1,169 research outputs found
An investigation into surface effects in thin film plastic scintillators
An investigation into the luminescent response of thin film plastic scintillators as a function of their method of preparation is made. Investigations are carried out on NE102A and NE118 using four different methods of preparation. It is found that the Birks model for luminescence as a function of film thickness successfully explains the response in three of the four methods of preparation, but fails to explain the response of thin films prepared on a glass surface. These films show an unexpected non-linearity in their behaviour. It is proposed that the behaviour in these films can be explained in terms of the existence of surface regions in these films. A model based on the existence of these surface regions is prepared. It is further proposed that, in general, the luminescent response of thin films of plastic scintillator is dependent on their method of preparation
Solar Physics - Plasma Physics Workshop
A summary of the proceedings of a conference whose purpose was to explore plasma physics problems which arise in the study of solar physics is provided. Sessions were concerned with specific questions including the following: (1) whether the solar plasma is thermal or non-themal; (2) what spectroscopic data is required; (3) what types of magnetic field structures exist; (4) whether magnetohydrodynamic instabilities occur; (5) whether resistive or non-magnetohydrodynamic instabilities occur; (6) what mechanisms of particle acceleration have been proposed; and (7) what information is available concerning shock waves. Very few questions were answered categorically but, for each question, there was discussion concerning the observational evidence, theoretical analyses, and existing or potential laboratory and numerical experiments
Instanton approach to the Langevin motion of a particle in a random potential
We develop an instanton approach to the non-equilibrium dynamics in
one-dimensional random environments. The long time behavior is controlled by
rare fluctuations of the disorder potential and, accordingly, by the tail of
the distribution function for the time a particle needs to propagate along the
system (the delay time). The proposed method allows us to find the tail of the
delay time distribution function and delay time moments, providing thus an
exact description of the long-time dynamics. We analyze arbitrary environments
covering different types of glassy dynamics: dynamics in a short-range random
field, creep, and Sinai's motion.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Complex Action Support from Coincidences of Couplings
Our model \cite{ownmMPP}\cite{SIMPP} with complex action in a functional
integral formulation with path integrals extending over all times, past and
future, is reviewed. Several numerical relations between coupling constants are
presented as supporting evidence. The new evidence is that some more
unexplained coincidences are explained in our model:
1) The "scale problem" is solved because the Higgs field expectation value is
predicted to be very small compared to say some fundamental scale, that might
be the Planck scale.
2) The Higgs VEV need not, however, to be just zero, but rather is predicted
to be so that the running top-Yukawa coupling just is about to be unity at this
scale; in this way the (weak) scale easily becomes "exponentially small".
Instead of the top-Yukawa we should rather say the highest flavour Yukawa
coupling here.
These predictions are only achieved by allowing the principle of minimization
of the imaginary part of the action SI(history) to to a certain extent adjust
some coupling constants in addition to the initial conditions.
If Susy-partners are not found in LHC, it would strengthen the need for
"solution" of the hierarchy or rather scale problem along the lines of the
present article.Comment: only text. Some printing mistakes corrected and a couple of new
subsections inserted and abstract stylistically changed a bi
The WKB Approximation without Divergences
In this paper, the WKB approximation to the scattering problem is developed
without the divergences which usually appear at the classical turning points. A
detailed procedure of complexification is shown to generate results identical
to the usual WKB prescription but without the cumbersome connection formulas.Comment: 13 pages, TeX file, to appear in Int. J. Theor. Phy
Integrated chemical/physical and biological processes modeling Part 2 - Anaerobic digestion of sewage sludges
The development and validation of a two phase (aqueous-gas) integrated mixed weak acid/base chemical, physical and biological processes kinetic model for anaerobic digestion (AD) of sewage sludge are described. The biological kinetic processes for AD are integrated into a two phase subset of the three phase mixed weak acid/base chemistry kinetic model of Musvoto et al. (1997, 2000a,b,c). The approach of characterising sewage sludge into carbohydrates, lipids and proteins, as is done in the International Water Association (IWA) AD model No 1 (ADM1, Batstone et al., 2002), requires measurements that are not routinely available on sewage sludges. Instead, the sewage sludge is characterised with the COD, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen (CHON) composition. The model is formulated in mole units, based on conservation of C, N, O, H and COD. The model is calibrated and validated with data from laboratory mesophilic anaerobic digesters operating from 7 to 20 d sludge age and fed a sewage primary and humus sludge mixture. These digesters yielded COD mass balances between 107 and 109% and N mass balances between 91 and 99%, and hence the experimental data is accepted as reasonable. The sewage sludge is found to be 64 to 68% biodegradable (depending on the kinetic formulation selected for the hydrolysis process) and to have a C,sub>3.5H7O2N0.196 composition. For the selected hydrolysis kinetics of surface mediated reaction (Contois), with a single set of kinetic and stoichiometric constants, for all retention times free and saline ammonia (FSA), short chain fatty acids (SCFA), H2CO3* alkalinity and pH of the effluent stream, and CO2 and CH4 gases in the gas stream. The measured composition of primary sludge from two local wastewater treatment plants ranged between C3.38H7O1.91N0.21 and C3.91H7O2.04N0.16. The predicted composition is therefore within 5% of the average measured composition providing persuasive validation of the model. Keywords: anaerobic digestion, weak acid/base chemistry, kinetic modelling, sewage sludge Water SA Vol. 31(4) 2005: 545-56
South Africa's salt reduction strategy: Are we on track, and what lies ahead?
