4,850 research outputs found
The role of shear in dissipative gravitational collapse
In this paper we investigate the physics of a radiating star undergoing
dissipative collapse in the form of a radial heat flux. Our treatment clearly
demonstrates how the presence of shear affects the collapse process; we are in
a position to contrast the physical features of the collapsing sphere in the
presence of shear with the shear-free case. By employing a causal heat
transport equation of the Maxwell-Cattaneo form we show that the shear leads to
an enhancement of the core temperature thus emphasizing that relaxational
effects cannot be ignored when the star leaves hydrostatic equilibrium.Comment: 15 pages, To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
The effect of a two-fluid atmosphere on relativistic stars
We model the physical behaviour at the surface of a relativistic radiating
star in the strong gravity limit. The spacetime in the interior is taken to be
spherically symmetrical and shear-free. The heat conduction in the interior of
the star is governed by the geodesic motion of fluid particles and a
nonvanishing radially directed heat flux. The local atmosphere in the exterior
region is a two-component system consisting of standard pressureless (null)
radiation and an additional null fluid with nonzero pressure and constant
energy density. We analyse the generalised junction condition for the matter
and gravitational variables on the stellar surface and generate an exact
solution. We investigate the effect of the exterior energy density on the
temporal evolution of the radiating fluid pressure, luminosty, gravitational
redshift and mass flow at the boundary of the star. The influence of the
density on the rate of gravitational collapse is also probed and the strong,
dominant and weak energy conditions are also tested. We show that the presence
of the additional null fluid has a significant effect on the dynamical
evolution of the star.Comment: 31 pages, Minor corrections implemente
Acceptable care? Illness constructions, healthworlds, and accessible chronic treatment in South Africa
Achieving equitable access to health care is an important policy goal, with access influenced by affordability, availability, and acceptability of specific services. We explore patient narratives from a 5-year program of research on health care access to examine relationships between social constructions of illness and the acceptability of health services in the context of tuberculosis treatment and antiretroviral therapy in South Africa. Acceptability of services seems particularly important to the meanings patients attach to illness and care, whereas—conversely—these constructions appear to influence what constitutes acceptability and hence affect access to care. We highlight the underestimated role of individually, socially, and politically constructed healthworlds; traditional and biomedical beliefs; and social support networks. Suggested policy implications for improving acceptability and hence overall health care access include abandoning patronizing approaches to care and refocusing from treating “disease” to responding to “illness” by acknowledging and incorporating patients’ healthworlds in patient–provider interactions
Southern African HIV Clinicians Society guideline for the prevention, diagnosis and management of cryptococcal disease among HIV-infected persons: 2019 update.
Renormalization Group Approach to Causal Viscous Cosmological Models
The renormalization group method is applied to the study of homogeneous and
flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker type Universes, filled with a causal bulk
viscous cosmological fluid. The starting point of the study is the
consideration of the scaling properties of the gravitational field equations,
of the causal evolution equation of the bulk viscous pressure and of the
equations of state. The requirement of scale invariance imposes strong
constraints on the temporal evolution of the bulk viscosity coefficient,
temperature and relaxation time, thus leading to the possibility of obtaining
the bulk viscosity coefficient-energy density dependence. For a cosmological
model with bulk viscosity coefficient proportional to the Hubble parameter, we
perform the analysis of the renormalization group flow around the scale
invariant fixed point, therefore obtaining the long time behavior of the scale
factor.Comment: 19 pages. RevTeX4. Revised version. Accepted in Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Teleparallel Versions of Friedmann and Lewis-Papapetrou Spacetimes
This paper is devoted to investigate the teleparallel versions of the
Friedmann models as well as the Lewis-Papapetrou solution. We obtain the tetrad
and the torsion fields for both the spacetimes. It is shown that the
axial-vector vanishes for the Friedmann models. We discuss the different
possibilities of the axial-vector depending on the arbitrary functions
and in the Lewis-Papapetrou metric. The vector related with spin has
also been evaluated.Comment: 13 pages, accepted for publication in GR
Factors influencing the selection of a university among first-year students – A case of a university of technology in South Africa
The social and political history of South Africa yielded massive transformation in the higher education landscape, including access to education and the merger of universities. Despite the many successes of transformation, it brought with it challenges such as increasing participation, student retention, throughput, and graduation rates; changes in government funding models; declining student subsidies and providing quality education with limited resources.
