314 research outputs found
A Comparison of Pairs Figure Skaters in Repeated Jumps
Trends in pairs figure skating have shown that increasingly difficult jumps have become an essential aspect of high-level performance, especially in the latter part of a competitive program. We compared a repeated jump power index in a 60 s repeated jump test to determine the relationship of repeated jump test to competitive rank and to measure 2D hip, knee, and ankle angles and angular velocities at 0, 20, 40, and 60 s. Eighteen National Team Pairs Figure Skaters performed a 60 s repeated jump test on a large switch-mat with timing of flight and ground durations and digital video recording. Each 60-s period was divided into 6, 10-s intervals, with power indexes (W/kg) calculated for each 10-s interval. Power index by 10-s interval repeated measures ANOVAs (RMANOVA) showed that males exceeded females at all intervals, and the highest power index interval was during 10 to 20 s for both sexes. RMANOVAs of angles and angular velocities showed main effects for time only. Power index and jumping techniques among figure skaters showed rapid and steady declines over the test duration. Power index can predict approximately 50% of competitive rank variance, and sex differences in jumping technique were rare
Doing gender locally: The importance of ‘place’ in understanding marginalised masculinities and young men’s transitions to ‘safe’ and successful futures
Observable anxieties have been developing about the position of boys and young men in contemporary society in recent years. This is expressed as a crisis of masculinity, in which place is often implicitly implicated, but is rarely considered for its role in the shaping of young men’s practices, trajectories and aspirations. Drawing on research conducted with young people who accessed a range of social care support services, this article argues that transition means different things for young men in different locales and that local definitions of masculinity are required to better understand young men’s lives and the opportunities available to them. The authors argue that home life, street life, individual neighbourhoods, regions and nations all shaped the young men’s identities and the practices they (and the staff working with them) drew on in order to create successful futures and ‘safe’ forms of masculinity. It is suggested that this place-based approach has the potential to re-shape the ‘crisis’ discourse surrounding masculinity and the anxieties associated with young men
Outbreak size distributions in epidemics with multiple stages
Multiple-type branching processes that model the spread of infectious
diseases are investigated. In these stochastic processes, the disease goes
through multiple stages before it eventually disappears. We mostly focus on the
critical multistage Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) infection process. In
the infinite population limit, we compute the outbreak size distributions and
show that asymptotic results apply to more general multiple-type critical
branching processes. Finally using heuristic arguments and simulations we
establish scaling laws for a multistage SIR model in a finite population.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; added references, final versio
The Origins of the Circumgalactic Medium in the FIRE Simulations
We use a particle tracking analysis to study the origins of the
circumgalactic medium (CGM), separating it into (1) accretion from the
intergalactic medium (IGM), (2) wind from the central galaxy, and (3) gas
ejected from other galaxies. Our sample consists of 21 FIRE-2 simulations,
spanning the halo mass range log(Mh/Msun) ~ 10-12 , and we focus on z=0.25 and
z=2. Owing to strong stellar feedback, only ~L* halos retain a baryon mass
>~50% of their cosmic budget. Metals are more efficiently retained by halos,
with a retention fraction >~50%. Across all masses and redshifts analyzed >~60%
of the CGM mass originates as IGM accretion (some of which is associated with
infalling halos). Overall, the second most important contribution is wind from
the central galaxy, though gas ejected or stripped from satellites can
contribute a comparable mass in ~L* halos. Gas can persist in the CGM for
billions of years, resulting in well-mixed halo gas. Sight lines through the
CGM are therefore likely to intersect gas of multiple origins. For low-redshift
~L* halos, cool gas (T<10^4.7 K) is distributed on average preferentially along
the galaxy plane, however with strong halo-to-halo variability. The metallicity
of IGM accretion is systematically lower than the metallicity of winds
(typically by >~1 dex), although CGM and IGM metallicities depend significantly
on the treatment of subgrid metal diffusion. Our results highlight the multiple
physical mechanisms that contribute to the CGM and will inform observational
efforts to develop a cohesive picture.Comment: 23 pages, 22 figures. Minor revisions from previous version. Online
interactive visualizations available at zhafen.github.io/CGM-origins and
zhafen.github.io/CGM-origins-pathline
Shapes of leading tunnelling trajectories for single-electron molecular ionization
Based on the geometrical approach to tunnelling by P.D. Hislop and I.M. Sigal
[Memoir. AMS 78, No. 399 (1989)], we introduce the concept of a leading
tunnelling trajectory. It is then proven that leading tunnelling trajectories
for single-active-electron models of molecular tunnelling ionization (i.e.,
theories where a molecular potential is modelled by a single-electron
multi-centre potential) are linear in the case of short range interactions and
"almost" linear in the case of long range interactions. The results are
presented on both the formal and physically intuitive levels. Physical
implications of the obtained results are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Producing Adulthood: Adolescent Employment, Fertility, and the Life Course
Adolescent employment is typically framed as having either positive or negative effects. Yet cutting edge research yields apparently contradictory results; work lowers delinquency but also increases school dropout. Both opportunity cost and life course development theories could explain these results. This study investigates effects of employment on fertility among adolescent women, which pits life course development against opportunity cost theory. Using 2006 and 2007 American Community Surveys, individual instrumental variable and state-level difference-in-difference models (following the same cohort over time) control for self-selection and find a positive effect of employment on adolescent fertility. National Vital Statistics birth data confirm state-level results. Results for fertility (and some evidence for other early transitions) indicate that youth employment speeds the transition to adulthood, supporting life course theory. Findings suggest adolescent employment should be reconceived as promoting adult rather than positive or negative behavior
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