28 research outputs found
The social structure of southern Somali tribes
The subject is the social structure of a southern Somali
community of about six thousand people, the Geledi, in the pre-colonial
period; and the manner in which it has reacted to colonial and other
modern influences.
Part A deals with the pre-colonial situation. Section 1 deals
with the historical background up to the nineteenth century, first
giving the general geographic and ethnographic setting, to show what
elements went to the making of this community, and then giving the
Geledi's own account of their history and movement up to that time.
Section 2 deals with the structure of the society during the
nineteenth century. Successive chapters deal with the basic units
and categories into which this community divided both itself and the
others with which it was in contact; with their material culture;
with economic life; with slavery, which is shown to have been at the
foundation of the social order; with the political and legal structure;
and with the conduct of war. The chapter on the 'sultanate' examines
the politico-religious office of the Sheikh or Sultan as the focal point
of the community, and how under successive occupants of this position,
the Geledi became the dominant power in this part of Somalia.
Part B deals with colonial and post-colonial influences. After
an outline of the history of Somalia since 1889, with special reference
to Geledi, the changes in society brought about by those events are described. The section on Afgoi in the nineteen-sixties deals with
the developments in population, general culture, economic life, politics and law.
A chapter describes the New Year customary 'stick fight',
and considers the significance of this tradition in the life of Geledi.
The concluding Section D siiminiiiaes the developments in this
community, in its transition from an autonomous small polity to a part
of a modern nation state. The old elite based on wealth, originally
in slaves, was being replaced by a new one based on education; but
the latter derived from the former, and the representatives of both cooperated
together
Photon scattering from strongly driven atomic ensembles
The second order correlation function for light emitted from a strongly and
near-resonantly driven dilute cloud of atoms is discussed. Because of the
strong driving, the fluorescence spectrum separates into distinct peaks, for
which the spectral properties can be defined individually. It is shown that the
second-order correlations for various combinations of photons from different
spectral lines exhibit bunching together with super- or sub-Poissonian photon
statistics, tunable by the choice of the detector positions. Additionally, a
Cauchy-Schwarz inequality is violated for photons emitted from particular
spectral bands. The emitted light intensity is proportional to the square of
the number of particles, and thus can potentially be intense. Three different
averaging procedures to model ensemble disorder are compared.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Refractive-index matching avoids local field corrections and scattering bias in solid-state Na <inf>2</inf>SO <inf>4</inf> ultraviolet Raman cross-section measurements
We report a refractive-index matching method to measure nonabsorbing solid ultraviolet (UV) Raman cross-sections that avoids the local field correction and interface scattering of incident light. We used refractiveindex- matched chloroform as an internal standard to determine the solidstate 995 cm -1Na 2SO 4 244 nm Raman cross-sections. The pure liquid chloroform 668 cm -1 244 nm Raman cross-section was determined by using acetonitrile as an internal standard and by calculating the local field corrections for the observed Raman intensities. Our measured 244 nm UV Raman cross-section of the solid-state 995 cm -1 SO 42- band of 1.97 ±0.07 6 10 -28 cm2/(molc.sr) is about half of its aqueous solution Raman crosssection, indicating interactions between the sulfate species in the solid that decrease the Raman polarizability. © 2012 Society for Applied Spectroscopy