35,565 research outputs found
Experimental determination of the particle motions associated with the low order acoustic modes in enclosures
A procedure for experimentally determining, in terms of the particle motions, the shapes of the low order acoustic modes in enclosures is described. The procedure is based on finding differentiable functions which approximate the shape functions of the low order acoustic modes when these modes are defined in terms of the acoustic pressure. The differentiable approximating functions are formed from polynomials which are fitted by a least squares procedure to experimentally determined values which define the shapes of the low order acoustic modes in terms of the acoustic pressure. These experimentally determined values are found by a conventional technique in which the transfer functions, which relate the acoustic pressures at an array of points in the enclosure to the volume velocity of a fixed point source, are measured. The gradient of the function which approximates the shape of a particular mode in terms of the acoustic pressure is evaluated to give the mode shape in terms of the particle motion. The procedure was tested by using it to experimentally determine the shapes of the low order acoustic modes in a small rectangular enclosure
X-ray Emission from the 3C 273 Jet
We present results from four recent Chandra monitoring observations of the
jet in 3C 273 using the ACIS detector, obtained between November 2003 and July
2004. We find that the X-ray emission comes in two components: unresolved knots
that are smaller than the corresponding optically emitting knots and a broad
channel that is about the same width as the optical interknot region. We
compute the jet speed under the assumption that the X-ray emission is due to
inverse Compton scattering of the cosmic microwave background, finding that the
dimming of the jet X-ray emission to the jet termination relative to the radio
emission may be due to bulk deceleration.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
Numerical Studies of the Compressible Ising Spin Glass
We study a two-dimensional compressible Ising spin glass at constant volume.
The spin interactions are coupled to the distance between neighboring particles
in the Edwards-Anderson model with +/- J interactions. We find that the energy
of a given spin configuration is shifted from its incompressible value, E_0, by
an amount quadratic in E_0 and proportional to the coupling strength. We then
construct a simple model expressed only in terms of spin variables that
predicts the existence of a critical value of the coupling above which the
spin-glass transition disappears.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Adjustment with aphasia after stroke: study protocol for a pilot feasibility randomised controlled trial for SUpporting wellbeing through PEeR Befriending (SUPERB)
Background: Despite the high prevalence of mood problems after stroke, evidence on effective interventions particularly for those with aphasia is limited. There is a pressing need to systematically evaluate interventions aiming to improve wellbeing for people with stroke and aphasia. This study aims to evaluate the feasibility of a peer-befriending intervention.
Methods/design: SUPERB is a single blind, parallel group feasibility trial of peer befriending for people with aphasia post-stroke and low levels of psychological distress. The trial includes a nested qualitative study and pilot economic evaluation and it compares usual care (n = 30) with usual care + peer befriending (n = 30). Feasibility outcomes include proportion screened who meet criteria, proportion who consent, rate of consent, number of missing/incomplete data on outcome measures, attrition rate at follow-up, potential value of conducting main trial using value of information analysis (economic evaluation), description of usual care, and treatment fidelity of peer befriending. Assessments and outcome measures (mood, wellbeing, communication, and social participation) for participants and significant others will be administered at baseline, with outcome measures re-administered at 4 and 10 months post-randomisation. Peer befrienders will complete outcome measures before training and after they have completed two cycles of befriending. The qualitative study will use semi-structured interviews of purposively sampled participants (n = 20) and significant others (n = 10) from both arms of the trial, and all peer befrienders to explore the acceptability of procedures and experiences of care. The pilot economic evaluation will utilise the European Quality of life measure (EQ-5D-5 L) and a stroke-adapted version of the Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI).
Discussion: This study will provide information on feasibility outcomes and an initial indication of whether peer befriending is a suitable intervention to explore further in a definitive phase III randomised controlled trial.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02947776, registered 28th October 2016
Local magnetic anisotropy in BaFeAs: a polarized inelastic neutron scattering study
The anisotropy of the magnetic excitations in BaFeAs was studied by
polarized inelastic neutron scattering which allows one to separate the
components of the magnetic response. Despite the in-plane orientation of the
static ordered moment we find the in-plane polarized magnons to exhibit a
larger gap than the out-of-plane polarized ones indicating very strong
single-ion anisotropy within the layers. It costs more energy to rotate a spin
within the orthorhombic {\it a-b} plane than rotating it perpendicular to the
FeAs layers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Gratings photowritten in ion-exchanged glass channel waveguides
Gratings are photowritten in ion-exchanged glass channel waveguides. The transmission of these waveguides shows a rejection dip of almost 20dB. The polarisation dependence of these waveguide gratings is measured and discussed
Grating formation in BGG31 glass by UV exposure
A three-dimensional index variation grating in bulk BGG31 glass written using neither hydrogen loading nor germanium doping is demonstrated. This material is useful for fabricating ion-exchanged waveguides, and its photosensitivity to ultraviolet (UV) radiation at 248nm has not been previously explored. Intensity measurements of the Bragg diffracted spots indicated a maximum index variation (Delta n) of similar to 4 x 10(-5)
Is feedforward the way forward?
