5,640 research outputs found
Constructing Professional Identity - the Experience of Work Based Learning Candidates
Previous research into professional identity has argued that training institutions shape professional formation. This research focuses on professionals who have undertaken a work based approach and explores the interrelationship between practitioners’ own narrative of professional identity and that encoded within the narrative of the standards of a professional HR/HRD body. The findings begin to question the traditional understanding of the inter-relationship between the narrative of the professional body and individual HR/HRD practitioner narratives of identity suggesting that neither the professional body nor the mainstream educational institution are the major players in the development of professional identity
Bi-large neutrino mixing and the Cabibbo angle
Recent measurements of the neutrino mixing angles cast doubt on the validity
of the so-far popular tri-bimaximal mixing ansatz. We propose a parametrization
for the neutrino mixing matrix where the reactor angle seeds the large solar
and atmospheric mixing angles, equal to each other in first approximation. We
suggest such bi-large mixing pattern as a model building standard, realized
when the leading order value of the reactor angle equals the Cabibbo angle.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figs. v2: matches version appearing in Phys.Rev.D, rapid
communication
CFHT AO Imaging of the CLASS Gravitational Lens System B1359+154
We present adaptive optics imaging of the CLASS gravitational lens system
B1359+154 obtained with the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) in the
infrared K band. The observations show at least three brightness peaks within
the ring of lensed images, which we identify as emission from multiple lensing
galaxies. The results confirm the suspected compound nature of the lens, as
deduced from preliminary mass modeling. The detection of several additional
nearby galaxies suggests that B1359+154 is lensed by the compact core of a
small galaxy group. We attempted to produce an updated lens model based on the
CFHT observations and new 5-GHz radio data obtained with the MERLIN array, but
there are too few constraints to construct a realistic model at this time. The
uncertainties inherent with modeling compound lenses make B1359+154 a
challenging target for Hubble constant determination through the measurement of
differential time delays. However, time delays will offer additional
constraints to help pin down the mass model. This lens system therefore
presents a unique opportunity to directly measure the mass distribution of a
galaxy group at intermediate redshift.Comment: 12 pages including 3 figures; ApJL accepte
Galaxy bimodality versus stellar mass and environment
We analyse a z<0.1 galaxy sample from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey focusing
on the variation of the galaxy colour bimodality with stellar mass and
projected neighbour density Sigma, and on measurements of the galaxy stellar
mass functions. The characteristic mass increases with environmental density
from about 10^10.6 Msun to 10^10.9 Msun (Kroupa IMF, H_0=70) for Sigma in the
range 0.1--10 per Mpc^2. The galaxy population naturally divides into a red and
blue sequence with the locus of the sequences in colour-mass and
colour-concentration index not varying strongly with environment. The fraction
of galaxies on the red sequence is determined in bins of 0.2 in log Sigma and
log mass (12 x 13 bins). The red fraction f_r generally increases continuously
in both Sigma and mass such that there is a unified relation: f_r =
F(Sigma,mass). Two simple functions are proposed which provide good fits to the
data. These data are compared with analogous quantities in semi-analytical
models based on the Millennium N-body simulation: the Bower et al. (2006) and
Croton et al. (2006) models that incorporate AGN feedback. Both models predict
a strong dependence of the red fraction on stellar mass and environment that is
qualitatively similar to the observations. However, a quantitative comparison
shows that the Bower et al. model is a significantly better match; this appears
to be due to the different treatment of feedback in central galaxies.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures; accepted by MNRAS, minor change
An Isocurvature CDM Cosmogony. II. Observational Tests
A companion paper presents a worked model for evolution through inflation to
initial conditions for an isocurvature model for structure formation. It is
shown here that the model is consistent with the available observational
constraints that can be applied without the help of numerical simulations. The
model gives an acceptable fit to the second moments of the angular fluctuations
in the thermal background radiation and the second through fourth moments of
the measured large-scale fluctuations in galaxy counts, within the possibly
significant uncertainties in these measurements. The cluster mass function
requires a rather low but observationally acceptable mass density,
0.1\lsim\Omega\lsim 0.2 in a cosmologically flat universe. Galaxies would be
assembled earlier in this model than in the adiabatic version, an arguably good
thing. Aspects of the predicted non-Gaussian character of the anisotropy of the
thermal background radiation in this model are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 3 postscript figures, uses aas2pp4.st
Clustering of loose groups and galaxies from the Perseus--Pisces Survey
We investigate the clustering properties of loose groups in the
Perseus--Pisces redshift Survey (PPS). Previous analyses based on CfA and SSRS
surveys led to apparently contradictory results. We investigate the source of
such discrepancies, finding satisfactory explanations for them. Furthermore, we
find a definite signal of group clustering, whose amplitude exceeds the
amplitude of galaxy clustering (,
for the most significant case; distances are
measured in \hMpc). Groups are identified with the adaptive
Friends--Of--Friends (FOF) algorithms HG (Huchra \& Geller 1982) and NW
(Nolthenius \& White 1987), systematically varying all search parameters.
