5,366 research outputs found
Introduction of CAA into a mathematics course for technology students to address a change in curriculum requirements
The mathematical requirements for engineering, science and technology students has been debated for many years and concern has been expressed about the mathematical preparedness of students entering higher education. This paper considers a mathematics course that has been specifically designed to address some of these issues for technology education students. It briefly chronicles the changes that have taken place over its lifetime and evaluates the introduction of Computer Assisted Assessment (CAA) into a course already being delivered using Computer Aided Learning (CAL).
Benefits of CAA can be categorised into four main areas.
1. Educational â achieved by setting short, topic related, assessments, each of which has to be passed, thereby increasing curriculum coverage.
2. Students â by allowing them to complete assessments at their own pace removing the stress of the final examination.
3. Financial â increased income to the institution, by broadening access to the course. Improved retention rate due to self-paced learning.
4. Time â staff no longer required to set and mark exams.
Most students preferred this method of assessment to traditional exams, because it increased confidence and reduced stress levels. Self-paced working, however, resulted in a minority of students not completing the tests by the deadline
The XMM-Newton EPIC X-ray Light Curve Analysis of WR 6
We obtained four pointings of over 100 ks each of the well-studied Wolf-Rayet
star WR 6 with the XMM-Newton satellite. With a first paper emphasizing the
results of spectral analysis, this follow-up highlights the X-ray variability
clearly detected in all four pointings. However, phased light curves fail to
confirm obvious cyclic behavior on the well-established 3.766 d period widely
found at longer wavelengths. The data are of such quality that we were able to
conduct a search for "event clustering" in the arrival times of X-ray photons.
However, we fail to detect any such clustering. One possibility is that X-rays
are generated in a stationary shock structure. In this context we favor a
co-rotating interaction region (CIR) and present a phenomenological model for
X-rays from a CIR structure. We show that a CIR has the potential to account
simultaneously for the X-ray variability and constraints provided by the
spectral analysis. Ultimately, the viability of the CIR model will require both
intermittent long-term X-ray monitoring of WR 6 and better physical models of
CIR X-ray production at large radii in stellar winds.Comment: to appear in Ap
Lowering of the Kinetic Energy in Interacting Quantum Systems
Interactions never lower the ground state kinetic energy of a quantum system.
However, at nonzero temperature, where the system occupies a thermal
distribution of states, interactions can reduce the kinetic energy below the
noninteracting value. This can be demonstrated from a first order weak coupling
expansion. Simulations (both variational and restricted path integral Monte
Carlo) of the electron gas model and dense hydrogen confirm this and show that
in contrast to the ground state case, at nonzero temperature the population of
low momentum states can be increased relative to the free Fermi distribution.
This effect is not seen in simulations of liquid He-3.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett., June, 200
Variational Density Matrix Method for Warm Condensed Matter and Application to Dense Hydrogen
A new variational principle for optimizing thermal density matrices is
introduced. As a first application, the variational many body density matrix is
written as a determinant of one body density matrices, which are approximated
by Gaussians with the mean, width and amplitude as variational parameters. The
method is illustrated for the particle in an external field problem, the
hydrogen molecule and dense hydrogen where the molecular, the dissociated and
the plasma regime are described. Structural and thermodynamic properties
(energy, equation of state and shock Hugoniot) are presented.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figures. submitted to Phys. Rev. E, October 199
Resistance exercise training restores bone mineral density in heart transplant recipients
AbstractObjectives. This was a prospective, randomized, controlled study designed to determine the effect of resistance exercise traning on bone metabolism in heart transplant recipients.Background. Osteoporosis frequently complicates heart transplantation. No preventative strategy is generally accepted for glucocorticoid-induced bone loss.Methods. Sixteen male heart transplant recipients were randomly assigned to a resistance exercise group that trained for 6 months (mean [±SD] age 56 ± 6 years) or a control group (mean age 52 ± 10 years) that did not perform resistance exercise. Bone mineral density (BMD) of the total body, femur neck and lumbar spine (L2 to L3) was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry before and 2 months after transplantation and after 3 and 6 months of resistance exercise or a control period. The exercise regimen consisted of lumbar extension