On 2 September 2016, 25 local and international participants from various sectors met in Cape Town to take stock of South Africa (SA)’s progress in salt reduction and develop a roadmap for action. SA is centre stage on salt reduction globally, being the first country to mandate salt reduction across a wide range of processed foods. Excessive salt intake contributed by processed foods and discretionary sources motivated SA to implement a public awareness campaign in parallel with legislation to reduce salt intake to the World Health Organization target of 5 g per day. Five priority areas were identified for continued action on salt reduction, including obtaining research funds for continued monitoring and compliance of salt reduction targets. Determining the contribution of foods eaten out of home to total salt intake and implementing strategies to address this sector were also highlighted as key actions. Lastly, implementing the next stage of the Salt Watch awareness campaign to change
Test of Quantum Action for Inverse Square Potential
We present a numerical study of the quantum action previously introduced as a
parametrisation of Q.M. transition amplitudes. We address the questions: Is the
quantum action possibly an exact parametrisation in the whole range of
transition times ()? Is the presence of potential terms beyond
those occuring in the classical potential required? What is the error of the
parametrisation estimated from the numerical fit? How about convergence and
stability of the fitting method (dependence on grid points, resolution, initial
conditions, internal precision etc.)? Further we compare two methods of
numerical determination of the quantum action: (i) global fit of the Q.M.
transition amplitudes and (ii) flow equation. As model we consider the inverse
square potential, for which the Q.M. transition amplitudes are analytically
known. We find that the relative error of the parametrisation starts from zero
at T=0 increases to about at and then decreases to zero
when . Second, we observe stability of the quantum action under
variation of the control parameters. Finally, the flow equation method works
well in the regime of large giving stable results under variation of
initial data and consistent with the global fit method.Comment: Text (LaTeX), Figures(ps
Educational aspirations in inner city schools
The research aimed to assess the nature and level of pupils’ educational aspirations and to elucidate the factors that influence these aspirations. A sample of five inner city comprehensive secondary schools were selected by their Local Authority because of poor pupil attendance, below average examination results and low rates of continuing in full-time education after the age of 16. Schools were all ethnically mixed and co-educational. Over 800 pupils aged 12-14 completed a questionnaire assessing pupils’ experience of home, school and their peers. A sub-sample of 48 pupils selected by teachers to reflect ethnicity and ability levels in individual schools also participated in detailed focus group interviews. There were no significant differences in aspirations by gender or year group, but differences between ethnic groups were marked. Black African, Asian Other and Pakistani groups had significantly higher educational aspirations than the White British group, who had the lowest aspirations. The results suggest the high aspirations of Black African, Asian Other and Pakistani pupils are mediated through strong academic self-concept, positive peer support, a commitment to schooling and high educational aspirations in the home. They also suggest that low educational aspirations may have different mediating influences in different ethnic groups. The low aspirations of White British pupils seem to relate most strongly to poor academic self-concept and low educational aspirations in the home, while for Black Caribbean pupils disaffection, negative peers and low commitment to schooling appear more relevant. Interviews with pupils corroborated the above findings and further illuminated the factors students described as important in their educational aspirations. The results are discussed in relation to theories of aspiration which stress its nature as a cultural capacity
Noise storm continua: power estimates for electron acceleration
We use a generic stochastic acceleration formalism to examine the power
() input to nonthermal electrons that cause
noise storm continuum emission. The analytical approach includes the derivation
of the Green's function for a general second-order Fermi process, and its
application to obtain the particular solution for the nonthermal electron
distribution resulting from the acceleration of a Maxwellian source in the
corona. We compare with the power observed in noise
storm radiation. Using typical values for the various parameters, we find that
, yielding an efficiency
estimate in the range 10^{-10} \lsim \eta
\lsim 10^{-6} for this nonthermal acceleration/radiation process. These
results reflect the efficiency of the overall process, starting from electron
acceleration and culminating in the observed noise storm emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in Solar Physic
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