4,440 research outputs found

    Dead Sea Scrolls (3 books)

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    Reviewed Book: Charlesworth, James H. Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1993. Anchor Bible reference library. Reviewed Book: Fitzmyer, Joseph A. Responses to 101 Questions on the Dead Sea Scrolls. London: Geoffrey Chapman; Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1992. Reviewed Book: Shanks, Hershel. Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls: a reader from the Biblical Archaeology Review. New York: Random House, 1992

    Spin transitions in an incompressible liquid Coulomb coupled to a quantum dot

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    We report on our investigation of the low-lying energy spectra and charge density of a two-dimensional quantum Hall liquid at ν=25\nu=\frac25 that is Coulomb coupled to a quantum dot. The dot contains a hole and two/three electrons. We found that any external perturbation (caused by the close proximity of the quantum dot) locally changes the spin polarization of the incompressible liquid. The effect depends crucially on the separation distance of the quantum dot from the electron plane. Electron density distribution in the quantum Hall layer indicates creation of a quasihole that is localized by the close proximity of the quantum dot. Manifestation of this effect in the photoluminescence spectroscopy is also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    NNNLO correction to the toponium and bottomonium wave-functions at the origin

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    We report new results of the NNNLO correction to the S-wave quarkonium wave-functions at the origin, which also provide an estimate of the resonance cross section in t-tbar threshold production at the ILC.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of 2007 International Linear Collider Workshop: LCWS07 and ILC07, Hamburg, Germany, 30 May - 3 Jun 200

    Reciprocal relativity of noninertial frames and the quaplectic group

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    Newtonian mechanics has the concept of an absolute inertial rest frame. Special relativity eliminates the absolute rest frame but continues to require the absolute inertial frame. General relativity solves this for gravity by requiring particles to have locally inertial frames on a curved position-time manifold. The problem of the absolute inertial frame for other forces remains. We look again at the transformations of frames on an extended phase space with position, time, energy and momentum degrees of freedom. Under nonrelativistic assumptions, there is an invariant symplectic metric and a line element dt^2. Under special relativistic assumptions the symplectic metric continues to be invariant but the line elements are now -dt^2+dq^2/c^2 and dp^2-de^2/c^2. Max Born conjectured that the line element should be generalized to the pseudo- orthogonal metric -dt^2+dq^2/c^2+ (1/b^2)(dp^2-de^2/c^2). The group leaving these two metrics invariant is the pseudo-unitary group of transformations between noninertial frames. We show that these transformations eliminate the need for an absolute inertial frame by making forces relative and bounded by b and so embodies a relativity that is 'reciprocal' in the sense of Born. The inhomogeneous version of this group is naturally the semidirect product of the pseudo-unitary group with the nonabelian Heisenberg group. This is the quaplectic group. The Heisenberg group itself is the semidirect product of two translation groups. This provides the noncommutative properties of position and momentum and also time and energy that are required for the quantum mechanics that results from considering the unitary representations of the quaplectic group.Comment: Substantial revision, Publicon LaTe

    Evaluating Thematic Units to Build Reformed Worldview

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    This descriptive study researched the benefits of implementing thematic units as an effective curricular approach to aid in developing and opening the minds of students, parents, teachers, and administration to the possibilities of kingdom transformation and kingdom discipleship. More importantly, this paper focused on the creation of evaluation rubrics in aiding schools in fulfilling their mission statements. The literature review examined three things: research on the benefits of using an integrated curriculum, background information on Reformed thinking on education, and information on the use of rubrics and school accountability concerning worldview development. The results found that thematic units are a teaching strategy that creates a dynamic curriculum. Thematic units will challenge teachers to rethink curriculum from a view of curriculum as a static list of facts to be learned or topics to be mastered to a curriculum where students will see the wholeness of God\u27s creation and gain a clearer vision of Reformed worldview and an awareness of and a better understanding of living lives of kingdom discipleship

    Stellar clusters in the inner Galaxy and their correlation with cold dust emission

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    Stars are born within dense clumps of giant molecular clouds, constituting young stellar agglomerates known as embedded clusters, which only evolve into bound open clusters under special conditions. We statistically study all embedded clusters (ECs) and open clusters (OCs) known so far in the inner Galaxy, investigating particularly their interaction with the surrounding molecular environment and the differences in their evolution. We first compiled a merged list of 3904 clusters from optical and infrared clusters catalogs in the literature, including 75 new (mostly embedded) clusters discovered by us in the GLIMPSE survey. From this list, 695 clusters are within the Galactic range |l| < 60 deg and |b| < 1.5 deg covered by the ATLASGAL survey, which was used to search for correlations with submm dust continuum emission tracing dense molecular gas. We defined an evolutionary sequence of five morphological types: deeply embedded cluster (EC1), partially embedded cluster (EC2), emerging open cluster (OC0), OC still associated with a submm clump in the vicinity (OC1), and OC without correlation with ATLASGAL emission (OC2). Together with this process, we performed a thorough literature survey of these 695 clusters, compiling a considerable number of physical and observational properties in a catalog that is publicly available. We found that an OC defined observationally as OC0, OC1, or OC2 and confirmed as a real cluster is equivalent to the physical concept of OC (a bound exposed cluster) for ages in excess of ~16 Myr. Some observed OCs younger than this limit can actually be unbound associations. We found that our OC and EC samples are roughly complete up to ~1 kpc and ~1.8 kpc from the Sun, respectively, beyond which the completeness decays exponentially. Using available age estimates for a few ECs, we derived an upper limit of 3 Myr for the duration of the embedded phase... (Abridged)Comment: 39 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A on Sept 16, 2013. The catalog will be available at the CDS after official publication of the articl
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