1,131 research outputs found
Electrical technology students in vocational colleges: are they healthy mentally?
Distraction such as depression, anxiety, and stress in mental health problem can influence academic achievement to students, including vocational colleges’ students. Hence, the main purpose of this study was to determine the mental health profiles of Electrical Course students in Vocational Colleges. The difference in mental health level in terms of gender, hometown, and years of study were also be investigated. Besides, the level of mental health elements implementation by teachers in teaching and learning was also determined. This study was employed a survey method as research design that involved of 132 respondents from three vocational colleges in the southern zone. The respondents were selected using strata sampling technique. The instrument of this study was Malay version DASS-21 item inventory. This inventory measures three elements of mental health problem, namely depression, anxiety, and stress through 21 items. Questionnaires for level of mental health elements implementation by teachers in teaching and learning from student perception consists of 21 items. The collected data were analyzed using frequency, percentage, Spearman Rho test, Mann Whitney U test, and Kruskal Wallis test. The findings of this study showed that students' mental health level and the level of mental health elements implementation by teachers in teaching and learning were at the moderate level. The findings also found that there was a significant relationship between each element of mental health with students’ academic achievement level, as well as the level of mental health elements implementation by teachers in teaching and learning. In addition, the results also shows that there were no significant difference in the mental health level among the students from the aspects of gender, hometown, and years of study. In short, an intervention program needs to be implemented to overwhelm students’ mental health problems, because prevention was better than cure
Post-Newtonian SPH calculations of binary neutron star coalescence. I. Method and first results
We present the first results from our Post-Newtonian (PN) Smoothed Particle
Hydrodynamics (SPH) code, which has been used to study the coalescence of
binary neutron star (NS) systems. The Lagrangian particle-based code
incorporates consistently all lowest-order (1PN) relativistic effects, as well
as gravitational radiation reaction, the lowest-order dissipative term in
general relativity. We test our code on sequences of single NS models of
varying compactness, and we discuss ways to make PN simulations more relevant
to realistic NS models. We also present a PN SPH relaxation procedure for
constructing equilibrium models of synchronized binaries, and we use these
equilibrium models as initial conditions for our dynamical calculations of
binary coalescence. Though unphysical, since tidal synchronization is not
expected in NS binaries, these initial conditions allow us to compare our PN
work with previous Newtonian results.
We compare calculations with and without 1PN effects, for NS with stiff
equations of state, modeled as polytropes with . We find that 1PN
effects can play a major role in the coalescence, accelerating the final
inspiral and causing a significant misalignment in the binary just prior to
final merging. In addition, the character of the gravitational wave signal is
altered dramatically, showing strong modulation of the exponentially decaying
waveform near the end of the merger. We also discuss briefly the implications
of our results for models of gamma-ray bursts at cosmological distances.Comment: RevTeX, 37 pages, 17 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. D, minor
corrections onl
Domain Growth and Finite-Size-Scaling in the Kinetic Ising Model
This paper describes the application of finite-size scaling concepts to
domain growth in systems with a non-conserved order parameter. A finite-size
scaling ansatz for the time-dependent order parameter distribution function is
proposed, and tested with extensive Monte-Carlo simulations of domain growth in
the 2-D spin-flip kinetic Ising model. The scaling properties of the
distribution functions serve to elucidate the configurational self-similarity
that underlies the dynamic scaling picture. Moreover, it is demonstrated that
the application of finite-size-scaling techniques facilitates the accurate
determination of the bulk growth exponent even in the presence of strong
finite-size effects, the scale and character of which are graphically exposed
by the order parameter distribution function. In addition it is found that one
commonly used measure of domain size--the scaled second moment of the
magnetisation distribution--belies the full extent of these finite-size
effects.Comment: 13 pages, Latex. Figures available on request. Rep #9401
Associated charged Higgs and W boson production in the MSSM at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
We investigate the viability of observing charged Higgs bosons (H^+/-)
produced in association with W bosons at the CERN Large Hadron Collider, using
the leptonic decay H^+ -> tau^+ nu_tau and hadronic W-decay, within different
scenarios of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with both real
and complex parameters. Performing a parton level study we show how the
irreducible Standard Model background from W+2 jets can be controlled by
applying appropriate cuts and find that the size of a possible signal depends
on the cuts needed to suppress QCD backgrounds and misidentifications. In the
standard maximal mixing scenario of the MSSM we find a viable signal for large
tan(beta) and intermediate H^+/- masses (~m_t) when using optimistic cuts
whereas for more pessimistic ones we only find a viable signal for very large
tan(beta) (>~50). We have also investigated a special class of MSSM scenarios
with large mass-splittings among the heavy Higgs bosons where the cross-section
can be resonantly enhanced by factors up to one hundred, with a strong
dependence on the CP-violating phases. Even so we find that the signal after
cuts remains small except for small masses (~< m_t) with optimistic cuts.
