950 research outputs found
Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
Previous studies have reported that students employed different problem solving approaches when presented with the same task structured with different representations. In this study, we explored and compared students’ strategies as they attempted tasks from two topical areas, kinematics and work. Our participants were 19 engineering students taking a calculus-based physics course. The tasks were presented in linguistic, graphical, and symbolic forms and requested either a qualitative solution or a value. The analysis was both qualitative and quantitative in nature focusing principally on the characteristics
of the strategies employed as well as the underlying reasoning for their applications. A comparison was also made for the same student’s approach with the same kind of representation across the two topics.
Additionally, the participants’ overall strategies across the different tasks, in each topic, were considered. On the whole, we found that the students prefer manipulating equations irrespective of the representational format of the task. They rarely recognized the applicability of a ‘‘qualitative’’ approach to solve the
problem although they were aware of the concepts involved. Even when the students included visual representations in their solutions, they seldom used these representations in conjunction with the
mathematical part of the problem. Additionally, the students were not consistent in their approach for interpreting and solving problems with the same kind of representation across the two topical areas. The representational format, level of prior knowledge, and familiarity with a topic appeared to influence their
strategies, their written responses, and their ability to recognize qualitative ways to attempt a problem. The nature of the solution does not seem to impact the strategies employed to handle the problem
Existence and Stability of Symmetric Periodic Simultaneous Binary Collision Orbits in the Planar Pairwise Symmetric Four-Body Problem
We extend our previous analytic existence of a symmetric periodic
simultaneous binary collision orbit in a regularized fully symmetric equal mass
four-body problem to the analytic existence of a symmetric periodic
simultaneous binary collision orbit in a regularized planar pairwise symmetric
equal mass four-body problem. We then use a continuation method to numerically
find symmetric periodic simultaneous binary collision orbits in a regularized
planar pairwise symmetric 1, m, 1, m four-body problem for between 0 and 1.
Numerical estimates of the the characteristic multipliers show that these
periodic orbits are linearly stability when , and are
linearly unstable when .Comment: 6 figure
Study of Knowledge, Attitudes, Perceptions and Beliefs Regarding HIV and AIDS, 1992
The aim of the study was to assess levels of knowledge, types of attitudes, perceptions and beliefs of the general public regarding HIV infection and AIDS. The public awareness campaign of the AIDS programme was carried out by many media, and personal counselling through family-planning personnel, teachers, activists, AIDS Training and Information Centres (ATIC) counsellors and other concerned groups and organisations over some time. However, there were uncertainties as to whether these efforts succeeded in informing the public about AIDS and HIV infection. This study aimed to establish a valid baseline assessment of the levels of knowledge, the awareness, perceptions and attitudes of the general public in order to recommend appropriate programme adjustment if needed. This study had two functions:
a)Descriptive function relevant to programme evaluation (i.e. how many people have correct knowledge regarding AIDS and HIV, as well as the quantity of some attitudes relevant to this study)
b) Predictive function in terms of possible risk behaviours (i.e. how knowledge, attitudes, perceptions, beliefs, behaviours and certain biographical traits relate to one another)
Power Corrections to Fragmentation Functions in Flavour-Singlet Deep Inelastic Scattering
We investigate the power-suppressed corrections to fragmentation functions in
flavour-singlet deep inelastic lepton scattering, to complement the previous
results for the non-singlet contribution. Our method is a dispersive approach
based on an analysis of Feynman graphs containing massive gluons. As in
non-singlet deep inelastic scattering we find that the leading corrections are
proportional to 1/Q^2.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Relative Equilibria in the Four-Vortex Problem with Two Pairs of Equal Vorticities
We examine in detail the relative equilibria in the four-vortex problem where
two pairs of vortices have equal strength, that is, \Gamma_1 = \Gamma_2 = 1 and
\Gamma_3 = \Gamma_4 = m where m is a nonzero real parameter. One main result is
that for m > 0, the convex configurations all contain a line of symmetry,
forming a rhombus or an isosceles trapezoid. The rhombus solutions exist for
all m but the isosceles trapezoid case exists only when m is positive. In fact,
there exist asymmetric convex configurations when m < 0. In contrast to the
Newtonian four-body problem with two equal pairs of masses, where the symmetry
of all convex central configurations is unproven, the equations in the vortex
case are easier to handle, allowing for a complete classification of all
solutions. Precise counts on the number and type of solutions (equivalence
classes) for different values of m, as well as a description of some of the
bifurcations that occur, are provided. Our techniques involve a combination of
analysis and modern and computational algebraic geometry
Photoproduction of mesons in nuclei at GeV energies
In a transport model that combines initial state interactions of the photon
with final state interactions of the produced particles we present a
calculation of inclusive photoproduction of mesons in nuclei in the energy
range from 1 to 7 GeV. We give predictions for the photoproduction cross
sections of pions, etas, kaons, antikaons, and invariant mass
spectra in ^{12}C and ^{208}Pb. The effects of nuclear shadowing and final
state interaction of the produced particles are discussed in detail.Comment: Text added in summary in general reliability of the method,
references updated. Phys. Rev. C (2000) in pres
The Basics of Water Waves Theory for Analogue Gravity
This chapter gives an introduction to the connection between the physics of
water waves and analogue gravity. Only a basic knowledge of fluid mechanics is
assumed as a prerequisite.Comment: 36 pages. Lecture Notes for the IX SIGRAV School on "Analogue
Gravity", Como (Italy), May 201
On the Potts model partition function in an external field
We study the partition function of Potts model in an external (magnetic)
field, and its connections with the zero-field Potts model partition function.
Using a deletion-contraction formulation for the partition function Z for this
model, we show that it can be expanded in terms of the zero-field partition
function. We also show that Z can be written as a sum over the spanning trees,
and the spanning forests, of a graph G. Our results extend to Z the well-known
spanning tree expansion for the zero-field partition function that arises
though its connections with the Tutte polynomial
Connection between Chiral Symmetry Restoration and Deconfinement
We propose a simple explanation for the connection between chiral symmetry
restoration and deconfinement in QCD at high temperature. In the Higgs
description of the QCD vacuum both spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking and
effective gluon masses are generated by the condensate of a color octet
quark-antiquark pair. The transition to the high temperature state proceeds by
the melting of this condensate. Quarks and gluons become (approximately)
massless at the same critical temperature. For instanton-dominated effective
multiquark interactions and three light quarks with equal mass we find a first
order phase transition at a critical temperature around 170 MeV.Comment: New section on vortices,33 pages,LaTe
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