2,789 research outputs found
They are looking... why not interacting? Understanding interaction around the public display of community sourced videos
In this paper, we study the extent to which the presentation of pedagogical videos on a public display at a communal space of the school is able to promote engagement around those videos. The videos were produced by students from the school itself. Using a mobile application, students could rate, create comments or simply bookmark videos. The evaluation of the platform is made through logs analysis, direct observation and a collective interview with end-users. The results show that even though the videos were able to attract many students to the display, there were not many of them that actually used the application to interact with content. In the final discussion, we explore some of the reasons that may justify this behavior and also the extent to which these videos have managed to foster students’ curiosity towards their topics.(undefined
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Constrained two-stream algorithm for calculating aerosol light absorption coefficient from the Particle Soot Absorption Photometer
We present a new correction scheme for filter-based absorption photometers based on a constrained two-stream (CTS) radiative transfer model and experimental calibrations. The two-stream model was initialized using experimentally accessible optical parameters of the filter. Experimental calibrations were taken from the literature and from dedicated experiments for the present manuscript. Uncertainties in the model and calibration experiments are discussed and uncertainties for retrieval of absorption coefficients are derived. For single-scattering albedos lower than 0.8, the new CTS method and also other correction schemes suffer from the uncertainty in calibration experiments, with an uncertainty of about 20% in the absorption coefficient. For high single-scattering albedos, the CTS correction significantly reduces errors. At a single-scattering albedo of about 0.98 the error can be reduced to 30%, whereas errors using the Bond correction (Bond et al., 1999) are up to 100%. The correction scheme was tested using data from an independent experiment. The tests confirm the modeled performance of the correction scheme when comparing the CTS method to other established correction methods
Isovector and isoscalar superfluid phases in rotating nuclei
The subtle interplay between the two nuclear superfluids, isovector T=1 and
isoscalar T=0 phases, are investigated in an exactly soluble model. It is shown
that T=1 and T=0 pair-modes decouple in the exact calculations with the T=1
pair-energy being independent of the T=0 pair-strength and vice-versa. In the
rotating-field, the isoscalar correlations remain constant in contrast to the
well known quenching of isovector pairing. An increase of the isoscalar (J=1,
T=0) pair-field results in a delay of the bandcrossing frequency. This
behaviour is shown to be present only near the N=Z line and its experimental
confirmation would imply a strong signature for isoscalar pairing collectivity.
The solutions of the exact model are also discussed in the
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approximation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Phase Transitions in Quantum Dots
We perform Hartree-Fock calculations to show that quantum dots (i.e. two
dimensional systems of up to twenty interacting electrons in an external
parabolic potential) undergo a gradual transition to a spin-polarized Wigner
crystal with increasing magnetic field strength. The phase diagram and ground
state energies have been determined. We tried to improve the ground state of
the Wigner crystal by introducing a Jastrow ansatz for the wavefunction and
performing a variational Monte Carlo calculation. The existence of so called
magic numbers was also investigated. Finally, we also calculated the heat
capacity associated with the rotational degree of freedom of deformed many-body
states.Comment: 14 pages, 7 postscript figure
Asymmetric Squares as Standing Waves in Rayleigh-Benard Convection
Possibility of asymmetric square convection is investigated numerically using
a few mode Lorenz-like model for thermal convection in Boussinesq fluids
confined between two stress free and conducting flat boundaries. For relatively
large value of Rayleigh number, the stationary rolls become unstable and
asymmetric squares appear as standing waves at the onset of secondary
instability. Asymmetric squares, two dimensional rolls and again asymmetric
squares with their corners shifted by half a wavelength form a stable limit
cycle.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Recovery of the persistent current induced by the electron-electron interaction in mesoscopic metallic rings
Persistent currents in mesoscopic metallic rings induced by static magnetic
fields are investigated by means of a Hamiltonian which incorporates diagonal
disorder and the electron-electron interaction through a Hubbard term ().
Correlations are included up to second order perturbation theory which is shown
to work accurately for of the order of the hopping integral. If disorder is
not very strong, interactions increase the current up to near its value for a
clean metal. Averaging over ring lengths eliminates the first Fourier component
of the current and reduces its value, which remains low after interactions are
included.Comment: uuencoded gzipped tar file containing the manuscript (tex file) and
four figures (postscript files). Accepted for publication in Solid State
Communications. Send e-mail to: [email protected]
Optical cavity tests of Lorentz invariance for the electron
A hypothetical violation of Lorentz invariance in the electrons' equation of
motion (expressed within the Lorentz-violating extension of the standard model)
leads to a change of the geometry of crystals and thus shifts the resonance
frequency of an electromagnetic cavity. This allows experimental tests of
Lorentz invariance of the electron sector of the standard model. The material
dependence of the effect allows to separate it from an additional shift caused
by Lorentz violation in electrodynamics, and to place independent limits on
both effects. From present experiments, upper limits on Lorentz violation in
the electrons' kinetic energy term are deduced.Comment: 17 pages revte
Axisymmetric core collapse simulations using characteristic numerical relativity
We present results from axisymmetric stellar core collapse simulations in
general relativity. Our hydrodynamics code has proved robust and accurate
enough to allow for a detailed analysis of the global dynamics of the collapse.
Contrary to traditional approaches based on the 3+1 formulation of the
gravitational field equations, our framework uses a foliation based on a family
of outgoing light cones, emanating from a regular center, and terminating at
future null infinity. Such a coordinate system is well adapted to the study of
interesting dynamical spacetimes in relativistic astrophysics such as stellar
core collapse and neutron star formation. Perhaps most importantly this
procedure allows for the unambiguous extraction of gravitational waves at
future null infinity without any approximation, along with the commonly used
quadrupole formalism for the gravitational wave extraction. Our results
concerning the gravitational wave signals show noticeable disagreement when
those are extracted by computing the Bondi news at future null infinity on the
one hand and by using the quadrupole formula on the other hand. We have strong
indication that for our setup the quadrupole formula on the null cone does not
lead to physical gravitational wave signals. The Bondi gravitational wave
signals extracted at infinity show typical oscillation frequencies of about 0.5
kHz.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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