13,478 research outputs found
School violence, school differences and school discourses
This article highlights one strand of a study which investigated the concept of the violenceresilient school. In six inner-city secondary schools, data on violent incidents in school and violent crime in the neighbourhood were gathered, and compared with school practices to minimise violence, accessed through interviews. Some degree of association between the patterns of behaviour and school practices was found: schools with a wider range of wellconnected practices seemed to have less difficult behaviour. Interviews also showed that the different schools had different organisational discourses for construing school violence, its possible causes and the possible solutions. Differences in practices are best understood in connection with differences in these discourses. Some of the features of school discourses are outlined, including their range, their core metaphor and their silences. We suggest that organisational discourse is an important concept in explaining school effects and school differences, and that improvement attempts could have clearer regard to this concept
In-situ measurements of the optical absorption of dioxythiophene-based conjugated polymers
Conjugated polymers can be reversibly doped by electrochemical means. This
doping introduces new sub-bandgap optical absorption bands in the polymer while
decreasing the bandgap absorption. To study this behavior, we have prepared an
electrochemical cell allowing measurements of the optical properties of the
polymer. The cell consists of a thin polymer film deposited on gold-coated
Mylar behind which is another polymer that serves as a counterelectrode. An
infrared transparent window protects the upper polymer from ambient air. By
adding a gel electrolyte and making electrical connections to the
polymer-on-gold films, one may study electrochromism in a wide spectral range.
As the cell voltage (the potential difference between the two electrodes)
changes, the doping level of the conjugated polymer films is changed
reversibly. Our experiments address electrochromism in
poly(3,4-ethylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PEDOT) and
poly(3,4-dimethyl-propylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PProDOT-Me). This closed
electrochemical cell allows the study of the doping induced sub-bandgap
features (polaronic and bipolaronic modes) in these easily oxidized and highly
redox switchable polymers. We also study the changes in cell spectra as a
function of polymer thickness and investigate strategies to obtain cleaner
spectra, minimizing the contributions of water and gel electrolyte features
Atomic Deuterium Adsorbed on the Surface of Liquid Helium
We investigate deuterium atoms adsorbed on the surface of liquid helium in
equilibrium with a vapor of atoms of the same species. These atoms are studied
by a sensitive optical method based on spectroscopy at a wavelength of 122 nm,
exciting the 1S-2P transition. We present a direct measurement of the
adsorption energy of deuterium atoms on helium and show evidence for the
existence of resonantly enhanced recombination of atoms residing on the surface
to molecules.Comment: 6 pages 4 figure
Jet power extracted from ADAF and the applications to X-ray binaries and radio galaxy FR dichotomy
We calculate the jet power of the classical Blandford-Znajek(BZ) model and
hybrid model developed by Meier based on the global solutions of advection
dominated accretion flows (ADAFs) surrounding Kerr black holes. We find that
the jet power of the hybrid model is larger than that of the pure BZ model. The
jet power will dominate over the accretion power, and the objects will enter
into "jet-power-dominated advective systems", when the accretion rate is less
than a critical value mdot_c=Mdot_c/Mdot_Edd, where 3*10^-4 < mdot_c < 5*10^-3
is a function of black hole spin parameter. The accretion power will be
dominant when mdot<mdot_c and the objects will enter into
"accretion-power-dominated advective systems." This is roughly consistent with
that constrained from the low/hard-state black hole X-ray binaries (e.g.,
Fender et al.). We calculate the maximal jet power as a function of black hole
mass with the hybrid jet formation model, and find it can roughly reproduce the
dividing line of the Ledlow-Owen relation for FR I/FR II dichotomy in the jet
power-black hole(BH) mass plane (Q_jet-M_BH) if the dimensionless accretion
rate mdot~0.01 and BH spin parameter j~0.9-0.99 are adopted. This accretion
rate mdot~0.01 is consistent with that of the critical accretion rate for the
accretion mode transition of a standard disk to an ADAF constrained from the
state transition of X-ray binaries. Our results imply that most FR I galaxies
may be in the ADAF accretion mode similar to the low/hard-state XRBs.Comment: 6 pages, 3 color figures, ApJ in press, edited with ApJ style and
English is improved as suggested by Edito
Blob ejection from advection-dominated accretion flow: observational consequences
There is increasing evidence for the presence of an optically thin
advection-dominated accretion flow (ADAF) in low luminosity active galactic
nuclei and radio-loud quasars. The present paper is devoted to explore the fate
of a blob ejected from an ADAF, and to discuss its observational consequences.
It is inevitable for the ejected blob to drastically expand into its
surroundings. Consequently, it is expected that a group of relativistic
electrons should be accelerated, which may lead to nonthermal flares, since a
strong shock will be formed by the interaction between the blob and its
surroundings. Then the blob cools down efficiently, leading to the appearance
of recombination lines about s after its ejection from an ADAF. We apply
this model to NGC 4258 for some observational prediction, and to PKS 2149--306
for the explanation of observational evidence. Future simultaneous observations
of recombination X-ray lines and continuum emission are highly desired to test
the present model.Comment: 4 pages in emulateapj.sty, no figure. Accepted by ApJ Letter
On The Reddening in X-ray Absorbed Seyfert 1 Galaxies
There are several Seyfert galaxies for which there is a discrepancy between
the small column of neutral hydrogen deduced from X-ray observations and the
much greater column derived from the reddening of the optical/UV emission lines
and continuum. The standard paradigm has the dust within the highly ionized gas
which produces O~VII and O~VIII absorption edges (i.e., a ``dusty warm
absorber''). We present an alternative model in which the dust exists in a
component of gas in which hydrogen has been stripped, but which is at too low
an ionization state to possess significant columns of O~VII and O~VIII (i.e, a
``lukewarm absorber''). The lukewarm absorber is at sufficient radial distance
to encompass much of the narrow emission-line region, and thus accounts for the
narrow-line reddening, unlike the dusty warm absorber. We test the model by
using a combination of photoionization models and absorption edge fits to
analyze the combined ROSAT/ASCA dataset for the Seyfert 1.5 galaxy, NGC 3227.
