2,484 research outputs found
Filaments as Possible Signatures of Magnetic Field Structure in Planetary Nebulae
We draw attention to the extreme filamentary structures seen in
high-resolution optical images of certain planetary nebulae. We determine the
physical properties of the filaments in the nebulae IC 418, NGC 3132, and NGC
6537, and based on their large length-to-width ratios, longitudinal coherence,
and morphology, we suggest that they may be signatures of the underlying
magnetic field. The fields needed for the coherence of the filaments are
probably consistent with those measured in the precursor circumstellar
envelopes. The filaments suggest that magnetic fields in planetary nebulae may
have a localized and thread-like geometry.Comment: 26 pages with 7 figures. To be published in PASP. For full resolution
images see http://physics.nyu.edu/~pjh
Facilitation skills: the catalyst for increased effectiveness in consultant practice and clinical systems leadership
Consultant practitioner is the pinnacle of the clinical career ladder for all health care disciplines in the United Kingdom. Consultant nurse, midwife and health visitor roles build on the clinical credibility and expertise characteristic of advanced level practice, but also possess expertise in: clinical systems leadership and the facilitation of culture change, learning and development; advanced consultancy approaches, and research and evaluation to prioritise person-centred, safe and effective care across patient pathways.
This project aimed to help new and emerging consultants to become more effective in their role through a programme of support to develop their expertise.
Emancipatory action research, supported by claims, concerns and issues tool, derived from Stakeholder Evaluation, and other methods (active learning, action learning, collaborative workshops and individual tools e.g. qualitative 360 degree feedback and reflective reviews) comprised the supportive intervention which enabled participants to research their own practice.
The programmeâs methodology and methods helped participants to: research their own practice; theorise from practice; grow the facilitation skills needed to develop and demonstrate their own effectiveness; foster the effectiveness of others and; transform practice culture. Greater effectiveness in their multiple roles was demonstrated, as was the impact of this on others, services and organisations.
The study concludes that the support programme augmented by the methodology, facilitation skills and the 10 principles derived from a concept analysis of work-based learning is central to achieving improved effectiveness and transformation of others, services and organisations. Theoretical insights at collective/community levels also resulted. Key recommendations are identified for commissioners, higher education and research
The benefits of organic farming for biodiversity
Previous studies suggest widespread positive responses of biodiversity to organic farming. Many of these studies, however, have been small-scale. This project tested the generality of habitat and biodiversity differences between matched pairs of organic and non-organic farms containing cereal crops in lowland England on a large-scale across a range of taxa including plants, insects, birds and bats. The extent of both cropped and un-cropped habitats together with their composition and management on a range of scales were also compared. Organic farms was likely to favour higher levels of biodiversity and indeed organic farms tended to support higher numbers of species and overall abundance across most taxa. However, the magnitude of the response differed strikingly; plants showed stronger and more consistent responses than other taxa. Some, but not all, differences in biodiversity between systems appear to be a consequence of differences in habitat quantity
Constraints on narrow exotic states from K+p and K0_Lp scattering data
We consider the effect of exotic S=+1 resonances Theta+ and Theta++ on K+p
elastic scattering data (total cross section) and the process K0_Lp-->K0_Sp.
Data near the observed Theta+(1540) are examined for evidence of additional
states. The width limit for a Theta++ state is reconsidered and shown to be
much less than 1 MeV.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures; minor corrections, one fig adde
Glasslike Arrest in Spinodal Decomposition as a Route to Colloidal Gelation
Colloid-polymer mixtures can undergo spinodal decomposition into colloid-rich
and colloid-poor regions. Gelation results when interconnected colloid-rich
regions solidify. We show that this occurs when these regions undergo a glass
transition, leading to dynamic arrest of the spinodal decomposition. The
characteristic length scale of the gel decreases with increasing quench depth,
and the nonergodicity parameter exhibits a pronounced dependence on scattering
vector. Mode coupling theory gives a good description of the dynamics, provided
we use the full static structure as input.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; replaced with published versio
Kaon photoproduction: background contributions, form factors and missing resonances
The photoproduction p(gamma, K+)Lambda process is studied within a
field-theoretic approach. It is shown that the background contributions
constitute an important part of the reaction dynamics. We compare predictions
obtained with three plausible techniques for dealing with these background
contributions. It appears that the extracted resonance parameters drastically
depend on the applied technique. We investigate the implications of the
corrections to the functional form of the hadronic form factor in the contact
term, recently suggested by Davidson and Workman (Phys. Rev. C 63, 025210). The
role of background contributions and hadronic form factors for the
identification of the quantum numbers of ``missing'' resonances is discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 7 eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Angle-resolved photoemission and first-principles electronic structure of single-crystalline -uranium (001)
Continuing the photoemission study begun with the work of Opeil et al. [Phys.
Rev. B \textbf{73}, 165109 (2006)], in this paper we report results of an
angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) study performed on a
high-quality single-crystal -uranium at 173 K. The absence of
surface-reconstruction effects is verified using X-ray Laue and low-energy
electron diffraction (LEED) patterns. We compare the ARPES intensity map with
first-principles band structure calculations using a generalized gradient
approximation (GGA) and we find good correlations with the calculated
dispersion of the electronic bands
Strange Decays of Nonstrange Baryons
The strong decays of excited nonstrange baryons into the final states Lambda
K, Sigma K, and for the first time into Lambda(1405) K, Lambda(1520) K,
Sigma(1385) K, Lambda K*, and Sigma K*, are examined in a relativized quark
pair creation model. The wave functions and parameters of the model are fixed
by previous calculations of N pi and N pi pi, etc., decays. Our results show
that it should be possible to discover several new negative parity excited
baryons and confirm the discovery of several others by analyzing these final
states in kaon production experiments. We also establish clear predictions for
the relative strengths of certain states to decay to Lambda(1405) K and
Lambda(1520) K, which can be tested to determine if a three-quark model of the
Lambda(1405) K is valid. Our results compare favorably with the results of
partial wave analyses of the limited existing data for the Lambda K and Sigma K
channels. We do not find large Sigma K decay amplitudes for a substantial group
of predicted and weakly established negative-parity states, in contrast to the
only previous work to consider decays of these states into the strange final
states Lambda K and Sigma K.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, RevTe
The two pion decay of the Roper resonance
We evaluate the two pion decay of the Roper resonance in a model where
explicit re-scattering of the two final pions is accounted for by the use of
unitarized chiral perturbation theory. Our model does not include an explicit
or scalar-isoscalar meson decay mode, instead it
generates it dynamically by means of the pion re-scattering. The two ways,
explicit or dynamically generated, of introducing this decay channel have very
different amplitudes.
Nevertheless, through interference with the other terms of the model we are
able to reproduce the same phenomenology as models with explicit consideration
of the meson.Comment: 17 latex pages, 11 eps figures. A few misprints corrected. A few new
references. Version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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