Correlation strenght is especially sensitive to the sky--link (increasing
for stricter normalization ), and to the (depth \mlim of the) galaxy
data. It is only moderately dependent on the galaxy luminosity function
, while it is almost insensitive to the redshift--link (both to
the normalization and to the scaling recipes HG or NW).Comment: 28 pages (LaTeX aasms4 style) + 5 Postscript figures ; ApJ submitted
on May 4th, 1996; group catalogs available upon request
([email protected]
Cosmology with superluminous supernovae
We predict cosmological constraints for forthcoming surveys using superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) as standardizable candles. Due to their high peak luminosity, these events can be observed to high redshift (z ? 3), opening up new possibilities to probe the Universe in the deceleration epoch. We describe our methodology for creating mock Hubble diagrams for the Dark Energy Survey (DES), the ‘Search Using DECam for Superluminous Supernovae’ (SUDSS) and a sample of SLSNe possible from the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST), exploring a range of standardization values for SLSNe. We include uncertainties due to gravitational lensing and marginalize over possible uncertainties in the magnitude scale of the observations (e.g. uncertain absolute peak magnitude, calibration errors). We find that the addition of only ?100 SLSNe from SUDSS to 3800 Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) from DES can improve the constraints on w and ?m by at least 20 per cent (assuming a flat wCDM universe). Moreover, the combination of DES SNe Ia and 10 000 LSST-like SLSNe can measure ?m and w to 2 and 4 per cent, respectively. The real power of SLSNe becomes evident when we consider possible temporal variations in w(a), giving possible uncertainties of only 2, 5 and 14 per cent on ?m, w0 and wa, respectively, from the combination of DES SNe Ia, LSST-like SLSNe and Planck. These errors are competitive with predicted Euclid constraints, indicating a future role for SLSNe for probing the high-redshift Universe
The Clustering of AGN in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present the two--point correlation function (2PCF) of narrow-line active
galactic nuclei (AGN) selected within the First Data Release of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey. Using a sample of 13605 AGN in the redshift range 0.055 < z
< 0.2, we find that the AGN auto--correlation function is consistent with the
observed galaxy auto--correlation function on scales 0.2h^{-1}Mpc to
>100h^{-1}Mpc. The AGN hosts trace an intermediate population of galaxies and
are not detected in either the bluest (youngest) disk--dominated galaxies or
many of the reddest (oldest) galaxies. We show that the AGN 2PCF is dependent
on the luminosity of the narrow [OIII] emission line (L_{[OIII]}), with low
L_{[OIII]} AGN having a higher clustering amplitude than high L_{[OIII]} AGN.
This is consistent with lower activity AGN residing in more massive galaxies
than higher activity AGN, and L_{[OIII]} providing a good indicator of the
fueling rate. Using a model relating halo mass to black hole mass in
cosmological simulations, we show that AGN hosted by ~ 10^{12} M_{odot} dark
matter halos have a 2PCF that matches that of the observed sample. This mass
scale implies a mean black hole mass for the sample of M_{BH} ~ 10^8 M_{odot}.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Ion beam effect on Ge-Se chalcogenide glass films: Non-volatile memory array formation, structural changes and device performance
The conductive bridge non-volatile memory technology is an emerging way to
replace traditional charge based memory devices for future neural networks and
configurable logic applications. An array of the memory devices that fulfills
logic operations must be developed for implementing such architectures. A
scheme to fabricate these arrays, using ion bombardment through a mask, has
been suggested and advanced by us. Performance of the memory devices is
studied, based on the formation of vias and damage accumulation due to the
interactions of Ar+ ions with GexSe1-x (x=0.2, 0.3 and 0.4) chalcogenide
glasses as a function of the ion energy and dose dependence. Blanket films and
devices were created to study the structural changes, surface roughness, and
device performance. Raman Spectroscopy, Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM), Energy
Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (EDS) and electrical measurements expound the Ar+
ions behavior on thin films of GexSe1-x system. Raman studies show that there
is a decrease in area ratio between edge-shared to corner-shared structural
units, revealing occurrence of structural reorganization within the system as a
result of ion/film interaction. AFM results demonstrate a tendency in surface
roughness improvement with increased Ge concentration, after ion bombardment.
EDS results reveal a compositional change in the vias, with a clear tendency of
greater interaction between ions and the Ge atoms, as evidenced by greater
compositional changes in the Ge rich films
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