50 research outputs found
Dual career couples in academia, international mobility and dual career services in Europe
The number of dual career couples in academia is growing due to the increasing proportion of women with a doctoral degree and the greater propensity of women to choose another academic as their partner. At the same time, international mobility is required for career advancement in academia creating challenges for dual career couples where both partners pursue careers. This paper has two objectives: a) to raise the increasingly important issue of dual career couples in academia and the gendered effect that the pressure for mobility has on career advancement and work-life interference, and b) to present examples of recently established dual career services of higher education institutions in Germany, Denmark and Switzerland, responding to the needs of the growing population of dual career couples. Due to long established practices of dual career services in the US, the European examples will be compared with US practices. This paper raises the significance of considering dual career couples in institutional policies that aim for an internationally excellent and diversified academic workforce. It will appraise dual career services according to whether they reinforce or address gender inequalities and provide recommendations to HEIs interested in developing services and programmes for dual career couples
Coupled surface polaritons and the Casimir force
The Casimir force between metallic plates made of realistic materials is
evaluated for distances in the nanometer range. A spectrum over real
frequencies is introduced and shows narrow peaks due to surface resonances
(plasmon polaritons or phonon polaritons) that are coupled across the vacuum
gap. We demonstrate that the Casimir force originates from the attraction
(repulsion) due to the corresponding symmetric (antisymmetric) eigenmodes,
respectively. This picture is used to derive a simple analytical estimate of
the Casimir force at short distances. We recover the result known for Drude
metals without absorption and compute the correction for weakly absorbing
materials.Comment: revised version submitted to Phys. Rev. A, 06 November 200