2,087 research outputs found
Bibliometrics : an overview
Research support is an expanding area of activity for libraries in the HE sector. At the University of Hull, the recent reorganisation of Library and Learning Innovation involved a redistribution of expertise to meet the changing needs of the University, its staff and students. As part of this, a new Research Services Team was created to meet the needs of the research community and so contribute to a key strategic aim of increasing the quantity and quality of research outputs
Binary black hole merger: symmetry and the spin expansion
We regard binary black hole (BBH) merger as a map from a simple initial state
(two Kerr black holes, with dimensionless spins {\bf a} and {\bf b}) to a
simple final state (a Kerr black hole with mass m, dimensionless spin {\bf s},
and kick velocity {\bf k}). By expanding this map around {\bf a} = {\bf b} = 0
and applying symmetry constraints, we obtain a simple formalism that is
remarkably successful at explaining existing BBH simulations. It also makes
detailed predictions and suggests a more efficient way of mapping the parameter
space of binary black hole merger. Since we rely on symmetry rather than
dynamics, our expansion complements previous analytical techniques.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, matches Phys. Rev. Lett. versio
Noise source location in the built environment, using a simple microphone array
An inadequate level of noise attenuation provided by a building element is frequently the
result of a lack of completeness in the construction. This often invisible fault acts as a noise
source in a room, so in order to undertake remedial work the source position must be found.
Recently, near field noise intensity measurement has been the popular method for noise
source location in buildings. This method of using intensity studies requires a grid of readings
to be taken. An alternative method, the one used in this work, employs a different strategy.
Here, the source location is identified by direction scanning of time delays at a number of
microphones arranged in a regular three-dimensional array.
A novel arrangement of seven microphones, in the shape of a wheel-brace, is used to measure
the differences in time taken for the sound waves to travel from a source to the various
microphones. The magnitudes of these time differences are combined and converted into the
coordinates of the source, relative to an origin which is placed at the centre of the wheel-brace
array. The mathematics for this conversion is derived and the errors in the experimental
arrangement discussed.
The use of this airay for the identification of faults in built structures is explored. A significant
contribution is made to the knowledge of noise source location in buildings, since the
microphone array is used to demonstrate the location of a noise source irrespective of the
direction of the incoming noise.
The use of computerised data collection is described for a budget system, where time was
cheap, but equipment expensive. The accuracy of the technique would be improved
considerably if state-of-the-art electronics were used to measure the lime differences. The
feasibility, advantages and potential performance of a modem system, that could be
assembled today, is described and discussed.School of Architectur
Health strategies for the control of childhood malnutrition
Malnutrition is the most important cause of morbidity and mortality
of young children in non-industrialized poor countries. The control of
protein - energy malnutrition is more complex than the prevention of most
other common killing diseases of children. It requires a multi-disciplinary
approach including involvement of departments and staff responsible for
agriculture, social services, education, economic development, health and
possibly others. The aetiology of the problem is complex and is closely
related to poverty, deprivation, ignorance and prevalent infectious diseases.
Intervention programmes should be considered a legitimate part of national
and local development plans.
This paper, while briefly discussing the planning of nutrition
programmes, deals primarily with those interventions in which health
personnel play a leading role. The need for base-line data, for continuing
surveillance and for planned evaluation of programmes is discussed. The
major part of the paper consists of a critical examination of the three
levels of treatment and prevention now commonly favoured: the hospital,
the nutrition rehabilitation centre and the health clinic
Nutrition planning and policy for African countries: summary report of a seminar held 2-19 June, 1976
This paper is the summary report of a seminar which was held at
the Institute for Development Studies from 2 to 19 June 1976, The seminar
was sponsored by USAID through a contract to Cornell University in Ithaca,
New York. Participants were government officers and employees of nongovernment
agencies from ten English-speaking African countries whose
responsibilities are clearly related to nutrition planning and policy making.
The report includes short summaries of the sessions conducted
by the seminar staff members. Some of these sessions were devoted to the
salient nutritional problems of Africa and their complex causes, to sociocultural
factors that influence the condition and its alleviation, and to
the basic economic considerations relating to the cause and control of
malnutrition and food shortages. However, much more time was devoted to
planning and policy relating to nutrition. The participants formed working
groups and prepared short reports on nutrition planning for Tanzania's
Ujamaa villages, on nutrition activities and goals in Kenya, on increased
wheat consumption and the trend toward bottle feeding in West Africa, and
on nutrition actitivities in the Sudan. The working group reports are also
included in this paper
Repositioning Information Science.
