1,254 research outputs found
Russell Square: a lifelong resource for teaching and learning
A quarter of a century ago, in 1978, Birkbeck College’s Faculty of Continuing Education (FCE, then the Department for Extra-Mural Studies of the federal University) moved to the offices that it now occupies in numbers 26 and 25 Russell Square. Then, as now, FCE was the one of the largest and most active extra-mural departments of any British university, with an enormous range of courses covering virtually every subject taught in ‘internal’ university departments and many more besides 1. Some of these courses have, from time to time, used Russell Square as a learning resource. Many more staff and students alike have (along with thousands of local workers, tourists and residents) used the square’s gardens for relaxation and recovery, without reflecting on its origins or present significance.
This Occasional Paper examines the past and present fabric of Russell Square (‘the Square’) as a resource for teaching and learning. It is a composite narrative assembled by FCE staff whose disciplines range from nature conservation through garden history and architectural history to social policy. It deconstructs the Square as an entity and attempts to decipher some of its ‘meanings’ that provide links between subjects taught within FCE.
We hope that it will stimulate discussion about the way this single ‘place’ – our Square - can be ‘seen’ or interpreted in different ways for diverse purposes, and about the way that it can be used as a resource for teaching and learning across disciplines
Growth and maturity of the Pacific razor clam in eastern Cook Inlet, AK
Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2014In Alaska, the only road-accessible fishery for the Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula, is located in eastern Cook Inlet, and has been monitored by the Alaska Department of Fish & Game (ADF&G) since 1964. In recent years, a shift has been observed in size, age, and number of clam cohorts in this region, yet little is known about the early life history of razor clams in this region. This study aimed to provide information on length and age at maturity, growth rates, and spawn timing at two beaches in eastern Cook Inlet, Ninilchik and Clam Gulch, in 2009 and 2010. At Clam Gulch, only 20% of the sampled population was reproductive, compared with 83% at Ninilchik. At Ninilchik, clams were reproductive at a smaller size and younger age (p<0.05) than previously documented. The Ninilchik clams grew faster and had a larger size at age (p<0.05) than at Clam Gulch. A body condition index of clams from Clam Gulch was consistently 50% lower than at Ninilchik. Despite the relative proximity (25 km) of these locations, it is possible that environmental conditions may be different, resulting in differences in growth and reproductive output. This information is of special interest to fisheries managers as they address recent declines in the eastern Cook Inlet razor clam population and provides a benchmark for future management decisions
Persistent superfluid flow arising from the He-McKellar-Wilkens effect in molecular dipolar condensates
We show that the He-McKellar-Wilkens effect can induce a persistent flow in a
Bose-Einstein condensate of polar molecules confined in a toroidal trap, with
the dipolar interaction mediated via an electric dipole moment. For
Bose-Einstein condensates of atoms with a magnetic dipole moment, we show that
although it is theoretically possible to induce persistent flow via the
Aharonov-Casher effect, the strength of electric field required is prohibitive.
We also outline an experimental geometry tailored specifically for observing
the He-McKellar-Wilkens effect in toroidally-trapped condensates.Comment: 5 pages 2 figure
Direct Improvement of Hamiltonian Lattice Gauge Theory
We demonstrate that a direct approach to improving Hamiltonian lattice gauge
theory is possible. Our approach is to correct errors in the Kogut-Susskind
Hamiltonian by incorporating additional gauge invariant terms. The coefficients
of these terms are chosen so that the order classical errors vanish. We
conclude with a brief discussion of tadpole improvement in Hamiltonian lattice
gauge theory.Comment: 9 page
On the continuous spectral component of the Floquet operator for a periodically kicked quantum system
By a straightforward generalisation, we extend the work of Combescure from
rank-1 to rank-N perturbations. The requirement for the Floquet operator to be
pure point is established and compared to that in Combescure. The result
matches that in McCaw. The method here is an alternative to that work. We show
that if the condition for the Floquet operator to be pure point is relaxed,
then in the case of the delta-kicked Harmonic oscillator, a singularly
continuous component of the Floquet operator spectrum exists. We also provide
an in depth discussion of the conjecture presented in Combescure of the case
where the unperturbed Hamiltonian is more general. We link the physics
conjecture directly to a number-theoretic conjecture of Vinogradov and show
that a solution of Vinogradov's conjecture solves the physics conjecture. The
result is extended to the rank-N case. The relationship between our work and
the work of Bourget on the physics conjecture is discussed.Comment: 25 pages, published in Journal of Mathematical Physic
Neutrino clustering and the Z-burst model
The possibility that the observed Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays are generated
by high energy neutrinos creating "Z-bursts" in resonant interactions with the
background neutrinos has been proposed, but there are difficulties in
generating enough events with reasonable incident neutrino fluxes.
We point out that this difficulty is overcome if the background neutrinos
have coalesced into "neutrino clouds" --- a possibility previously suggested by
some of us in another context. The limitations that this mechanism for the
generation of UHECRs places on the high energy neutrino flux, on the masses of
the background neutrinos and the characteristics of the neutrino clouds are
spelled out.Comment: 13 pages and 3 figures. Contributed to the XX International Symposium
on Lepton and Photon Interactions at High Energies, Rome, July 2001, and to
the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics, Budapest,
July 2001. Preprint numbers added, misprints correcte
Construction and analysis of a simplified many-body neutrino model
In dense neutrino systems, such as found in the early Universe, or near a
supernova core, neutrino flavor evolution is affected by coherent
neutrino-neutrino scattering. It has been recently suggested that many-particle
quantum entanglement effects may play an essential role in these systems,
potentially invalidating the traditional description in terms of a set of
single-particle evolution equations. We model the neutrino system by a system
of interacting spins, following an earlier work which showed that such a spin
system can in some cases be solved exactly. We extend this work by constructing
an exact analytical solution to a more general spin system, including initial
states with asymmetric spin distribution and, moreover, not necessarily aligned
along the same axis. Our solution exhibits a rich set of behaviors, including
coherent oscillations and dephasing and a transition from the classical to
quantum regimes. We argue that the classical evolution of the spin system
captures the entire coherent behavior of the neutrino system, while the quantum
effects in the spin system capture some, but not all, of the neutrino
incoherent evolution. By comparing the spin and neutrino systems, we find no
evidence for the violation of the accepted one-body description, though the
argument involves some subtleties not appreciated before. The analysis in this
paper may apply to other two-state systems beyond the neutrino field.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Neutrino masses or new interactions
Recent proposals to study the mass of the "electron" neutrino at a
sensitivity of 0.3 eV can be used to place limits on the right handed and
scalar charged currents at a level which improves on the present experimental
limits. Indeed the neglect of the possibility of such interactions can lead to
the inference of an incorrect value for the mass, as we illustrate.Comment: 12 pages and 3 figures. Contributed to the XX International Symposium
on Lepton and Photon Interactions at High Energies, Rome, July 2001, and to
the International Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics, Budapest,
July 2001. Preprint numbers added, misprints correcte
Resonances in the one-dimensional Dirac equation in the presence of a point interaction and a constant electric field
We show that the energy spectrum of the one-dimensional Dirac equation in the
presence of a spatial confining point interaction exhibits a resonant behavior
when one includes a weak electric field. After solving the Dirac equation in
terms of parabolic cylinder functions and showing explicitly how the resonant
behavior depends on the sign and strength of the electric field, we derive an
approximate expression for the value of the resonance energy in terms of the
electric field and delta interaction strength.Comment: 9 pages. To appear in Physics Letters
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