Finally, in all the scenarios we have investigated we have only found small
CP-asymmetries.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, version to appear in Euro. Phys. J.
Charged Higgs Boson Production in Bottom-Gluon Fusion
We compute the complete next-to-leading order SUSY-QCD corrections for the
associated production of a charged Higgs boson with a top quark via
bottom-gluon fusion. We investigate the applicability of the bottom parton
description in detail. The higher order corrections can be split into real and
virtual corrections for a general two Higgs doublet model and into additional
massive supersymmetric loop contributions. We find that the perturbative
behavior is well under control. The supersymmetric contributions consist of the
universal bottom Yukawa coupling corrections and non-factorizable diagrams.
Over most of the relevant supersymmetric parameter space the Yukawa coupling
corrections are sizeable, while the remaining supersymmetric loop contributions
are negligible.Comment: 18 pages, v2: some discussions added, v3: published versio
Post-Newtonian SPH calculations of binary neutron star coalescence. II. Binary mass ratio, equation of state, and spin dependence
Using our new Post-Newtonian SPH (smoothed particle hydrodynamics) code, we
study the final coalescence and merging of neutron star (NS) binaries. We vary
the stiffness of the equation of state (EOS) as well as the initial binary mass
ratio and stellar spins. Results are compared to those of Newtonian
calculations, with and without the inclusion of the gravitational radiation
reaction. We find a much steeper decrease in the gravity wave peak strain and
luminosity with decreasing mass ratio than would be predicted by simple
point-mass formulae. For NS with softer EOS (which we model as simple
polytropes) we find a stronger gravity wave emission, with a
different morphology than for stiffer EOS (modeled as polytropes as
in our previous work). We also calculate the coalescence of NS binaries with an
irrotational initial condition, and find that the gravity wave signal is
relatively suppressed compared to the synchronized case, but shows a very
significant second peak of emission. Mass shedding is also greatly reduced, and
occurs via a different mechanism than in the synchronized case. We discuss the
implications of our results for gravity wave astronomy with laser
interferometers such as LIGO, and for theoretical models of gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs) based on NS mergers.Comment: RevTeX, 38 pages, 24 figures, Minor Corrections, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
Comparison of advanced gravitational-wave detectors
We compare two advanced designs for gravitational-wave antennas in terms of
their ability to detect two possible gravitational wave sources. Spherical,
resonant mass antennas and interferometers incorporating resonant sideband
extraction (RSE) were modeled using experimentally measurable parameters. The
signal-to-noise ratio of each detector for a binary neutron star system and a
rapidly rotating stellar core were calculated. For a range of plausible
parameters we found that the advanced LIGO interferometer incorporating RSE
gave higher signal-to-noise ratios than a spherical detector resonant at the
same frequency for both sources. Spheres were found to be sensitive to these
sources at distances beyond our galaxy. Interferometers were sensitive to these
sources at far enough distances that several events per year would be expected
A complete 3D numerical study of the effects of pseudoscalar-photon mixing on quasar polarizations
We present the results of three-dimensional simulations of quasar
polarizations in the presence of pseudoscalar-photon mixing in the
intergalactic medium. The intergalactic magnetic field is assumed to be
uncorrelated in wave vector space but correlated in real space. Such a field
may be obtained if its origin is primordial. Furthermore we assume that the
quasars, located at cosmological distances, have negligible initial
polarization. In the presence of pseudoscalar-photon mixing we show, through a
direct comparison with observations, that this may explain the observed large
scale alignments in quasar polarizations within the framework of big bang
cosmology. We find that the simulation results give a reasonably good fit to
the observed data.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, significant changes, to appear in EPJ
Neutrino Propagation in a Strongly Magnetized Medium
We derive general expressions at the one-loop level for the coefficients of
the covariant structure of the neutrino self-energy in the presence of a
constant magnetic field. The neutrino energy spectrum and index of refraction
are obtained for neutral and charged media in the strong-field limit () using the lowest Landau level
approximation. The results found within the lowest Landau level approximation
are numerically validated, summing in all Landau levels, for strong and weakly-strong fields. The neutrino energy in
leading order of the Fermi coupling constant is expressed as the sum of three
terms: a kinetic-energy term, a term of interaction between the magnetic field
and an induced neutrino magnetic moment, and a rest-energy term. The leading
radiative correction to the kinetic-energy term depends linearly on the
magnetic field strength and is independent of the chemical potential. The other
two terms are only present in a charged medium. For strong and weakly-strong
fields, it is found that the field-dependent correction to the neutrino energy
in a neutral medium is much larger than the thermal one. Possible applications
to cosmology and astrophysics are considered.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures. Corrected misprints in reference
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