5,729 research outputs found
Phases of granular segregation in a binary mixture
We present results from an extensive experimental investigation into granular
segregation of a shallow binary mixture in which particles are driven by
frictional interactions with the surface of a vibrating horizontal tray. Three
distinct phases of the mixture are established viz; binary gas (unsegregated),
segregation liquid and segregation crystal. Their ranges of existence are
mapped out as a function of the system's primary control parameters using a
number of measures based on Voronoi tessellation. We study the associated
transitions and show that segregation can be suppressed is the total filling
fraction of the granular layer, , is decreased below a critical value,
, or if the dimensionless acceleration of the driving, , is
increased above a value .Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
The sedimentology of gravel beds in groundwater-dominated chalk streams: Implications for sediment modelling and management
Elevated fine sediment accumulation in a river system's gravel bed is known to cause detrimental ecological impacts. Current sediment targets and approaches to mitigation have failed due to the oversimplification of geomorphological processes controlling fine sediment accumulation and the lack of relevant scientific knowledge underpinning them. This is particularly apparent in chalk streams (groundwater-dominated systems) which regularly exhibit high rates of sediment accumulation despite low suspended sediment yields. A necessary first step is to better characterise their sedimentology; thus, the novelty of this study was to determine the sedimentological characteristics of chalk stream gravel beds, specifically the quantity and distribution of fine sediment with depth. We collated published and unpublished freeze-core data, encompassing 90 sites across 11 UK chalk streams. Results showed average quantities of fine sediment (75% of beds exceeding thresholds for ecological degradation. Quantities of fine sediment increased with increasing depth into the bed, with an average increase between surface and subsurface layers of 54%, and 89% of the gravel bed over-saturated with fine sediment. Regional differences were attributed to differences in stream power and local sediment sources, including surficial geology and catchment land use. Additionally, a major contrast was identified between experimental conditions in flume studies used to establish models describing interactions/mechanisms of fine sediment infiltration into immobile gravel beds and the natural conditions observed in chalk streams. As such, the use of such models as a basis to explore sediment management scenarios is unlikely to predict the outcome of such management techniques correctly in a real-world situation
Harnessing lived experience in a community-based intervention to address gambling-related harms
Background Lived experience of people directly or indirectly affected by public health issues can provide unique insights into how to improve interventions. Increasing availability of gambling necessitates involving communities in efforts to reduce gambling-related harms. This presentation reports qualitative exploratory research into the value of lived experience across a city-region gambling harm reduction initiative in the UK. Methods Focus groups and interviews were used to explore the practical application of lived experience with participants: advisory panel members, external stakeholders, community project staff, and public health professionals. Collaborative data analysis combined the framework method with theme development inductively (from participantsâ accounts) and deductively (from academic and grey literature). Results Four themes were identified: (1) lived experience spans formal and informal settings with different activities and personal impacts; (2) organic and structured pathways to lived experience involvement coexist; (3) the emotional work of people affected by gambling-related harms ranges from frustration at policy inertia to deeper understanding of their own recovery journey; and (4) lived experience encompasses diverse experiential knowledges. Conclusions Involving lived experience in this intervention increased participantsâ awareness of the harmful role of the gambling industry and critical reflection on the representativeness of lived experience. Harnessing lived experience at a regional level requires multi-setting support free from stigma and industry influence to ensure the sustained vitality of a diverse lived experience community specialised in gambling-related harms and equipped to navigate conflicting emotions and a challenging policy environment. Key messages âą Increasing availability of gambling necessitates involving communities in efforts to reduce gambling-related harms. âą The use of lived experience in gambling-related harms prevention efforts and research can inform intervention development
Fair game: exploring the dynamics, perception and environmental impact of âsurplusâ wild foods in England 10kya-present
This paper brings together zooarchaeological data from Neolithic to Post-medieval sites in England to explore the plasticity of cultural attitudes to the consumption of wild animals. It shows how, through time, game has been considered variously as âtabooedâ and âedibleâ, each having implications for patterns of biodiversity and wildlife management. The essential points being made are that deeper-time studies can reveal how human perceptions of âsurplus foodsâ have the potential to both create and remedy problems of environmental sustainability and food security. Perhaps more significantly, this paper argues that understanding the bio-cultural past of edible wild animal species has the potential to transform human attitudes to game in the present. This is important at a time when food security and the production of surplus are pressing national and global concerns
Complex-Temperature Singularities in the Ising Model. III. Honeycomb Lattice
We study complex-temperature properties of the uniform and staggered
susceptibilities and of the Ising model on the honeycomb
lattice. From an analysis of low-temperature series expansions, we find
evidence that and both have divergent singularities at the
point (where ), with exponents
. The critical amplitudes at this
singularity are calculated. Using exact results, we extract the behaviour of
the magnetisation and specific heat at complex-temperature
singularities. We find that, in addition to its zero at the physical critical
point, diverges at with exponent , vanishes
continuously at with exponent , and vanishes
discontinuously elsewhere along the boundary of the complex-temperature
ferromagnetic phase. diverges at with exponent
and at (where ) with exponent , and
diverges logarithmically at . We find that the exponent relation
is violated at ; the right-hand side is 4
rather than 2. The connections of these results with complex-temperature
properties of the Ising model on the triangular lattice are discussed.Comment: 22 pages, latex, figures appended after the end of the text as a
compressed, uuencoded postscript fil
Site Percolation and Phase Transitions in Two Dimensions
The properties of the pure-site clusters of spin models, i.e. the clusters
which are obtained by joining nearest-neighbour spins of the same sign, are
here investigated. In the Ising model in two dimensions it is known that such
clusters undergo a percolation transition exactly at the critical point. We
show that this result is valid for a wide class of bidimensional systems
undergoing a continuous magnetization transition. We provide numerical evidence
for discrete as well as for continuous spin models, including SU(N) lattice
gauge theories. The critical percolation exponents do not coincide with the
ones of the thermal transition, but they are the same for models belonging to
the same universality class.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Numerical part developed; figures,
references and comments adde
Exact solutions to the four Goldstone modes around a dark soliton of the nonlinear Schroedinger equation
This article is concerned with the linearisation around a dark soliton
solution of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation. Crucially, we present
analytic expressions for the four linearly-independent zero eigenvalue
solutions (also known as Goldstone modes) to the linearised problem. These
solutions are then used to construct a Greens matrix which gives the
first-order spatial response due to some perturbation. Finally we apply this
Greens matrix to find the correction to the dark-soliton wavefunction of a
Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of fluctuations.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Journal of Physics
âDigital James Dickeyâ Developing an App for the iPad based on a poem by James Dickey (grade level 11 & 12)
The purpose of our project was to create an app for the ipad based on a nature poem by James Dickey that could be used by a high school teacher in a classroom. The app includes a poem, video readings by the poet, perspectives (comment and literary criticisms) by a number of experts, biography, a gallery of photos, and a resources page. In fall of 2013 we will test the app in the high school classroo
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