The South African higher education sector is multi-faceted, and students have a wide range of higher education options. This study explored factors influencing decision-making of first-year students when selecting a university. Data was collected from first-year students and employees at a University of Technology. Through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions, the researchers analysed the complex factors that guide students’ decision-making when selecting a university.
The findings revealed that factors significantly influencing decision-making on university selection are, the reputation and quality of university programmes offered, response time and support provided by staff; location; and infrastructure and facilities. This research is significant in that it will assist higher education institutions, particularly marketing and communications departments to be more responsive to students’ needs by shifting toward active engagement in its marketing and recruitment approaches to attract, retain, and satisfy students
Cryptococcal Antigen Screening in Patients Initiating ART in South Africa: A Prospective Cohort Study.
BACKGROUND: Retrospective data suggest that cryptococcal antigen (CrAg) screening in patients with late-stage human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) may reduce cryptococcal disease and deaths. Prospective data are limited. METHODS: CrAg was measured using lateral flow assays (LFA) and latex agglutination (LA) tests in 645 HIV-positive, ART-naive patients with CD4 counts ≤100 cells/µL in Cape Town, South Africa. CrAg-positive patients were offered lumbar puncture (LP) and treated with antifungals. Patients were started on ART between 2 and 4 weeks and followed up for 1 year. RESULTS: A total of 4.3% (28/645) of patients were CrAg positive in serum and plasma with LFA. These included 16 also positive by urine LFA (2.5% of total screened) and 7 by serum LA (1.1% of total). In 4 of 10 LFA-positive cases agreeing to LP, the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) CrAg LFA was positive. A positive CSF CrAg was associated with higher screening plasma/serum LFA titers.Among the 28 CrAg-positive patients, mortality was 14.3% at 10 weeks and 25% at 12 months. Only 1 CrAg-positive patient, who defaulted from care, died from cryptococcal meningitis (CM). Mortality in CrAg-negative patients was 11.5% at 1 year. Only 2 possible CM cases were identified in CrAg-negative patients. CONCLUSIONS: CrAg screening of individuals initiating ART and preemptive fluconazole treatment of CrAg-positive patients resulted in markedly fewer cases of CM compared with historic unscreened cohorts. Studies are needed to refine management of CrAg-positive patients who have high mortality that does not appear to be wholly attributable to cryptococcal disease
The Adoption of Internet Banking in a Developing Economy
The international world has witnessed significant developments in internet banking. This has presented opportunities to both banks and customers in the world of e-commerce. The adoption rate for internet banking in South Africa has been low, compared to other developing countries. With a reasonably well developed infrastructure, South Africa presents itself with great market potential for internet banking. Given this scenario, this paper examines the factors influencing the adoption of internet banking in South Africa. A survey was conducted using a sample of 400 consumers using a quantitative and descriptive design. The results indicate a relationship between the selected biographical variables and the adoption of internet banking. Perceived usefulness, an indicator of relative advantage was associated with the adoption of internet banking. Users considered internet banking to be less complex and less costly than non-users. It emerged that both users and non-users did not consider social influences as being a factor in the adoption of internet banking
Spherically symmetric dissipative anisotropic fluids: A general study
The full set of equations governing the evolution of self--gravitating
spherically symmetric dissipative fluids with anisotropic stresses is deployed
and used to carry out a general study on the behaviour of such systems, in the
context of general relativity. Emphasis is given to the link between the Weyl
tensor, the shear tensor, the anisotropy of the pressure and the density
inhomogeneity. In particular we provide the general, necessary and sufficient,
condition for the vanishing of the spatial gradients of energy density, which
in turn suggests a possible definition of a gravitational arrow of time. Some
solutions are also exhibited to illustrate the discussion.Comment: 28 pages Latex. To appear in Phys.Rev.
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