980 research outputs found
Community Service to the Elderly A Service-Learning Model: Guidelines for Replication
At the University of Pittsburgh, Generations Together, an Intergenerational Studies Program develops programs that bring young and old together in ways that benefit both generations. The University Challenge for Excellence Program (DCEP) works with entering students who are often first generation, mostly African-American, and who may be in need of special assistance during their first year. UCEP seeks ways to raise their self esteem, give them a sense of purpose, connect them to the University, and ultimately to retain them at Pitt through graduation. In 1994, these two university programs joined together with the Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh (HACP) to develop a program that addresses the needs of UCEP students and older adults in Pittsburgh. The result of this collaboration is an intergenerational community service project which was funded by the U. S. Department of Education\u27s Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE)
First exit times and residence times for discrete random walks on finite lattices
In this paper, we derive explicit formulas for the surface averaged first
exit time of a discrete random walk on a finite lattice. We consider a wide
class of random walks and lattices, including random walks in a non-trivial
potential landscape. We also compute quantities of interest for modelling
surface reactions and other dynamic processes, such as the residence time in a
subvolume, the joint residence time of several particles and the number of hits
on a reflecting surface.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figure
A cosmological model in Weyl-Cartan spacetime
We present a cosmological model for early stages of the universe on the basis
of a Weyl-Cartan spacetime. In this model, torsion and
nonmetricity are proportional to the vacuum polarization.
Extending earlier work of one of us (RT), we discuss the behavior of the cosmic
scale factor and the Weyl 1-form in detail. We show how our model fits into the
more general framework of metric-affine gravity (MAG).Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, typos corrected, uses IOP style fil
Exact solution for random walks on the triangular lattice with absorbing boundaries
The problem of a random walk on a finite triangular lattice with a single
interior source point and zig-zag absorbing boundaries is solved exactly. This
problem has been previously considered intractable.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, IOP macro
The Clusters AgeS Experiment (CASE). II. The Eclipsing Blue Straggler OGLEGC-228 in the Globular Cluster 47 Tuc
We use photometric and spectroscopic observations of the eclipsing binary
OGLEGC-228 (V228) to derive the masses, radii, and luminosities of the
component stars. Based on measured systemic velocity, proper motion and
distance, the system is a blue straggler member of the globular cluster 47 Tuc.
Our analysis shows that V228 is a semi-detached Algol. We obtain M=1.512 +/-
0.022 Msun, R=1.357 +/- 0.019 Rsun, L=7.02 +/- 0.050 Lsun for the hotter and
more luminous primary component and M=0.200 +/- 0.007 Msun, R=1.238 +/- 0.013
Rsun, L=1.57 +/- 0.09 Lsun for the Roche lobe filling secondary.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, AJ, in pres
Aquaculture and eelgrass Zostera marina interactions in temperate ecosystems
This paper reviews the impacts of shellfish and finfish aquaculture on eelgrassZostera marina, the most widely distributed seagrass species in the northern hemisphere. Shellfish aquaculture can have positive, neutral, and negative effects on eelgrass. Positive interactions can be generated by the filtering activity of cultured bivalves, which may improve water quality and reduce epiphyte loads, and shellfish biodeposits may provide more nutrients to eelgrass and other vegetation. However, negative responses are more commonly reported and can be causedby shading and sedimentation. These negative effects tend to occur directly under and immediately surrounding shellfish farms and rapidly diminish with increasing distance. In contrast to shellfish aquaculture, only one field study has investigated the effects of finfish aquaculture on eelgrass in a temperate setting, and the results were inconclusive. However, many studies have investigated the effects of Mediterranean finfish farms on 2 other species of seagrass (Posidoniaoceanica and Cymodocea nodosa). These studies reported clear negative interactions, which have been linked to increased nutrient concentrations, sulphides, sedimentation, epiphyte loads, and grazing pressure. It is unknown if these studies are relevant for finfish aquaculture in temperate regions due to differences in environmental conditions, and because the studies focused on differ-ent species of seagrass. Thus, further study in a temperate setting is warranted. We conclude by highlighting key research gaps that could help regulators establish unambiguous operational and siting guidelines that minimize the potential for negative interactions between aquaculture and eelgrass
Another Non-segregated Blue Straggler Population in a Globular Cluster: the Case of NGC 2419
We have used a combination of ACS-HST high-resolution and wide-field SUBARU
data in order to study the Blue Straggler Star (BSS) population over the entire
extension of the remote Galactic globular cluster NGC 2419. The BSS population
presented here is among the largest ever observed in any stellar system, with
more than 230 BSS in the brightest portion of the sequence. The radial
distribution of the selected BSS is essentially the same as that of the other
cluster stars. In this sense the BSS radial distribution is similar to that of
omega Centauri and unlike that of all Galactic globular clusters studied to
date, which have highly centrally segregated distributions and, in most cases,
a pronounced upturn in the external regions. As in the case of omega Centauri,
this evidence indicates that NGC 2419 is not yet relaxed even in the central
regions. This observational fact is in agreement with estimated half-mass
relaxation time, which is of the order of the cluster age.Comment: in press in the Ap
Mathisson-Papapetrou equations in metric and gauge theories of gravity in a Lagrangian formulation
We present a simple method to derive the semiclassical equations of motion
for a spinning particle in a gravitational field. We investigate the cases of
classical, rotating particles (pole-dipole particles), as well as particles
with intrinsic spin. We show that, starting with a simple Lagrangian, one can
derive equations for the spin evolution and momentum propagation in the
framework of metric theories of gravity and in theories based on a
Riemann-Cartan geometry (Poincare gauge theory), without explicitly referring
to matter current densities (spin and energy-momentum). Our results agree with
those derived from the multipole expansion of the current densities by the
conventional Papapetrou method and from the WKB analysis for elementary
particles.Comment: 28 page
The Apparent Fractal Conjecture: Scaling Features in Standard Cosmologies
This paper presents an analysis of the smoothness problem in cosmology by
focussing on the ambiguities originated in the simplifying hypotheses aimed at
observationally verifying if the large-scale distribution of galaxies is
homogeneous, and conjecturing that this distribution should follow a fractal
pattern in perturbed standard cosmologies. This is due to a geometrical effect,
appearing when certain types of average densities are calculated along the past
light cone. The paper starts reviewing the argument concerning the possibility
that the galaxy distribution follows such a scaling pattern, and the premises
behind the assumption that the spatial homogeneity of standard cosmology can be
observable. Next, it is argued that to discuss observable homogeneity one needs
to make a clear distinction between local and average relativistic densities,
and showing how the different distance definitions strongly affect them,
leading the various average densities to display asymptotically opposite
behaviours. Then the paper revisits Ribeiro's (1995: astro-ph/9910145) results,
showing that in a fully relativistic treatment some observational average
densities of the flat Friedmann model are not well defined at z ~ 0.1, implying
that at this range average densities behave in a fundamentally different manner
as compared to the linearity of the Hubble law, well valid for z < 1. This
conclusion brings into question the widespread assumption that relativistic
corrections can always be neglected at low z. It is also shown how some key
features of fractal cosmologies can be found in the Friedmann models. In view
of those findings, it is suggested that the so-called contradiction between the
cosmological principle, and the galaxy distribution forming an unlimited
fractal structure, may not exist.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX. This paper is a follow-up to
gr-qc/9909093. Accepted for publication in "General Relativity and
Gravitation
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