1,058 research outputs found
Little groups of irreps of O(3), SO(3), and the infinite axial subgroups
Little groups are enumerated for the irreps and their components in any basis
of O(3) and SO(3) up to rank 9, and for all irreps of C, C, C, D and D. The results are obtained
by a new chain criterion, which distinguishes massive (rotationally
inequivalent) irrep basis functions and allows for multiple branching paths,
and are verified by inspection. These results are relevant to the determination
of the symmetry of a material from its linear and nonlinear optical properties
and to the choices of order parameters for symmetry breaking in liquid
crystals.Comment: 28 pages and 3 figure
Detection of the gravitomagnetic clock effect
The essence of the gravitomagnetic clock effect is properly defined showing
that its origin is in the topology of world lines with closed space
projections. It is shown that, in weak field approximation and for a
spherically symmetric central body, the loss of synchrony between two clocks
counter-rotating along a circular geodesic is proportional to the angular
momentum of the source of the gravitational field. Numerical estimates are
presented for objects within the solar system. The less unfavorable situation
is found around Jupiter.Comment: 14 pages; Latex. To be published on Classical and Quantum Gravit
General relativistic corrections to the Sagnac effect
The difference in travel time of corotating and counter-rotating light waves
in the field of a central massive and spinning body is studied. The corrections
to the special relativistic formula are worked out in a Kerr field. Estimation
of numeric values for the Earth and satellites in orbit around it show that a
direct measurement is in the order of concrete possibilities.Comment: REVTex, accepted for publication on Phys. Rev.
Birefringence of interferential mirrors at normal incidence Experimental and computational study
In this paper we present a review of the existing data on interferential
mirror birefringence. We also report new measurements of two sets of mirrors
that confirm that mirror phase retardation per reflection decreases when mirror
reflectivity increases. We finally developed a computational code to calculate
the expected phase retardation per reflection as a function of the total number
of layers constituting the mirror. Different cases have been studied and we
have compared computational results with the trend of the experimental data.
Our study indicates that the origin of the mirror intrinsic birefringence can
be ascribed to the reflecting layers close to the substrate.Comment: To be published in Applied Physics
Anatomy and Neurophysiology of the Taste System in Aged Animals a
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72005/1/j.1749-6632.1989.tb20989.x.pd
Parent and child agreement for acute stress disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder and other psychopathology in a prospective study of children and adolescents exposed to single-event trauma
Examining parent-child agreement for Acute Stress Disorder (ASD) and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in children and adolescents is essential for informing the assessment of trauma-exposed children, yet no studies have examined this relationship using appropriate statistical techniques. Parent-child agreement for these disorders was examined by structured interview in a prospective study of assault and motor vehicle accident (MVA) child survivors, assessed at 2-4 weeks and 6 months post-trauma. Children were significantly more likely to meet criteria for ASD, as well as other ASD and PTSD symptom clusters, based on their own report than on their parent's report. Parent-child agreement for ASD was poor (Cohen's κ = -.04), but fair for PTSD (Cohen's κ = .21). Agreement ranged widely for other emotional disorders (Cohen's κ = -.07-.64), with generalised anxiety disorder found to have superior parent-child agreement (when assessed by phi coefficients) relative to ASD and PTSD. The findings support the need to directly interview children and adolescents, particularly for the early screening of posttraumatic stress, and suggest that other anxiety disorders may have a clearer presentation post-trauma
'An Apotheosis of Well-Being': Durkheim on austerity and double-dip recessions
This article is an attempt to contribute a view on the economic crisis from classical sociology, a voice often missing from the sociological response to the crisis. The work of Émile Durkheim provides a unique perspective here centred on morality and inequality produced in a historical context akin to our neoliberal times. It is argued there are four key points to take from Durkheim’s work. Firstly, that the initial credit crunch can be more fully understood with reference to the economic anomie which Durkheim sees as ‘chronic’ in a time of marketization. Secondly, that this creates an antagonistic relationship between a supposedly self-dependent rich and lazy poor. Thirdly, this conception of self-dependency and individual initiative makes any attempt to regulate the economy akin to sacrilege. Finally, the state is unwilling to intervene due to the emergence of ‘pseudo-democracies’. Therefore, Durkheim’s theory accounts for the initial crisis, austerity and double-dip recessions in a sociological framework. The article concludes by returning to the centrality of morality to the crisis for Durkheim and highlighting the omission of this in contemporary debates
Public Perceptions of Wildlife-Associated Disease: Risk Communication Matters
Wildlife professionals working at the interface where conflicts arise between people and wild animals have an exceptional responsibility in the long-term interest of sustaining society’s support for wildlife and its conservation by resolving human–wildlife conflicts so that people continue to view wildlife as a valued resource. The challenge of understanding and responding to people’s concerns about wildlife is particularly acute in situations involving wildlife-associated disease and may be addressed through One Health communication. Two important questions arise in this work: (1) how will people react to the message that human health and wildlife health are linked?; and (2) will wildlife-associated disease foster negative attitudes about wildlife as reservoirs, vectors, or carriers of disease harmful to humans? The answers to these questions will depend in part on whether wildlife professionals successfully manage wildlife disease and communicate the associated risks in a way that promotes societal advocacy for healthy wildlife rather than calls for eliminating wildlife because they are viewed as disease-carrying pests. This work requires great care in both formal and informal communication. We focus on risk perception, and we briefly discuss guidance available for risk communication, including formation of key messages and the importance of word choices. We conclude that the risk perception and communication research available is helpful but inadequate, and that thoughtful practice with respect to message and word choice is needed
Simultaneity and generalized connections in general relativity
Stationary extended frames in general relativity are considered. The
requirement of stationarity allows to treat the spacetime as a principal fiber
bundle over the one-dimensional group of time translations. Over this bundle a
connection form establishes the simultaneity between neighboring events
accordingly with the Einstein synchronization convention. The mathematics
involved is that of gauge theories where a gauge choice is interpreted as a
global simultaneity convention. Then simultaneity in non-stationary frames is
investigated: it turns to be described by a gauge theory in a fiber bundle
without structure group, the curvature being given by the Fr\"olicher-Nijenhuis
bracket of the connection. The Bianchi identity of this gauge theory is a
differential relation between the vorticity field and the acceleration field.
In order for the simultaneity connection to be principal, a necessary and
sufficient condition on the 4-velocity of the observers is given.Comment: RevTeX, 9 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. Previous title "The gauge nature
of simultaneity". Classical and Quantum Gravity
http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/CQ
Is it possible to detect gravitational waves with atom interferometers?
We investigate the possibility to use atom interferometers to detect
gravitational waves. We discuss the interaction of gravitational waves with an
atom interferometer and analyze possible schemes
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