7,523 research outputs found
A Dialectological Survey of Northern and Central Kurdish.
This work comprises a survey of the Kurdish dialects spoken in the following northern areas, or by the following tribes of present-day Iraq: Sulaimaniya, Warmawa, Bingird, Pizdar, Arbil, Rawandiz, Xosnaw, Surcir, Akra, Amadiya, Barwari-zor, Gulli, and Zakho. With the sole exception of Sulaimani Kurdish none of these dialects has previously been described individually. A descriptive sketch of the Phonology, Morphology and Syntax of the dialects is therefore given, based on the evidence of the lingusitic material recorded by the writer in 1954-5. Where appropriate, reference is also made to other descriptions of Kurdish dialects, particularly that of the Mukri dialect by Oskar Mann. Certain phonetic and morphological features distinguishing the various dialects are then summarized and on the basis of this summary a division of the dialects into main, viz. Northern and Central, and subsidiary groups is suggested
On ‘Organized Crime’ in the illicit antiquities trade: moving beyond the definitional debate
The extent to which ‘organized crime’ is involved in illicit antiquities trafficking is unknown and frequently debated. This paper explores the significance and scale of the illicit antiquities trade as a unique transnational criminal phenomenon that is often said to be perpetrated by and exhibit traits of so-called ‘organized crime.’ The definitional debate behind the term ‘organized crime’ is considered as a potential problem impeding our understanding of its existence or extent in illicit antiquities trafficking, and a basic progression-based model is then suggested as a new tool to move beyond the definitional debate for future research that may help to elucidate the actors, processes and criminal dynamics taking place within the illicit antiquities trade from source to market. The paper concludes that researchers should focus not on the question of whether organized criminals- particularly in a traditionally conceived, mafia-type stereotypical sense- are involved in the illicit antiquities trade, but instead on the structure and progression of antiquities trafficking itself that embody both organized and criminal dynamics
Rigid-Band Shift of the Fermi Level in a Strongly Correlated Metal: Sr(2-y)La(y)RuO(4)
We report a systematic study of electron doping of Sr2RuO4 by non-isovalent
substitution of La^(3+) for Sr^(2+). Using a combination of de Haas-van Alphen
oscillations, specific heat, and resistivity measurements, we show that
electron doping leads to a rigid-band shift of the Fermi level corresponding to
one doped electron per La ion, with constant many-body quasiparticle mass
enhancement over the band mass. The susceptibility spectrum is substantially
altered and enhanced by the doping but this has surprisingly little effect on
the strength of the unconventional superconducting pairing.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
A condensed-mass advection based model for the simulation of liquid polar stratospheric clouds
International audienceWe present a condensed-mass advection based model (MADVEC) designed to simulate the condensation/evaporation of liquid polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) particles. A (Eulerian-in-radius) discretization scheme is used, making the model suitable for use in global or mesoscale chemistry and transport models (CTMs). The mass advection equations are solved using an adaption of the weighted average flux (WAF) scheme. We validate the numerical scheme using an analytical solution for multicomponent aerosols. The physics of the model are tested using a test case designed by Meilinger et al. (1995). The results from this test corroborate the composition gradients across the size distribution under rapid cooling conditions that were reported in earlier studies.</p
Cartan Pairs
A new notion of Cartan pairs as a substitute of notion of vector fields in
noncommutative geometry is proposed. The correspondence between Cartan pairs
and differential calculi is established.Comment: 7 pages in LaTeX, to be published in Czechoslovak Journal of Physics,
presented at the 5th Colloquium on Quantum Groups and Integrable Systems,
Prague, June 199
The mean field infinite range p=3 spin glass: equilibrium landscape and correlation time scales
We investigate numerically the dynamical behavior of the mean field 3-spin
spin glass model: we study equilibrium dynamics, and compute equilibrium time
scales as a function of the system size V. We find that for increasing volumes
the time scales increase like . We also present an
accurate study of the equilibrium static properties of the system.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure
A Tale of Two Narrow-Line Regions: Ionization, Kinematics, and Spectral Energy Distributions for a Local Pair of Merging Obscured Active Galaxies
We explore the gas ionization and kinematics, as well as the optical--IR
spectral energy distributions for UGC 11185, a nearby pair of merging galaxies
hosting obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs), also known as SDSS
