13,600 research outputs found
Foundation degrees in biomedical science: the student experience
The first cohort of students on a University of Westminster foundation degree completed the course recently. Here, Chrystalla Ferrier, Kelly Brookwell and Paul Quinn employ some reflective practice
Pre-school experience and Key Stage 2 performance in English and Mathematics
This report considers children\u27s educational attainment in English and mathematics at the end of primary school (age 11). Children\u27s educational attainment in English and mathematics was derived from their national Key Stage 2 assessments. The analyses have considered the child\u27s level of Key Stage 2 attainment in terms of the effects of child, family, home environment and preschool experience variables as well as the child\u27s ability at the start of primary school
Growing Pains or Opportunities? A Customer Survey of Three Farmers\u27 Markets in One Rural Community
The continued growth of farmers\u27 markets is presenting new challenges to Extension. As the number of markets expands, how can Extension help those in the same community work together for mutual benefit? The study reported here examined similarities and differences among customers attending three different farmers\u27 markets within a single locality in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Based on 370 customer surveys, study results underscore the diversity of markets operating within the same community and provide insights into ways Extension might assist markets to work together to expand their shared customer base, increase revenues, and better serve local residents
Two-Stream Instability of Counter-Rotating Galaxies
The present study of the two-stream instability in stellar disks with
counter-rotating components of stars and/or gas is stimulated by recently
discovered counter-rotating spiral and S0 galaxies. Strong linear two-stream
instability of tightly-wrapped spiral waves is found for one and two-armed
waves with the pattern angular speed of the unstable waves always intermediate
between the angular speed of the co-rotating matter () and that of the
counter-rotating matter (). The instability arises from the
interaction of positive and negative energy modes in the co- and
counter-rotating components. The unstable waves are in general convective -
they move in radius and radial wavenumber space - with the result that
amplification of the advected wave is more important than the local growth
rate. For a galaxy of co-rotating stars and counter-rotating stars of
mass-fraction , or of counter-rotating gas of mass-fraction
, the largest amplification is usually for the one-armed
leading waves (with respect to the co-rotating stars). For the case of both
counter-rotating stars and gas, the largest amplifications are for , also for one-armed leading waves. The two-armed trailing
waves usually have smaller amplifications. The growth rates and amplifications
all decrease as the velocity spreads of the stars and/or gas increase. It is
suggested that the spiral waves can provide an effective viscosity for the gas
causing its accretion.Comment: 14 pages, submitted to ApJ. One table and 17 figures can be obtained
by sending address to R. Lovelace at [email protected]
Decadal trends in aerosol chemical composition at Barrow, Alaska: 1976–2008
Aerosol measurements at Barrow, Alaska during the past 30 years have identified the long range transport of pollution associated with Arctic Haze as well as ocean-derived aerosols of more local origin. Here, we focus on measurements of aerosol chemical composition to assess (1) trends in Arctic Haze aerosol and implications for source regions, (2) the interaction between pollution-derived and ocean-derived aerosols and the resulting impacts on the chemistry of the Arctic boundary layer, and (3) the response of aerosols to a changing climate. Aerosol chemical composition measured at Barrow, AK during the Arctic haze season is compared for the years 1976–1977 and 1997–2008. Based on these two data sets, concentrations of non-sea salt (nss) sulfate (SO<sub>4</sub><sup>=</sup>) and non-crustal (nc) vanadium (V) have decreased by about 60% over this 30 year period. Consistency in the ratios of nss SO<sub>4</sub><sup>=</sup>/ncV and nc manganese (Mn)/ncV between the two data sets indicates that, although emissions have decreased in the source regions, the source regions have remained the same over this time period. The measurements from 1997–2008 indicate that, during the haze season, the nss SO<sub>4</sub><sup>=</sup> aerosol at Barrow is becoming less neutralized by ammonium (NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>) yielding an increasing sea salt aerosol chloride (Cl<sup>&minus;</sup>) deficit. The expected consequence is an increase in the release of Cl atoms to the atmosphere and a change in the lifetime of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) including methane. In addition, summertime concentrations of biogenically-derived methanesulfonate (MSA<sup>&minus;</sup>) and nss SO<sub>4</sub><sup>=</sup> are increasing at a rate of 12 and 8% per year, respectively. Further research is required to assess the environmental factors behind the increasing concentrations of biogenic aerosol
Massive galaxies in cosmological simulations: UV-selected sample at redshift z=2
We study the properties of galaxies at z=2 in a Lambda CDM universe, using
two different types of hydrodynamic simulation methods (Eulerian TVD and SPH)
and a spectrophotometric analysis in the Un, G, R filter set. The simulated
galaxies at z=2 satisfy the color-selection criteria proposed by Adelberger et
al. (2004) when we assume Calzetti extinction with E(B-V)=0.15. We find that
the number density of simulated galaxies brighter than R<25.5 at z=2 is about
2e-2 h^3/Mpc^3, roughly one order of magnitude larger than that of Lyman break
galaxies at z=3. The most massive galaxies at z=2 have stellar masses >~1e11
Msun, and their observed-frame G-R colors lie in the range 0.0<G-R<1.0. They
typically have been continuously forming stars with a rate exceeding 30 Msun/yr
over a few Gyrs from z=10 to z=2, although the TVD simulation indicates a more
sporadic star formation history than the SPH simulations. Of order half of
their stellar mass was already assembled by z~4. The reddest massive galaxies
at z=2 with G-R >= 1.0 and Mstar>1e10 Msun/h finished the build-up of their
stellar mass by z~3. Interestingly, our study suggests that the majority of the
most massive galaxies at z=2 should be detectable at rest-frame UV wavelengths,
contrary to some recent claims made on the basis of near-IR studies of galaxies
at the same epoch, provided the median extinction is less than E(B-V)<0.3.
However, our results also suggest that the fraction of stellar mass contained
in galaxies that pass the color-selection criteria could be as low as 50% of
the total stellar mass in the Universe at z=2. Our simulations suggest that the
missing stellar mass is contained in fainter (R>25.5) and intrinsically redder
galaxies. Our results do not suggest that hierarchical galaxy formation fails
to account for the massive galaxies at z>=1. (abridged)Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Error in AB magnitude
calculation corrected. Higher resolution version available at
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~knagamine/redgal.ps.g
Quantum Hall Spherical Systems: the Filling Fraction
Within the newly formulated composite fermion hierarchy the filling fraction
of a spherical quantum Hall system is obtained when it can be expressed as an
odd or even denominator fraction. A plot of as a function
of for a constant number of particles (up to N=10001) exhibits structure
of the fractional quantum Hall effect. It is confirmed that
for all particle-hole conjugate systems, except systems with , and
.Comment: 3 pages, Revtex, 7 PostScript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B
Rapid Communicatio
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