2,992 research outputs found
Traversable Wormholes in Geometries of Charged Shells
We construct a static axisymmetric wormhole from the gravitational field of
two charged shells which are kept in equilibrium by their electromagnetic
repulsion. For large separations the exterior tends to the Majumdar-Papapetrou
spacetime of two charged particles. The interior of the wormhole is a
Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole matching to the two shells. The wormhole is
traversable and connects to the same asymptotics without violation of energy
conditions. However, every point in the Majumdar-Papapetrou region lies on a
closed timelike curve.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 1 figur
The Cosmic Censor Forbids Naked Topology
For any asymptotically flat spacetime with a suitable causal structure
obeying (a weak form of) Penrose's cosmic censorship conjecture and satisfying
conditions guaranteeing focusing of complete null geodesics, we prove that
active topological censorship holds. We do not assume global hyperbolicity, and
therefore make no use of Cauchy surfaces and their topology. Instead, we
replace this with two underlying assumptions concerning the causal structure:
that no compact set can signal to arbitrarily small neighbourhoods of spatial
infinity (``-avoidance''), and that no future incomplete null geodesic is
visible from future null infinity. We show that these and the focusing
condition together imply that the domain of outer communications is simply
connected. Furthermore, we prove lemmas which have as a consequence that if a
future incomplete null geodesic were visible from infinity, then given our
-avoidance assumption, it would also be visible from points of spacetime
that can communicate with infinity, and so would signify a true naked
singularity.Comment: To appear in CQG, this improved version contains minor revisions to
incorporate referee's suggestions. Two revised references. Plain TeX, 12
page
Streptozotocin-induced diabetic models in mice and rats
Streptozotocin (STZ) is an antibiotic that causes pancreatic islet ÎČâcell destruction and is widely used experimentally to produce a model of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). Detailed in this article are protocols for producing STZâinduced insulin deficiency and hyperglycemia in mice and rats. Also described are protocols for creating animal models for type 2 diabetes using STZ. These animals are employed for assessing the pathological consequences of diabetes and for screening potential therapies for the treatment of this condition
Psychological Safety and Norm Clarity in Software Engineering Teams
In the software engineering industry today, companies primarily conduct their
work in teams. To increase organizational productivity, it is thus crucial to
know the factors that affect team effectiveness. Two team-related concepts that
have gained prominence lately are psychological safety and team norms. Still,
few studies exist that explore these in a software engineering context.
Therefore, with the aim of extending the knowledge of these concepts, we
examined if psychological safety and team norm clarity associate positively
with software developers' self-assessed team performance and job satisfaction,
two important elements of effectiveness.
We collected industry survey data from practitioners (N = 217) in 38
development teams working for five different organizations. The result of
multiple linear regression analyses indicates that both psychological safety
and team norm clarity predict team members' self-assessed performance and job
satisfaction. The findings also suggest that clarity of norms is a stronger
(30\% and 71\% stronger, respectively) predictor than psychological safety.
This research highlights the need to examine, in more detail, the
relationship between social norms and software development. The findings of
this study could serve as an empirical baseline for such, future work.Comment: Submitted to CHASE'201
Developing specialist leaders of education: a research engagement approach
There has been little research to date on the continuing professional
development needs of the several thousand Specialist Leaders of
Education (SLE) now designated by the National College for Teaching
and Leadership in England to work across schools as consultants on
school-to-school support. This case study reports on the second and
third stages of a four-stage research process designed to address these
needs. The
fi
rst stage reported on the creation of a professional devel-
opment framework for SLE
â
s using consultancy research. These middle
stages test out this framework with a stakeholder group of SLEs, head-
teachers and broker in a Teaching Schools Alliance. The fourth stage will
track the implementation of professional development activities arising
from these
fi
ndings. Apart from the speci
fi
c needs of SLE, this study will
have wider relevance for all practitioners and researchers working in and
with schools on leadership development using Research Engagement
strategies and Joint Practice Development approaches in a so-called
â
self-
improving
â
school system
Temperature and Field Dependence of the Mobility in Liquid-Crystalline Conjugated Polymer Films
The transport properties of organic light-emitting diodes in which the
emissive layer is composed of conjugated polymers in the liquid-crystalline
phase have been investigated. We have performed simulations of the current
transient response to an illumination pulse via the Monte Carlo approach, and
from the transit times we have extracted the mobility of the charge carriers as
a function of both the electric field and the temperature. The transport
properties of such films are different from their disordered counterparts, with
charge carrier mobilities exhibiting only a weak dependence on both the
electric field and temperature. We show that for spatially ordered polymer
films, this weak dependence arises for thermal energy being comparable to the
energetic disorder, due to the combined effect of the electrostatic and thermal
energies. The inclusion of spatial disorder, on the other hand, does not alter
the qualitative behaviour of the mobility, but results in decreasing its
absolute value.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Let us not neglect the impact of organizational culture on increasing diversity within medical schools.
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
SOME ABSTRACT PROPERTIES OF SEMIGROUPS APPEARING IN SUPERCONFORMAL THEORIES
A new type of semigroups which appears while dealing with
superconformal symmetry in superstring theories is considered. The ideal series
having unusual abstract properties is constructed. Various idealisers are
introduced and studied. The ideal quasicharacter is defined. Green's relations
are found and their connection with the ideal quasicharacter is established.Comment: 11 page
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science A Journal of Dosic and Clinical Research Articles Non-Fluorescent Dye Staining of Primate Blue Cones
The intravitreal injection in macaque retina of the fluorescent dye Procion yellow can selectively label a specific cone population whose eccentricity distribution and angular separation are consistent with those of the blue-sensitive cones of human and non-human primate retinas. Because at the concentrations used the dye is poorly visible in conventional light microscopy, fluorescence microscopy is required for the observation of the stained cones. In this paper we describe several alternative methods for the staining of blue cones in primate retina, staining that can be visualized in conventional light microscopy and, with some methods, electron microscopy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 24:1449-1455, 198
- âŠ