J181611.72+423941.6 and J181609.37+423923.0 (J1816NE and J1816SW, ). Due to the wide separation between these interacting galaxies ( kpc), observations of these objects provide a rare glimpse of the
concurrent growth of supermassive black holes at an early merger stage. We use
BPT line diagnostics to show that the full extent of the narrow line emission
in both galaxies is photoionized by an AGN and confirm the existence of a
10-kpc-scale ionization cone in J1816NE, while in J1816SW the AGN narrow-line
region is much more compact (1--2 kpc) and relatively undisturbed. Our
observations also reveal the presence of ionized gas that nearly spans the
entire distance between the galaxies which is likely in a merger-induced tidal
stream. In addition, we carry out a spectral analysis of the X-ray emission
using data from {\em XMM-Newton}. These galaxies represent a useful pair to
explore how the [\ion{O}{3}] luminosity of an AGN is dependent on the size of
the region used to explore the extended emission. Given the growing evidence
for AGN "flickering" over short timescales, we speculate that the appearances
and impact of these AGNs may change multiple times over the course of the
galaxy merger, which is especially important given that these objects are
likely the progenitors of the types of systems commonly classified as "dual
AGNs."Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
Obstructed viscoplastic flow in a Hele–Shaw cell
Experiments are conducted exploring the flow of Carbopol past obstacles in a narrow slot and compared with predictions of a model based on the Herschel-Bulkley constitutive law and the conventional Hele-Shaw approximation. Although Carbopol is often assumed to be a relatively simple yield-stress fluid, the flow pattern around an obstacle markedly lacks the fore-aft symmetry expected theoretically. Such asymmetry has been observed previously for viscoplastic flows past obstacles in unconfined geometries, but the narrowness of the Hele-Shaw cell ensures that the stress state is very different, placing further constraints on the underlying origin. The asymmetry is robust, as demonstrated by varying the shape and number of the obstacles, the surfaces of the cell walls, and the steadiness of the flow rate. The results suggest that rheological hysteresis near the yield point may be the cause of the asymmetry
Analytic Perturbation Theory for Practitioners and Upsilon Decay
Within the ghost-free Analytic Perturbation Theory (APT), devised in the last
decade for low energy QCD, simple approximations are proposed for 3-loop
analytic couplings and their effective powers, in both the space-like
(Euclidean) and time-like (Minkowskian) regions, accurate enough in the large
range (1--100 GeV) of current physical interest.\par Effectiveness of the new
Model is illustrated by the example of decay where the
standard analysis gives value that is
inconsistent with the bulk of data for .
Instead, we obtain that
corresponds to that is close to the world
average.\par The issue of scale uncertainty for decay is also
discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 0 figures. Model slightly modified to increase its
accuracy. Numerical results upgraded, references added. The issue of scale
uncertainty is discusse
Lead in Residential Water Heaters: An Analysis of Lead Dissolution Kinetics in Non-Ideal Aquatic Environments
Lead dioxide, a lead corrosion product, is an important contributor to residential drinking water contamination. A neurotoxin and endocrine disruptor, lead poses serious human health concerns. Despite previous research on water distribution pipes, lead in water heating and softening systems is unexplored. Standard tank water heaters and water softeners have significantly different aquatic environments compared to distribution pipes, due to increased temperature and ion concentration levels. This research verifies the iodometric method for lead dioxide detection and quantifies total lead and dissolved lead(IV) ions over time in simulated water heater and softener environments. Initial experiments confirmed the iodometric method for lead(IV) and measured absorbance with UV-spectrometry. Another set of experiments quantified the dissolved lead(IV) cation in a filtered lead-water mixture by applying the iodometric method to batch reactors, and varying water source (DI, synthetic tap water), temperature (25, 55°C), and NaCl concentration (0.175, 0.584 g/L). Furthermore, each sample was analyzed by ICP-OES to determine the concentration of elemental lead present. The iodometric method resulted in an 80% recovery of dosed lead over one hour. Dissolved lead(IV) ion, conversely, had very little recovery after a week in each batch reactor. Overall, the iodometric method is an accurate and rapid tool for quantifying and comparing dissolution kinetics of total lead dioxide. In contrast, at the temperatures and ionic strength levels investigated, lead(IV) cations may exist in such low concentrations that iodometry may not be an accurate detection method. Future research should consider additional lead species for complete lead dissolution models of water heating and softening systems
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