2,578 research outputs found
High resolution observations of the L1551 bipolar outflow
The nearby dark cloud Lynds 1551 contains one of the closest examples of a well-collimated bipolar molecular outflow. This source has the largest angular size of any known outflow and was the first bipolar outflow to be detected. The outflow originates from a low-luminosity young stellar object, IRS-5. Optical and radio continuum observations show the presence of a highly collimated, ionized stellar wind orginating from close to IRS-5 and aligned with the molecular outflow. However, we have little information on the actual mechanism that generates the stellar wind and collimates it into opposed jets. The Very Large Array (VLA) observations indicate that the winds originate within 10(15) cm of IRS-5, unfortunately at a size scale difficult to resolve. For these reasons, observations of the structure and dynamics of the hypersonic molecular gas may provide valuable information on the origin and evolution of these outflows. In addition, the study of the impact of the outflowing gas on the surrounding molecular material is essential to understand the consequence these outflows have on the evolution and star formation history of the entire cloud. Moriarty-Schieven et al. (1986) obtained a oversampled map of the CO emission of a portion of both the blueshifted and redshifted outflows in LI551 using Five College Radio Astronomy Observatory 14 m telescope. The oversampled maps have been reconstructed to an effective angular resolution of 20 arcsec using a maximum entropy algorithm. A continuation of the study of Moriarty-Schieven et al. is presented. The entire L1551 outflow has now been mapped at 12 arcsec sampling requiring roughly 4000 spectra. This data has been constructed to 20 arcsec resolution to provide the first high resolution picture of the entire L1551 outflow. This new data has shown that the blueshifted lobe is more extended than previously thought and has expanded downstream sufficiently to break out of the dense molecular cloud, but the redshifted outflow is still confined within the molecular cloud. Details of the structure and kinematics of the high velocity gas are used to test the various models of the origin and evolution of outflows
Microstructure Effects on Daily Return Volatility in Financial Markets
We simulate a series of daily returns from intraday price movements initiated
by microstructure elements. Significant evidence is found that daily returns
and daily return volatility exhibit first order autocorrelation, but trading
volume and daily return volatility are not correlated, while intraday
volatility is. We also consider GARCH effects in daily return series and show
that estimates using daily returns are biased from the influence of the level
of prices. Using daily price changes instead, we find evidence of a significant
GARCH component. These results suggest that microstructure elements have a
considerable influence on the return generating process.Comment: 15 pages, as presented at the Complexity Workshop in Aix-en-Provenc
Validation of magnetophonon spectroscopy as a tool for analyzing hot-electron effects in devices
It is shown that very high precision hot-electron magnetophonon experiments made on n+n−n+-GaAs sandwich device structures which are customized for magnetoresistance measurements can be very accurately modeled by a new Monte Carlo technique. The latter takes account of the Landau quantization and device architecture as well as material parameters. It is proposed that this combination of experiment and modeling yields a quantitative tool for the direct analysis of spatially localized very nonequilibrium electron distributions in small devices and low dimensional structures
First Passage Properties of the Erdos-Renyi Random Graph
We study the mean time for a random walk to traverse between two arbitrary
sites of the Erdos-Renyi random graph. We develop an effective medium
approximation that predicts that the mean first-passage time between pairs of
nodes, as well as all moments of this first-passage time, are insensitive to
the fraction p of occupied links. This prediction qualitatively agrees with
numerical simulations away from the percolation threshold. Near the percolation
threshold, the statistically meaningful quantity is the mean transit rate,
namely, the inverse of the first-passage time. This rate varies
non-monotonically with p near the percolation transition. Much of this behavior
can be understood by simple heuristic arguments.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 2-column revtex4 forma
Star Formation in Bright Rimmed Clouds. I. Millimeter and Submillimeter Molecular Line Surveys
We present the results of the first detailed millimeter and submillimeter
molecular line survey of bright rimmed clouds, observed at FCRAO in the CO
(J=1-0), C18O (J=1-0), HCO+ (J=1-0), H13CO+ (J=1-0), and N2H+ (J=1-0)
transitions, and at the HHT in the CO (J=2-1), HCO+ (J=3-2), HCO+ (J=4-3),
H13CO+ (J=3-2), and H13CO+ (J=4-3) molecular line transitions. The source list
is composed of a selection of bright rimmed clouds from the catalog of such
objects compiled by Sugitani et al. (1991). We also present observations of
three Bok globules done for comparison with the bright rimmed clouds. We find
that the appearance of the millimeter CO and HCO+ emission is dominated by the
morphology of the shock front in the bright rimmed clouds. The HCO+ (J=1-0)
emission tends to trace the swept up gas ridge and overdense regions which may
be triggered to collapse as a result of sequential star formation. Five of the
seven bright rimmed clouds we observe seem to have an outflow, however only one
shows the spectral line blue-asymmetric signature that is indicative of infall,
in the optically thick HCO+ emission. We also present evidence that in bright
rimmed clouds the nearby shock front may heat the core from outside-in thereby
washing out the normally observed line infall signatures seen in isolated star
forming regions. We find that the derived core masses of these bright rimmed
clouds are similar to other low and intermediate mass star forming regions.Comment: 67 pages, including 35 figures and 6 tables. Accepted for publication
in ApJ. Version with embedded full-resolution figures available at
http://www.astro.umass.edu/~devries/brc1
Human Resources and the Resource Based View of the Firm
The resource-based view (RBV) of the firm has influenced the field of strategic human resource management (SHRM) in a number of ways. This paper explores the impact of the RBV on the theoretical and empirical development of SHRM. It explores how the fields of strategy and SHRM are beginning to converge around a number of issues, and proposes a number of implications of this convergence
Shared understanding in psychiatrist–patient communication: Association with treatment adherence in schizophrenia
Objective
Effective doctor–patient communication, including a shared understanding, is associated with treatment adherence across medicine. However, communication is affected by a diagnosis of schizophrenia and reaching a shared understanding can be challenging. During conversation, people detect and deal with possible misunderstanding using a conversational process called repair. This study tested the hypothesis that more frequent repair in psychiatrist–patient communication is associated with better treatment adherence in schizophrenia.
Methods
Routine psychiatric consultations involving patients with (DSM-IV) schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder were audio-visually recorded. Consultations were coded for repair and patients’ symptoms and insight assessed. Adherence was assessed six months later. A principal components analysis reduced the repair data for further analysis. Random effects models examined the association between repair and adherence, adjusting for symptoms, consultation length and the amount patients spoke.
Results
138 consultations were recorded, 118 were followed up. Patients requesting clarification of the psychiatrist's talk and the clarification provided by the psychiatrist was associated with adherence six months later (OR 5.82, 95% CI 1.31–25.82, p = 0.02).
Conclusion
The quality of doctor–patient communication also appears to influence adherence in schizophrenia.
Practice implications
Future research should investigate how patient clarification can be encouraged among patients and facilitated by psychiatrists’ communication
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