195 research outputs found
Scattering hypervolume for ultracold bosons from weak to strong interactions
The elastic scattering properties of three bosons at low energy enter the
many-body description of ultracold Bose gases via the three-body scattering
hypervolume . We study this quantity for identical bosons that interact via
a pairwise finite-range potential. Our calculations cover the regime from
strongly repulsive potentials towards attractive potentials supporting multiple
two-body bound states and are consistent with the few existing predictions for
. We present the first numerical confirmation of the universal predictions
for in the strongly interacting regime, where Efimov physics dominates, for
a local nonzero-range potential. Our findings highlight how is influenced
by three-body quasibound states with strong -wave or -wave
characteristics in the weakly interacting regime.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
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"The dearest of our possessions": applying Floridi's information privacy concept in models of information behavior and information literacy
This conceptual paper argues for the value of an approach to privacy in the digital information environment informed by Luciano Floridi's philosophy of information and information ethics. This approach involves achieving informational privacy, through the features of anonymity and obscurity, through an optimal balance of ontological frictions. This approach may be used to modify models for information behavior and for information literacy, giving them a fuller and more effective coverage of privacy issues in the infosphere. For information behavior, the Information Seeking and Communication Model, and the Information Grounds conception, are most appropriate for this purpose. For information literacy, the metaliteracy model, using a modification a privacy literacy framework, is most suitable
Research in and application of modern automatic control theory to nuclear rocket dynamics and control, volume I Semiannual status report
Linear optimal feedback control theory for nuclear rocket dynamics and control problem
Still dreaming: service users' employment, education & training goals
Background: Enabling service users to find and keep real jobs is a significant strand of UK mental health policy. An evidence-based approach to employment support is well documented, but is not widely implemented in the UK.
Aim: To inform the development of vocational services in South Essex by ascertaining service users' employment, education and training goals.
Method: Face-to-face interviews with a randomly selected sample of service users on enhanced CPA carried out by a team of service user researchers using an adapted version of a questionnaire developed for a previous similar survey. A postal survey of a further randomly selected sample of service users on enhanced CPA using a brief version of the questionnaire was also carried out.
Results: Interviews were carried out with 82 service users. A further 159 returned a postal questionnaire. 42.7% had no regular day time activity. Only 15% were in paid work. 60.6% were definitely interested in finding work. Seventy-seven percent of respondents to the interviews who were interested in work were not currently receiving support to achieve this. The main help wanted was support in work, help with mental health problems and benefits advice. The main barriers identified were employers' attitudes and threat to benefits. Service user researchers reported benefits from undertaking the work.
Conclusions: High numbers of mental health service users are interested in pursuing employment, education or training goals but currently lack the support they need to do so. Implementation of an evidence-based approach to employment support has the potential to enable service users to achieve their goals. Service users are well able to undertake research with considerable benefits for themselves and other stakeholders
The Extraordinary `Superthin' Spiral Galaxy UGC7321. I. Disk Color Gradients and Global Properties from Multiwavelength Observations
We present B- and R-band imaging and photometry, H-alpha narrow-band imaging,
NIR H-band imaging, and HI 21-cm spectroscopy of the nearby Sd spiral galaxy
UGC7321. UGC7321 exhibits a remarkably thin stellar disk with no bulge
component. The galaxy has a very diffuse, low surface brightness disk, which
appears to suffer little internal extinction in spite of its edge-on geometry.
The UGC7321 disk shows significant B-R color gradients in both the radial and
vertical directions. These color gradients cannot be explained solely by dust
and are indicative of changes in the mix of stellar ages and/or metallicity as
a function of both radius and height above the galaxy plane. The outer regions
of the UGC7321 disk are too blue to be explained by low metallicity alone
(B-R<0.6), and must be relatively young. However, the galaxy also contains
stellar populations with B-R>1.1, indicating it is not a young or
recently-formed galaxy. The disk of UGC7321 is not a simple exponential, but
exhibits a light excess at small radii, as well as distinct surface brightness
zones. Together the properties of UGC7321 imply that it is an under-evolved
galaxy in both a dynamical and in a star-formation sense. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 28 pages, 1 table and 21
figures (GIF and postscript
The Norma cluster (ACO3627): II. The near infrared K_s-band luminosity function
A deep K_s-band photometric catalogue of galaxies at the core of the rich,
nearby Norma cluster (ACO3627) is presented. The survey covers about 45 by 45
square arcmin (slightly less than 1/3 Abell radius), which corresponds to
approx. 0.8 Mpc^2 at the adopted distance (v_cmb/H0) of 70 Mpc of this cluster.