Objectives: The Feedforward Interview (FFI) is a means of structuring conversations (Kluger
& Nir, 2006), such as performance appraisals, or indeed coaching in organisations. Conceptually situated in a positive psychological paradigm, FFI techniques build on appreciative inquiry (Cooperrider
& Srivastva, 1987), positive psychology (Seligman
& Csikszentmihalyi, 2002) and Feedback Intervention Theory ( Kluger
& DeNisi, 1996). The objective of this research was to investigate how FFI affects individual outcomes compared to traditional feedback as part of a coaching session. Design: we conducted a quasi-experimental longitudinal study allocating Fifty four participants randomly to either a FFI or Feedback based coaching intervention. Methods: We measured self-efficacy, mood and strengths-confidence as well goal attainment before and after each intervention. Results: Self-efficacy significantly increased following FFI compared to feedback; participants were more likely to obtain their goals in the FFI condition. There were no significant differences for mood; and no main effects for strengths-knowledge but a significant interaction. Conclusions: The results indicate that FFI appears a valid intervention to facilitate positive psychological change as part of a coaching session. We discuss the potential for further research including the evaluation of transfer of learning arising from FFI in experimental paradigms as well as behavioural observations
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Psychological distress after stroke and aphasia: the first six months
Objective: We explored the factors that predicted psychological distress in the first six months post stroke in a sample including people with aphasia.
Design: Prospective longitudinal observational study.
Setting and subjects: Participants with a first stroke from two acute stroke units were assessed while still in hospital (baseline) and at three and six months post stroke.
Main measures: Distress was assessed with the General Health Questionnaire-12. Other measures included: NIH Stroke Scale, Barthel Index, Frenchay Aphasia Screening Test, Frenchay Activities Index, MOS Social Support Scale and social network indicators. Logistic regression was used to identify predictors of distress at each stage post stroke; and to determine what baseline factors predicted distress at six months.
Results: Eighty-seven participants were able to self-report on measures used, of whom 32 (37%) had aphasia. 71 (82%) were seen at six months, including 11 (16%) with aphasia. Predictors of distress were: stroke severity at baseline; low social support at three months; and loneliness and low satisfaction with social network at six months. The baseline factors that predicted distress at six months were psychological distress, loneliness and low satisfaction with social network (Nagelkerke R2 = 0.49). Aphasia was not a predictor of distress at any time point. Yet, at three months post stroke 93% of those with aphasia experienced high distress, as opposed to 50% of those without aphasia (χ2 (1) = 8.61, P<0.01).
Conclusions: Factors contributing to distress after stroke vary across time. Loneliness and low satisfaction with one’s social network are particularly important and contribute to long-term psychological distress
A massive warm baryonic halo in the Coma cluster
Several deep PSPC observations of the Coma cluster reveal a very large-scale
halo of soft X-ray emission, substantially in excess of the well known
radiation from the hot intra-cluster medium. The excess emission, previously
reported in the central region of the cluster using lower-sensitivity EUVE and
ROSAT data, is now evident out to a radius of 2.6 Mpc, demonstrating that the
soft excess radiation from clusters is a phenomenon of cosmological
significance. The X-ray spectrum at these large radii cannot be modeled
non-thermally, but is consistent with the original scenario of thermal emission
from warm gas at ~ 10^6 K. The mass of the warm gas is on par with that of the
hot X-ray emitting plasma, and significantly more massive if the warm gas
resides in low-density filamentary structures. Thus the data lend vital support
to current theories of cosmic evolution, which predict that at low redshift
\~30-40 % of the baryons reside in warm filaments converging at clusters of
galaxies.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, in pres
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