1,265 research outputs found
Students’ Race and Participation in Classroom Discussion in Introductory Sociology: A Preliminary Investigation
This study utilizes observation, survey and interview methodologies to investigate the impact of student race on participation in discussion in introductory sociology courses at a large Midwestern US university with a minority enrollment of approximately 15 percent. While results are mixed there is some evidence that white students participated at a higher rate than minority students. However, in certain circumstances (e.g., discussion of racism), minority students became the “experts” during particular class sessions and participated at a greater rate than did white students. Key Words: Discussion, College Students, Race, Learning, Interactio
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High-throughput continuous dielectrophoretic separation of neural stem cells.
We created an integrated microfluidic cell separation system that incorporates hydrophoresis and dielectrophoresis modules to facilitate high-throughput continuous cell separation. The hydrophoresis module consists of a serpentine channel with ridges and trenches to generate a diverging fluid flow that focuses cells into two streams along the channel edges. The dielectrophoresis module is composed of a chevron-shaped electrode array. Separation in the dielectrophoresis module is driven by inherent cell electrophysiological properties and does not require cell-type-specific labels. The chevron shape of the electrode array couples with fluid flow in the channel to enable continuous sorting of cells to increase throughput. We tested the new system with mouse neural stem cells since their electrophysiological properties reflect their differentiation capacity (e.g., whether they will differentiate into astrocytes or neurons). The goal of our experiments was to enrich astrocyte-biased cells. Sorting parameters were optimized for each batch of neural stem cells to ensure effective and consistent separations. The continuous sorting design of the device significantly improved sorting throughput and reproducibility. Sorting yielded two cell fractions, and we found that astrocyte-biased cells were enriched in one fraction and depleted from the other. This is an advantage of the new continuous sorting device over traditional dielectrophoresis-based sorting platforms that target a subset of cells for enrichment but do not provide a corresponding depleted population. The new microfluidic dielectrophoresis cell separation system improves label-free cell sorting by increasing throughput and delivering enriched and depleted cell subpopulations in a single sort
Hamiltonian solutions of the 3-body problem in (2+1)-gravity
We present a full study of the 3-body problem in gravity in flat
(2+1)-dimensional space-time, and in the nonrelativistic limit of small
velocities. We provide an explicit form of the ADM Hamiltonian in a regular
coordinate system and we set up all the ingredients for canonical quantization.
We emphasize the role of a U(2) symmetry under which the Hamiltonian is
invariant and which should generalize to a U(N-1) symmetry for N bodies. This
symmetry seems to stem from a braid group structure in the operations of
looping of particles around each other, and guarantees the single-valuedness of
the Hamiltonian. Its role for the construction of single-valued energy
eigenfunctions is also discussed.Comment: 25 pages, no figure. v2: some calculation details removed to make the
paper more concise (see v1 for the longer version), minor correction in a
formula in the section on quantization, references added; results and
conclusions unchange
"Charged" Particle's Tunneling from Rotating Black Holes
The behavior of a scalar field theory near the event horizon in a rotating
black hole background can be effectively described by a two dimensional field
theory in a gauge field background. Based on this fact, we proposal that the
quantum tunneling from rotating black hole can be treated as "charged"
particle' s tunneling process in its effectively two dimensional metric. Using
this viewpoint and considering the corresponding "gauge charge" conservation,
we calculate the non-thermal tunneling rate of Kerr black hole and Myers-Perry
black hole, and results are consistent with Parikh-Wilczek's original result
for spherically symmetric black holes. Especially for Myers-Perry black hole
which has multi-rotation parameters, our calculation fills in the gap existing
in the literature applying Parikh-Wilczek's tunneling method to various types
black holes. Our derivation further illuminates the essential role of effective
gauge symmetry in Hawking radiation from rotating black holes.Comment: 15 pages, no figure; any comments are welcome
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Total Gamma Count Rate Analysis Method for Nondestructive Assay Characterization
A new approach to nondestructively characterize waste for disposal, based on total gamma response, has been developed at the Idaho Cleanup Project by CH2M-WG Idaho, LLC and Idaho State University, and is called the total gamma count rate analysis method. The total gamma count rate analysis method measures gamma interactions that produce energetic electrons or positrons in a detector. Based on previous experience with waste assays, the radionuclide content of the waste container is then determined. This approach potentially can yield minimum detection limits of less than 10 nCi/g. The importance of this method is twofold. First, determination of transuranic activity can be made for waste containers that are below the traditional minimum detection limits. Second, waste above 10 nCi/g and below 100 nCi/g can be identified, and a potential path for disposal resolved
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