2,512 research outputs found
Understanding Inclusion from the Educators’ Viewpoint
Inclusion has been the preferred method of educating students with disabilities for several decades. However, the understanding of the concept of inclusion seems vast and diverse. The purpose of this study was to examine the perceptions of general and special educators from two geographic locations-United States and St. Lucia- on their understanding of inclusion. Findings indicate that the majority of educators' understanding of inclusion was based on the placement definition where instruction for students with disabilities occurs in the general education classroom. The main difference found was that most general educators used the placement definition of inclusion while special educators used the individual instruction and general instruction definitions as discussed by Göransson and Nilholm (2014). There was no major difference in responses between general and special educators based on context and state policy. Recommendations and implications for future practice are discussed. Keywords: disabilities, education policy, global perspectives, inclusion, inclusive education, inclusive practice DOI: 10.7176/JEP/12-3-04 Publication date: January 31st 202
A new Tolman test of a cosmic distance duality relation at 21 cm
Under certain general conditions in an expanding universe, the luminosity
distance (d_L) and angular diameter distance (d_A) are connected by the
Etherington relation as d_L = d_A (1 + z)^2. The Tolman test suggests the use
of objects of known surface brightness, to test this relation. In this letter,
we propose the use of redshifted 21 cm signal from disk galaxies, where neutral
hydrogen (HI) masses are seen to be almost linearly correlated with surface
area, to conduct a new Tolman test. We construct simulated catalogs of
galaxies, with the observed size-luminosity relation and realistic redshift
evolution of HI mass functions, likely to be detected with the planned Square
Kilometer Array (SKA). We demonstrate that these observations may soon provide
the best implementation of the Tolman test to detect any violation of the
Etherington relation.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, v2: published versio
Making Sense of the Prejudgment Seizure Cases
The purpose of this article is to examine critically four recent Supreme Court cases on prejudgment seizure, Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp., Fuentes v. Shevin, Mitchell v. W. T. Grant Co., and North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, Inc. These cases have been cited as an arch-example of inconsistency, even irrationality, in constitutional doctrine. Members of the Supreme Court and numerous scholars have expressed chagrin at the apparent irresponsible obscurity at this difficult intersection of creditors\u27 remedies and constitutional rights. We believe, however, that the search for reasonable and rational constitutional standards is not a hopeless task. We hope to show that there are emerging recognizable, if still indistinct, tests, against which state schemes for balancing the prejudgment rights of creditors and debtors may be measured. In short, we will assert that the recent prejudgment seizure cases, read together sympathetically, make sense
Mass along the Line of Sight to the Gravitational Lens B1608+656: Galaxy Groups and Implications for H_0
We report the discovery of four groups of galaxies along the line of sight to the B1608+656 gravitational lens system. One group is at the redshift of the primary lensing galaxy (z = 0.631) and appears to have a low mass, with eight spectroscopically confirmed members and an estimated velocity dispersion of 150 ± 60 km s^(-1). The three other groups are in the foreground of the lens. These groups contain ~10 confirmed members each and are located at redshifts of 0.265, 0.426, and 0.52. Two of the three additional groups are centered roughly on the lens system, while the third is centered ~1' south of the lens. We investigate the effect of each of the four groups on the gravitational lensing potential of the B1608+656 system, with a particular focus on the implications for the value of H_0 derived from this system. We find that each group provides an external convergence of ~0.005-0.060, depending on the assumptions made in the calculation. For the B1608+656 system, the stellar velocity dispersion of the lensing galaxy has been measured, thus breaking the mass sheet degeneracy due to the group that is physically associated with the lens. The effect of the other groups along the line of sight can be folded into the overall uncertainties due to large-scale structure (LSS) along the line of sight. Because B1608+656 appears to lie along an overdense line of sight, the LSS will cause the measurement of H_0 to be biased high for this system. This effect could be 5% or greater
QSO 0130-4021: A third QSO showing a low Deuterium to Hydrogen Abundance Ratio
We have discovered a third quasar absorption system which is consistent with
a low deuterium to hydrogen abundance ratio, D/H = 3.4 times 10^-5. The z ~ 2.8
partial Lyman limit system towards QSO 0130-4021 provides the strongest
evidence to date against large D/H ratios because the H I absorption, which
consists of a single high column density component with unsaturated high order
Lyman series lines, is readily modeled -- a task which is more complex in other
D/H systems. We have obtained twenty-two hours of spectra from the HIRES
spectrograph on the W.M. Keck telescope, which allow a detailed description of
the Hydrogen. We see excess absorption on the blue wing of the H I Lyman alpha
line, near the expected position of Deuterium. However, we find that Deuterium
cannot explain all of the excess absorption, and hence there must be
contamination by additional absorption, probably H I. This extra H I can
account for most or all of the absorption at the D position, and hence D/H = 0
is allowed. We find an upper limit of D/H < 6.7 times 10^-5 in this system,
consistent with the value of D/H ~ 3.4 times 10^-5 deduced towards QSO
1009+2956 and QSO 1937-1009 by Burles and Tytler (1998a, 1998b). This
absorption system shows only weak metal line absorption, and we estimate [Si/H]
< -2.6 -- indicating that the D/H ratio of the system is likely primordial. All
four of the known high redshift absorption line systems simple enough to
provide useful limits on D are consistent with D/H = 3.4 +/- 0.25 times 10^-5.
