104,409 research outputs found
A characterization of the central shell-focusing singularity in spherical gravitational collapse
We give a characterization of the central shell-focusing curvature
singularity that can form in the spherical gravitational collapse of a bounded
matter distribution obeying the dominant energy condition. This
characterization is based on the limiting behaviour of the mass function in the
neighbourhood of the singularity. Depending on the rate of growth of the mass
as a function of the area radius R, the singularity may be either covered or
naked. The singularity is naked if this growth rate is slower than R, covered
if it is faster than R, and either naked or covered if the growth rate is same
as R.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, significantly revised version, including change of
title. Revised version to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Hydrodynamic signatures of stationary Marangoni-driven surfactant transport
We experimentally study steady Marangoni-driven surfactant transport on the
interface of a deep water layer. Using hydrodynamic measurements, and without
using any knowledge of the surfactant physico-chemical properties, we show that
sodium dodecyl sulphate and Tergitol 15-S-9 introduced in low concentrations
result in a flow driven by adsorbed surfactant. At higher surfactant
concentration, the flow is dominated by the dissolved surfactant. Using
Camphoric acid, whose properties are {\it a priori} unknown, we demonstrate
this method's efficacy by showing its spreading is adsorption dominated
Complementarity and Phase Distributions for Angular Momentum Systems
Interferences in the distributions of complementary variables for angular
momentum - two level systems are discussed. A quantum phase distribution is
introduced for angular momentum. Explicit results for the phase distributions
and the number distributions for atomic coherent states, squeezed states and
superpositions of coherent states are given. These results clearly demonstrate
the issue of complementarity and provide us with results analogous to those for
the radiation field.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures available on request, replaced with minor typos
corrected in abstract, to appear in Physics Letters
Undergraduate research in primary care: Is it sustainable?
To describe the research project component of the BSc in Primary Health Care and to discuss the issues faced by students and faculty in attempting to complete a student-led research project. Medical schools increasingly expect medical students to undertake research as part of intercalated BScâs or in self-selected study modules. This research has historically been laboratory based, âpiggybackingâ onto existing projects. Projects initiated by students themselves and studies in primary care or community settings are more unusual. A qualitative study, based on interviews with students and examiners, triangulated with data from the peer review process and personal observations on the running of the course. A London medical school, running an intercalated BSc in Primary Health Care. We interviewed 24 of 26 students and two external examiners during the interview period of the study. Students successfully undertook research, from initial question through to publication. Overall, 90 dissertations were completed since 1997, of which half used a qualitative methodology (45/90). Ten projects have subsequently been published; there were also 16 conference presentations and 6 research letters. Themes from the interview data include: the studentsâ strong sense of project ownership, the difficulties of being a novice researcher, the difficulties posed by the research governance hurdles, the beneficial and for some students adverse impact (stress and coping with unsuccessful projects) and finally, the impact on their careers. Students gain considerably from this learning process, not only by undertaking their own research, but they also gain in terms of acquisition of transferable skills such as critical appraisal and improved self-directedness. Project completion and publication rates suggest that programmes developing undergraduate initiated research projects can be as successful as those for other novice researchers. The student-led project is a fragile endeavour, but currently is sustainable. © 2008, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved
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