1,241 research outputs found
Field trip guidebook on environmental impact of clays along the upper Texas coast
During this one-day field trip, stops will include the examination of (i)expansive soils (Vertisols and Alfisols) in the southern part of Houston, (ii) subsidence and surface faulting east of Downtown Houston (San Jacinto Monument, Goose Creek Oil Field, and Baytown), and (iii) a landfill located southeast of Houston at the Gulf Coast Waste Disposal Authority Campbell Bayou Facility where clay is used as part of the liner material. In addition, a stop will be made at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Lyndon B. Space Center where field trip participants will be given the opportunity to observe the heritage of the Nation's space program.prepared by Theron D. Garcia, Douglas W. Ming, Lisa Kay Tuck
Mn Interstitial Diffusion in (Ga,Mn)As
We present a combined theoretical and experimental study of the ferromagnetic
semiconductor (Ga,Mn)As which explains the remarkably large changes observed on
low temperature annealing. Careful control of the annealing conditions allows
us to obtain samples with ferromagnetic transition temperatures up to 159 K. Ab
initio calculations, and resistivity measurements during annealing, show that
the observed changes are due to out-diffusion of Mn interstitials towards the
surface, governed by an energy barrier of about 0.7-0.8 eV. The Mn interstitial
is a double donor resulting in compensation of charge carriers and suppression
of ferromagnetism. Electric fields induced by high concentrations of
substitutional Mn acceptors have a significant effect on the diffusion.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Voice, autonomy and utopian desire in participatory film-making with young refugees
This article is a reflection on what reflexive documentary scholars call the âmoral dimensionâ (Nash 2012: 318) of a participatory filmmaking project with refugee young people, who wanted to make a film to support other new young arrivals in the process of making home in Scotland. In the first part, we highlight some of the challenges of collaborating with refugee young people, in light of the often de-humanising representations of refugees in mainstream media and the danger of the triple conflation of authenticity-voice-pain in academic narratives about refugees. In the second part, we show how honouring young peopleâs desire to convey the hopeful aspects of making home, emerged as a key pedagogical strategy to affirm their expert position and encourage their participation in the project. Revisiting key moments of learning and interaction, we demonstrate how young peopleâs process of âfinding a voiceâ in moment-by-moment filmmaking practice was not a linear, developmental process towards âpureâ individual empowerment and singular artistic expression. Their participation in shaping their visual (self-)representation in the final film, was embedded in the dialogical process and pragmatic requirements of a collaborative film production, in which voice, autonomy and teacher authority were negotiated on a moment-by-moment basis. We conclude that it is vital for a reflexive practice and research to not gloss over the moral dilemmas in the name of progressive ideals, for example, when representations are co-created by project filmmakers/educators, but embrace these deliberations as part of the âfascinating collaborative matrixâ (Chambers 2019: 29) of participatory filmmaking
Asymptotic and numerical analysis of a simple model for blade coating
Motivated by the industrial process of blade coating, the two-dimensional flow of a thin film of Newtonian fluid on a horizontal substrate moving parallel to itself with constant speed under a fixed blade of finite length in which the flows upstream and downstream of the blade are coupled via the flow under the blade is analysed. A combination of asymptotic and numerical methods is used to investigate the number and nature of the steady solutions that exist. Specially, it is found that in the presence of gravity there is always at least one, and (depending on the parameter values) possibly as many as three, steady solutions, and that when multiple solutions occur they are identical under and downstream of the blade, but differ upstream of it. The stability of these solutions is investigated, and their asymptotic behaviour in the limits of large and small flux and weak and strong gravity effects, respectively, determined
Batek playing Batek for tourists at Peninsular Malaysiaâs national park
The Batek are a foraging-trading people living in and around Peninsular malaysiaâs largest national park, taman Negara. In recent years some of their semi-permanent camps near the park headquarters at Kuala tahan have become tourist attractions. Batek residents allow groups of malaysian and foreign tourists to visit, and they demonstrate some of their specialised skills, including shooting blowpipes and making fire with rattan vines and dry wood, as well as selling handicrafts. In this article we examine the reasons why some Batek participate in the tourist business, how they integrate it into their overall economy, and how they preserve their distinctive cultural values and practices while offering a simplified picture of their culture to curious outsiders
Psychoneuroimmunology-Based Stress Management during Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Early Breast Cancer
Objective. In a randomized trial of women with early stage breast cancer undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy, two stress management interventions, tai chi training and spiritual growth groups, were compared to a usual care control group, to evaluate psychosocial functioning, quality of life (QOL), and biological markers thought to reflect cancer- and treatment-specific mechanisms. Method. The sample consisted of 145 women aged 27â75 years; 75% were Caucasian and 25% African American. A total of 109 participants completed the study, yielding a 75% retention rate. Grounded in a psychoneuroimmunology framework, the overarching hypothesis was that both interventions would reduce perceived stress, enhance QOL and psychosocial functioning, normalize levels of stress-related neuroendocrine mediators, and attenuate immunosuppression. Results. While interesting patterns were seen across the sample and over time, the interventions had no appreciable effects when delivered during the period of chemotherapy. Conclusions. Findings highlight the complex nature of biobehavioral interventions in relation to treatment trajectories and potential outcomes. Psychosocial interventions like these may lack sufficient power to overcome the psychosocial or physiological stress experienced during the chemotherapy treatment period. It may be that interventions requiring less activity and/or group attendance would have enhanced therapeutic effects, and more active interventions need to be tested prior to and following recovery from chemotherapy
Conformal Mapping on Rough Boundaries II: Applications to bi-harmonic problems
We use a conformal mapping method introduced in a companion paper to study
the properties of bi-harmonic fields in the vicinity of rough boundaries. We
focus our analysis on two different situations where such bi-harmonic problems
are encountered: a Stokes flow near a rough wall and the stress distribution on
the rough interface of a material in uni-axial tension. We perform a complete
numerical solution of these two-dimensional problems for any univalued rough
surfaces. We present results for sinusoidal and self-affine surface whose slope
can locally reach 2.5. Beyond the numerical solution we present perturbative
solutions of these problems. We show in particular that at first order in
roughness amplitude, the surface stress of a material in uni-axial tension can
be directly obtained from the Hilbert transform of the local slope. In case of
self-affine surfaces, we show that the stress distribution presents, for large
stresses, a power law tail whose exponent continuously depends on the roughness
amplitude
Structural relaxation in a system of dumbbell molecules
The interaction-site-density-fluctuation correlators, the dipole-relaxation
functions, and the mean-squared displacements of a system of symmetric
dumbbells of fused hard spheres are calculated for two representative
elongations of the molecules within the mode-coupling theory for the evolution
of glassy dynamics. For large elongations, universal relaxation laws for states
near the glass transition are valid for parameters and time intervals similar
to the ones found for the hard-sphere system. Rotation-translation coupling
leads to an enlarged crossover interval for the mean-squared displacement of
the constituent atoms between the end of the von Schweidler regime and the
beginning of the diffusion process. For small elongations, the superposition
principle for the reorientational -process is violated for parameters
and time intervals of interest for data analysis, and there is a strong
breaking of the coupling of the -relaxation scale for the diffusion
process with that for representative density fluctuations and for dipole
reorientations.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, Phys. Rev. E in pres
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