Conversely, this QSO provides the third case which is inconsistent with much
larger values.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
The First Detailed X-ray Observations of High-Redshift, Optically-Selected Clusters: XMM-Newton Results for Cl 1324+3011 at z = 0.76 and Cl 1604+4304 at z = 0.90
We present the first detailed X-ray observations of optically-selected
clusters at high redshift. Two clusters, Cl 1324+3011 at z = 0.76 and Cl
1604+4304 at z = 0.90, were observed with XMM-Newton. The optical center of
each cluster is coincident with an extended X-ray source whose emission is
detected out to a radius of 0.5 Mpc. The emission from each cluster appears
reasonably circular, with some indication of asymmetries and more complex
morphologies. Similarly to other optically-selected clusters at redshifts of z
> 0.4, both clusters are modest X-ray emitters with bolometric luminosities of
only Lx = 1.4 - 2.0 x 10^(44) erg/s. We measure gas temperatures of T = 2.88
(+0.71/-0.49) keV for Cl 1324+3011 and 2.51 (+1.05/-0.69) keV for Cl 1604+4304.
The X-ray properties of both clusters are consistent with the high-redshift
Lx-T relation measured from X-ray-selected samples at z > 0.5. However, based
on the local relations, their X-ray luminosities and temperatures are low for
their measured velocity dispersions (sigma). The clusters are cooler by a
factor of 2 - 9 compared to the local sigma-T relation. We briefly discuss the
possible explanations for these results.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal Letters; version with full resolution figures available at
http://bubba.ucdavis.edu/~lubin/xmm.pd
Construction and Test of a Flux Modulation Superconducting Machine for Aircraft
International audienceThe increasing of drives towards More Electric Aircraft (MEA) or the development of electric propulsion aircraft calls for MW-class electrical machines with more compact and power dense designs. One way is to explore the use of superconducting materials to create a high magnetic field in order to reduce the mass of ferromagnetic components. This paper presents the construction and the test of a brushless axial flux superconducting machine. The brushless topology satisfies the aeronautics industry requirements in terms of maintenance, while the axial configuration ensures an optimal use of the anisotropic HTS tapes. The machine is classed as partially superconducting, only the inductor is made with superconducting materials. A special design concerning the use of a stationary cryostat is presented. This improvement reduces significantly the electromagnetic air-gap length. A 50kW prototype is manufactured with a minimal mass objective. The prototype constitutes a first step to a scale-up MW-class machine design
Keck spectroscopy of CLASS gravitational lenses
We present the optical spectra of four newly discovered gravitational lenses
from the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS). These observations were carried
out using the Low Resolution Imaging Spectrograph on the W. M. Keck-I Telescope
as part of a program to study galaxy-scale gravitational lenses. From our
spectra we found the redshift of the background source in CLASS B0128+437
(z_s=3.1240+-0.0042) and the lensing galaxy redshifts in CLASS B0445+123
(z_l=0.5583+-0.0003) and CLASS B0850+054 (z_l=0.5883+-0.0006). Intriguingly, we
also discovered that CLASS B0631+519 may have two lensing galaxies
(z_l,1=0.0896+-0.0001, z_l,2=0.6196+-0.0004). We also found a single
unidentified emission line from the lensing galaxy in CLASS B0128+437 and the
lensed source in CLASS B0850+054. We find the lensing galaxies in CLASS
B0445+123 and CLASS B0631+519 (l,2) to be early-type galaxies with Einstein
Radii of 2.8-3.0 h^{-1} kpc. The deflector in CLASS B0850+054 is a late-type
galaxy with an Einstein Radius of 1.6 h^{-1} kpc.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
COMPASS: a 2.6m telescope for CMBR polarization studies
COMPASS (COsmic Microwave Polarization at Small Scale) is an experiment devoted to measuring the polarization of the CMBR. Its design and characteristics are presented
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