The survey is estimated to be complete to a magnitude of M_Ks <~ -19.5 mag.
This extends into the dwarf regime, 6 magnitudes below M_Ks*. The catalogue
contains 390 objects, 235 of which are classified as likely or definite
galaxies and 155 as candidate galaxies. The Ks-band luminosity function (LF) is
constructed from the photometric sample, using a spectroscopic subsample to
correct for fore- and background contamination. We fit a Schechter function
with a characteristic magnitude of M_Ks* = -25.39 \pm 0.80 mag and faint-end
slope of alpha = -1.26 \pm 0.10 to the data. The shape of the LF is similar to
those found in previous determinations of the cluster LF, in both optical and
near infrared. The Schechter parameters agree well with those of recent field
LFs, suggesting that both the shape of the bright end and the faint end slope
are relatively insensitive to environment.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 8 tables (includes full photometric catalogue as
appendix), accepted for publication in MNRA
Evolutionary properties of the low-luminosity galaxy population in the NGC5044 Group
With this third paper of a series we present Johnson-Gunn B,g,V,r,i,z
multicolour photometry for 79 objects, including a significant fraction of the
faintest galaxies around NGC5044, assessing group membership on the basis of
apparent morphology and low-resolution optical spectroscopy to estimate
redshift for 21 objects. Together, dE's and Im's provide the bulk of the galaxy
luminosity function, around M(g)\sim-18.0, while the S0 and dSph components
dominate, respectively, the bright and faint-end tails of the distribution.
This special mix places the NGC 5044 group just "midway" between the
high-density cosmic aggregation scale typical of galaxy clusters, and the
low-density environment of looser galaxy clumps like our Local Group. The
bright mass of the 136 member galaxies with available photometry and
morphological classification, amounts to a total of 2.3x10^{12}M_sun while
current SFR within the group turns to be about or higher than 23M_sun/yr. In
this regard, a drift toward bluer integrated colours is found to be an issue
for dE's pointing to a moderate but pervasive star-formation activity even
among nominally "quiescent" stellar systems. Through Lick narrow-band index
analysis, dwarf ellipticals are found to share a sub-solar metallicity (-1.0 <
[Fe/H] <-0.5) with a clear decoupling between Iron and alpha elements, as
already established also for high-mass systems. Both dE's and dS0's are
consistent with an old age, about one Hubble time, although a possible bias,
toward higher values of age, may be induced by the gas emission affecting the
Hbeta strength.Comment: 25 pages with 19 figure & 8 tables - To appear in the Monthly Notices
of the Royal Astronomical Society (in press) See
http://www.bo.astro.it/~eps/buz10602/10602.html for a complete overview of
the projec
The dwarf galaxy population in Abell 2218
We present results from a deep photometric study of the rich galaxy cluster
Abell 2218 (z=0.18) based on archival HST WFPC2 F606W images. These have been
used to derive the luminosity function to extremely faint limits
(M_{F606W}=-13.2 mag, mu_{0}=24.7 mag arcsec^{-2}) over a wide field of view
(1.3 h^{-2} Mpc^2). We find the faint-end slope of the luminosity function to
vary with environment within the cluster, going from alpha=-1.23\pm0.13 within
the projected central core of the cluster (100 < r < 300 h^{-1} kpc) to
alpha=-1.49\pm 0.06 outside this radius (300 < r < 750 h^{-1} kpc). We infer
that the core is 'dwarf depleted', and further quantify this by studying the
ratio of 'dwarf' to 'giant' galaxies and its dependency as a function of
cluster-centric radius and local galaxy density. We find that this ratio varies
strongly with both quantities, and that the dwarf galaxy population in A2218
has a more extended distribution than the giant galaxy population.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 11 pages, 12 figure
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