exercise (MedX) performed 1 day/week and variable resistance exercises (Nautilus) performed 2 days/week. Each exercise consisted of one set of 10 to 15 repetitions performed to volitional fatigue.Results. Pretransplantation baseline values for regional BMD did not differ in the control and training groups. Bone mineral density of the total body, femur neck and lumbar vertebra (L2 to L3) were significantly decreased below baseline at 2 months after transplantation in both the control (â3.3 ± 1.3%, â 4.5 ± 2.8%, â12.7 ± 6.2%, respectly) and training groups (â2.9 ± 1.1%, 5.9 ± 3.2%, â14.8 ± 3.1%, respectively). Six months of resistance exercise restored BMD of the whole body, femur neck and lumbar vertebra to within 1%, 1.9% and 3.6% of pretransplantation levels, respectively. Bone mineral density of the control group remained unchanged from the 2-month posttransplantation levels.Conclusions. Within 2 months after heart transplantation, â 3% of whole-body BMD is lost, mostly due to decreases in trabecular bone (â12% to â15% of lumbar vertebra). Six months of resistance exercise, consisting of low back exercise that isolates the lumbar spine and a regimen of variable resistance exercises, restores BMD toward pretransplantation levels. Our results suggest that resistance exercise is osteogenic and should be initiated early after heart transplantation
Precision Monte Carlo Test of the Hartree-Fock Approximation for a trapped Bose Gas
We compare the semiclassical Hartree-Fock approximation for a trapped Bose
gas to a direct Path Integral Quantum Monte Carlo simulation. The chosen
parameters correspond to current Rb experiments. We observe corrections to the
mean-field density profile. The Path Integral calculation reveals an increase
of the number of condensed particles, which is of the same order as a
previously computed result for a homogeneous system. We discuss the
experimental observability of the effect and propose a method to analyze data
of in-situ experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revte
The conspicuous absence of X-ray emission from carbon-enriched Wolf-Rayet stars
The carbon-rich WC5 star WR 114 was not detected during a 15.9 ksec XMM-Newton observation, implying an upper limit to the X- ray luminosity of L-X less than or similar to 2.5 x 10(30) erg s(-1) and to the X-ray to bolometric luminosity ratio of L- X/L(bo)l less than or similar to 4 x 10(-9). This confirms indications from earlier less sensitive measurements that there has been no convincing X-ray detection of any single WC star. This lack of detections is reinforced by XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of WC stars. Thus the conclusion has to be drawn that the stars with radiatively-driven stellar winds of this particular class are insignificant X-ray sources. We attribute this to photoelectronic absorption by the stellar wind. The high opacity of the metal-rich and dense winds from WC stars puts the radius of optical depth unity at hundreds or thousands of stellar radii for much of the X-ray band. We believe that the essential absence of hot plasma so far out in the wind exacerbated by the large distances and correspondingly high ISM column densities makes the WC stars too faint to be detectable with current technology. The result also applies to many WC stars in binary systems, of which only about 20% are identified X-ray sources, presumably due to colliding winds
Generalized Second Law and phantom Cosmology: accreting black holes
The accretion of phantom fields by black holes within a thermodynamic context
is addressed. For a fluid violating the dominant energy condition, case of a
phantom fluid, the Euler and Gibbs relations permit two different possibilities
for the entropy and temperature: a situation in which the entropy is negative
and the temperature is positive or vice-versa. In the former case, if the
generalized second law (GSL) is valid, then the accretion process is not
allowed whereas in the latter, there is a critical black hole mass below which
the accretion process occurs. In a universe dominated by a phantom field, the
critical mass drops quite rapidly with the cosmic expansion and black holes are
only slightly affected by accretion. All black holes disappear near the big
rip, as suggested by previous investigations, if the GSL is violated.Comment: 8 pp., no figure
Linear modeling of possible mechanisms for parkinson tremor generation
The power of Parkinson tremor is expressed in terms of possibly changed frequency response functions between relevant variables in the neuromuscular system. The derivation starts out from a linear loopless equivalent model of mechanisms for general tremor generation. Hypothetical changes in this model from the substrate of the disease are indicated, and possible ones are inferred from literature about experiments on patients. The result indicates that in these patients tremor appears to have been generated in loops, which did not include the brain area which in surgery usually is inactivated. For some patients in the literature, these loops could involve muscle length receptors, the static sensitivity of which may have been enlarged by pathological brain activity
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