International audienceDuring the twentieth century there was a strong desire for information studies to become scientific, to move from librarianship, bibliography, and documentation to an information science. In 1968 the American Documentation Institute was renamed American Society for Information Science. By the twenty-first century, however, departments of (library and) information science had turned instead towards the social sciences, but have not been successful in providing a coherent explanation of the nature and scope of the field. The accepted view of Information Science as an emerging, scientific discipline closely tied with Information Technology and, mainly, textual data, will be challenged. Three brief presentations proposing different foundations and directions as a basis for a moderated discussion: There are other options: The development of Information Science in France has been radically different and has from the start been steeped in the humanities. The scope and focus should be broader to include, for example, the cognitive and aesthetic experiences of museum visitors? If Information Science is really concerned with influencing what people know, what kind of science can Information Science be
The spin expansion for binary black hole merger: new predictions and future directions
In a recent paper arXiv:0709.0299, we introduced a spin expansion that
provides a simple yet powerful way to understand aspects of binary black hole
(BBH) merger. This approach relies on the symmetry properties of initial and
final quantities like the black hole mass m, kick velocity {\bf k}, and spin
vector {\bf s}, rather than a detailed understanding of the merger dynamics. In
this paper, we expand on this proposal, examine how well its predictions agree
with current simulations, and discuss several future directions that would make
it an even more valuable tool. The spin expansion yields many new predictions,
including several exact results that may be useful for testing numerical codes.
Some of these predictions have already been confirmed, while others await
future simulations. We explain how a relatively small number of simulations --
10 equal-mass simulations, and 16 unequal-mass simulations -- may be used to
calibrate all of the coefficients in the spin expansion up to second order at
the minimum computational cost. For a more general set of simulations of given
covariance, we derive the minimum-variance unbiased estimators for the spin
expansion coefficients. We discuss how this calibration would be interesting
and fruitful for general relativity and astrophysics. Finally, we sketch the
extension to eccentric orbits.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures, matches Phys. Rev. D version. Added new
appendix: "Minimum-variance estimators for the spin coefficients
Functional visual fields: A cross-sectional UK study to determine which visual field paradigms best reflect difficulty with mobility function
Objectives:
To develop an appropriate method of assessing visual field (VF) loss which reflects its functional consequences, this study aims to determine which method(s) of assessing visual fields best reflect mobility difficulty.
Setting:
This cross-sectional observational study took place within a single primary care setting. Participants attended a single session at a University Eye Clinic, Cambridge, UK, with data collected by a single researcher (HS), a qualified optometrist.
Participants:
50 adult participants with peripheral field impairment were recruited for this study. Individuals with conditions not primarily affecting peripheral visual function, such as macular degeneration, were excluded from the study.
Primary and secondary outcome measures:
Participants undertook three custom and one standard binocular VF tests assessing visual field to 60 degrees, and also integrated monocular threshold 24-2 visual fields (IVF). Primary VF outcomes were average mean threshold, percentage of stimuli seen, and VF area. VF outcomes were compared to self-reported mobility function assessed with the Independent Mobility Questionnaire, and time taken and patient acceptability were also considered. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves determined which tests best predicted difficulty with mobility tasks.
Results:
Greater VF loss was associated with greater self-reported mobility difficulty with all field paradigms (R2 0.38-0.48, all p<0.001). All four binocular tests were better than the IVF at predicting difficulty with at least three mobility tasks in ROC analysis. Mean duration of the tests ranged from 1min 26sec (±9sec) for kinetic assessment to 9min 23sec (±24 sec) for IVF.
Conclusions:
The binocular VF tests extending to 60 deg eccentricity all relate similarly to self-reported mobility function, and slightly better than integrated monocular VFs. A kinetic assessment of VF area is quicker than and as effective at predicting mobility function as static threshold assessment
Transits and Occultations of an Earth-Sized Planet in an 8.5-Hour Orbit
We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet () in
an 8.5-hour orbit around a late G-type star (KIC 8435766, Kepler-78). The
object was identified in a search for short-period planets in the {\it Kepler}
database and confirmed to be a transiting planet (as opposed to an eclipsing
stellar system) through the absence of ellipsoidal light variations or
substantial radial-velocity variations. The unusually short orbital period and
the relative brightness of the host star ( = 11.5) enable robust
detections of the changing illumination of the visible hemisphere of the
planet, as well as the occultations of the planet by the star. We interpret
these signals as representing a combination of reflected and reprocessed light,
with the highest planet dayside temperature in the range of 2300 K to 3100 K.
Follow-up spectroscopy combined with finer sampling photometric observations
will further pin down the system parameters and may even yield the mass of the
planet.Comment: Accepted for publication, ApJ, 10 pages and 6 figure
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