangential shear around a stacked sample of foreground galaxies in three
bandpasses out to angular radii of 600'', detecting the shear signal at very
high statistical significance. The shear profile is well described by a
power-law. A variety of rigorous tests demonstrate the reality of the
gravitational lensing signal and confirm the uncertainty estimates. We
interpret our results by modeling the mass distributions of the foreground
galaxies as approximately isothermal spheres characterized by a velocity
dispersion and a truncation radius. The velocity dispersion is constrained to
be 150-190 km/s at 95% confidence (145-195 km/s including systematic
uncertainties), consistent with previous determinations but with smaller error
bars. Our detection of shear at large angular radii sets a 95% confidence lower
limit , corresponding to a physical radius of
kpc, implying that galaxy halos extend to very large radii. However, it is
likely that this is being biased high by diffuse matter in the halos of groups
and clusters. We also present a preliminary determination of the galaxy-mass
correlation function finding a correlation length similar to the galaxy
autocorrelation function and consistency with a low matter density universe
with modest bias. The full SDSS will cover an area 44 times larger and provide
spectroscopic redshifts for the foreground galaxies, making it possible to
greatly improve the precision of these constraints, measure additional
parameters such as halo shape, and measure the properties of dark matter halos
separately for many different classes of galaxies.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, submitted to A
Clinical practice guidelines for the foot and ankle in rheumatoid arthritis: a critical appraisal
Background: Clinical practice guidelines are recommendations systematically developed to assist clinical decision-making and inform healthcare. In current rheumatoid arthritis (RA) guidelines, management of the foot and ankle is under-represented and the quality of recommendation is uncertain. This study aimed to identify and critically appraise clinical practice guidelines for foot and ankle management in RA. Methods: Guidelines were identified electronically and through hand searching. Search terms 'rheumatoid arthritis', 'clinical practice guidelines' and related synonyms were used. Critical appraisal and quality rating were conducted using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE) II instrument. Results: Twenty-four guidelines were included. Five guidelines were high quality and recommended for use. Five high quality and seven low quality guidelines were recommended for use with modifications. Seven guidelines were low quality and not recommended for use. Five early and twelve established RA guidelines were recommended for use. Only two guidelines were foot and ankle specific. Five recommendation domains were identified in both early and established RA guidelines. These were multidisciplinary team care, foot healthcare access, foot health assessment/review, orthoses/insoles/splints, and therapeutic footwear. Established RA guidelines also had an 'other foot care treatments' domain. Conclusions: Foot and ankle management for RA features in many clinical practice guidelines recommended for use. Unfortunately, supporting evidence in the guidelines is low quality. Agreement levels are predominantly 'expert opinion' or 'good clinical practice'. More research investigating foot and ankle management for RA is needed prior to inclusion in clinical practice guidelines
- âŠ