We show that the data are well fit by a combination of the lukewarm absorber
and a more highly ionized component similar to that suggested in earlier
studies. We predict that the lukewarm absorber will produce strong UV
absorption lines of N V, C IV, Si IV and Mg II. Finally, these results
illustrate that singly ionized helium is an important, and often overlooked,
source of opacity in the soft X-ray band (100 - 500 eV).Comment: 17 pages, Latex, includes 1 figure (encapsulated postscript), one
additional table in Latex (landscape format), to appear in the Astrophysical
Journa
Low-Temperature Mobility of Surface Electrons and Ripplon-Phonon Interaction in Liquid Helium
The low-temperature dc mobility of the two-dimensional electron system
localized above the surface of superfluid helium is determined by the slowest
stage of the longitudinal momentum transfer to the bulk liquid, namely, by the
interaction of surface and volume excitations of liquid helium, which rapidly
decreases with temperature. Thus, the temperature dependence of the
low-frequency mobility is \mu_{dc} = 8.4x10^{-11}n_e T^{-20/3} cm^4 K^{20/3}/(V
s), where n_e is the surface electron density. The relation
T^{20/3}E_\perp^{-3} << 2x10^{-7} between the pressing electric field (in
kV/cm) and temperature (in K) and the value \omega < 10^8 T^5 K^{-5}s^{-1} of
the driving-field frequency have been obtained, at which the above effect can
be observed. In particular, E_\perp = 1 kV/cm corresponds to T < 70 mK and
\omega/2\pi < 30 Hz.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Iron fluorescence from within the innermost stable orbit of black hole accretion disks
The fluorescent iron Ka line is a powerful observational probe of the inner
regions of black holes accretion disks. Previous studies have assumed that only
material outside the radius of marginal stability can contribute to the
observed line emission. Here, we show that fluorescence by material inside the
radius of marginal stability, which is in the process of spiralling towards the
event horizon, can have a observable influence on the iron line profile and
equivalent width. For concreteness, we consider the case of a geometrically
thin accretion disk, around a Schwarzschild black hole, in which fluorescence
is excited by an X-ray source placed at some height above the disk and on the
axis of the disk. Fully relativistic line profiles are presented for various
source heights and efficiencies. It is found that the extra line flux generally
emerges in the extreme red wing of the iron line, due to the large
gravitational redshift experienced by photons from the region within the radius
of marginal stability. We apply our models to the variable iron line seen in
the ASCA spectrum of the Seyfert nucleus MCG-6-30-15. It is found that the
change in the line profile, equivalent width, and continuum normalization, can
be well explained as being due to a change in the height of the source above
the disk. We discuss the implications of these results for distinguishing
rapidly-rotating black holes from slowly rotating holes using iron line
diagnostics.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal.
Figures 3 to 7 replaced with corrected versions (previous figures affected by
calculational error). Some changes in the best fitting parameter
Truncated Levy Random Walks and Generalized Cauchy Processes
A continuous Markovian model for truncated Levy random walks is proposed. It
generalizes the approach developed previously by Lubashevsky et al. Phys. Rev.
E 79, 011110 (2009); 80, 031148 (2009), Eur. Phys. J. B 78, 207 (2010) allowing
for nonlinear friction in wondering particle motion and saturation of the noise
intensity depending on the particle velocity. Both the effects have own reason
to be considered and individually give rise to truncated Levy random walks as
shown in the paper. The nonlinear Langevin equation governing the particle
motion was solved numerically using an order 1.5 strong stochastic Runge-Kutta
method and the obtained numerical data were employed to calculate the geometric
mean of the particle displacement during a certain time interval and to
construct its distribution function. It is demonstrated that the time
dependence of the geometric mean comprises three fragments following one
another as the time scale increases that can be categorized as the ballistic
regime, the Levy type regime (superballistic, quasiballistic, or superdiffusive
one), and the standard motion of Brownian particles. For the intermediate Levy
type part the distribution of the particle displacement is found to be of the
generalized Cauchy form with cutoff. Besides, the properties of the random
walks at hand are shown to be determined mainly by a certain ratio of the
friction coefficient and the noise intensity rather then their characteristics
individually.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
A variable efficiency for thin disk black hole accretion
We explore the presence of torques at the inner edges of geometrically-thin
black hole accretion disks using 3-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
simulations in a pseudo-Newtonian potential. By varying the saturation level of
the magnetorotational instability that leads to angular momentum transport, we
show that the dynamics of gas inside the radius of marginal stability varies
depending upon the magnetic field strength just outside that radius. Weak
fields are unable to causally connect material within the plunging region to
the rest of the disk, and zero torque is an approximately correct boundary
condition at the radius of marginal stability. Stronger fields, which we obtain
artificially but which may occur physically within more complete disk models,
are able to couple at least some parts of the plunging region to the rest of
the disk. In this case, angular momentum (and implicitly energy) is extracted
from the material in the plunging region. Furthermore, the magnetic coupling to
the plunging region can be highly time dependent with large fluctuations in the
torque at the radius of marginal stability. This implies varying accretion
efficiencies, both across systems and within a given system at different times.
The results suggest a possible link between changes in X-ray and outflow
activity, with both being driven by transitions between weak and strong field
states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letter
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