31,249 research outputs found
Machine tests slow-speed sliding friction in high vacuum
Testing machine that operates without any lubrication of the machine elements within the vacuum chamber measures static friction and sliding friction at very low speeds. Moving parts are held to a minimum to simplify operation in the vacuum chamber
Attitudes towards lesbians and gay men and support for lesbian and gay human rights among psychology students
A questionnaire comprising two scales, the short form of the Attitudes Towards Lesbians and Gay Men Scale (ATLG-S; Herek, 1984) and the newly devised Support for Lesbian and Gay Human Rights Scale (SLGHR) were administered to 226 students taking undergraduate psychology courses at universities in the United Kingdom, to assess their attitudes towards lesbians and gay men, and their level of support for lesbian and gay human rights. The results indicated that whilst only a small percentage of respondents expressed negative attitudes towards lesbians and gay men on the ATLG-S, the sample as a whole did not overwhelmingly support lesbian and gay human rights. The lack of support for lesbian and gay human rights is discussed in relation to its implications for psychology students as future practitioners and policy makers.
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The evolutionary sequence of post-starburst galaxies
© 2017 The Authors. There are multiple ways in which to select post-starburst galaxies in the literature. In this work, we present a study into how two well-used selection techniques have consequences on observable post-starburst galaxy parameters, such as colour, morphology and environment, and how this affects interpretations of their role in the galaxy duty cycle. We identify a master sample of Hδ strong (EWHδ> 3Å) post-starburst galaxies from the value-added catalogue in the seventh data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR7) over a redshift range 0.01 -2.5Å) but one having an additional cut onEWHα (> -3Å).We examine the differences in observables and AGN fractions to see what effect the Hα cut has on the properties of post-starburst galaxies and what these differing samples can tell us about the duty cycle of post-starburst galaxies. We find that Hδ strong galaxies peak in the 'blue cloud', E+As in the 'green valley' and pure E+As in the 'red sequence'.We also find that pure E+As have a more early-type morphology and a higher fraction in denser environments compared with the Hδ strong and E+A galaxies. These results suggest that there is an evolutionary sequence in the post-starburst phase from blue discy galaxies with residual star formation to passive red early-types
The export of national varieties of capitalism: the cases of Wal-Mart and Ikea
Using the cases of Wal-Mart and IKEA, this paper takes a productive systems approach to examine ‘varieties of capitalism’ from the perspective of the ways by which production and market relations are structured and prioritised. It considers the nature of these relations and their interaction within the domestic economy and the ways that firms and national systems interact with each other
in the global economy. It examines the processes by which trading standards are transported via supply chain relationships, which ultimately become embedded in products and recognized by consumers at various stages. In this
analysis, the cases of Wal-Mart and IKEA provide insight into the ways by which national systems extend themselves globally, their contrasting effects on the business environments in host localities, and the impact of the resulting supply chain relations on organizational performance
A comparison of the in vitro and in planta responses of Phytophthora cinnamomi isolates to phosphite
Research in plant pathology often relies on testing interactions between a fungicide and a pathogen in vitro and extrapolating from these results what may happen in planta. Likewise, results from glasshouse experiments are used to estimate what will happen if the fungicide is applied in the field. However, it is difficult to obtain conditions in vitro and in the glasshouse which reflect the conditions where the fungicide may eventually be used, in the field.
The aim of this paper is to compare results of the effect of phosphite on P. cinnamomi isolates in vitro and in planta
Oxygen Moment Formation and Canting in Li2CuO2
The possibilities of oxygen moment formation and canting in the quasi-1D
cuprate Li2CuO2 are investigated using single crystal neutron diffraction at 2
K. The observed magnetic intensities could not be explained without the
inclusion of a large ordered oxygen moment of 0.11(1) Bohr magnetons.
Least-squares refinement of the magnetic structure of Li2CuO2 in combination
with a spin-density Patterson analysis shows that the magnetization densities
of the Cu and O atoms are highly aspherical, forming quasi-1D ribbons of
localised Cu and O moments. Magnetic structure refinements and low-field
magnetization measurements both suggest that the magnetic structure of Li2CuO2
at 2 K may be canted. A possible model for the canted configuration is
proposed.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures (screen resolution
First determination of the content of and updated determination of the contents of and
Quantum-correlated decays collected by the CLEO-c
experiment are used to perform a first measurement of , the
fractional -even content of the self-conjugate decay , obtaining a value of . An important
input to the measurement comes from the use of
and decays to tag the signal mode. This same
technique is applied to the channels and , yielding and
, where the first uncertainty is
statistical and the second systematic. These measurements are consistent with
those of an earlier analysis, based on -eigenstate tags, and can be
combined to give values of and
. The results will enable the three modes to
be included in a model-independent manner in measurements of the unitarity
triangle angle using decays, and in time-dependent
studies of violation and mixing in the system.Comment: Minor revisions following journal acceptanc
CBI limits on 31 GHz excess emission in southern HII regions
We have mapped four regions of the southern Galactic plane at 31 GHz with the
Cosmic Background Imager. From the maps, we have extracted the flux densities
for six of the brightest \hii regions in the southern sky and compared them
with multi-frequency data from the literature. The fitted spectral index for
each source was found to be close to the theoretical value expected for
optically thin free-free emission, thus confirming that the majority of flux at
31 GHz is due to free-free emission from ionised gas with an electron
temperature of K.
We also found that, for all six sources, the 31 GHz flux density was slightly
higher than the predicted value from data in the literature. This excess
emission could be due to spinning dust or another emission mechanism.
Comparisons with m data indicate an average dust emissivity of
K (MJy/sr), or a 95 per cent confidence limit of K (MJy/sr). This is lower than that found in diffuse clouds at high
Galactic latitudes by a factor of . The most significant detection
() was found in (RCW49) and may account for up to
per cent of the total flux density observed at 31 GHz. Here, the
dust emissivity of the excess emission is K (MJy/sr) and
is within the range observed at high Galactic latitudes.
Low level polarised emission was observed in all six sources with
polarisation fractions in the range per cent. This is likely to be
mainly due to instrumental leakage and is therefore upper an upper limit to the
free-free polarisation. It corresponds to an upper limit of per cent
for the polarisation of anomalous emission.Comment: Accepted in MNRAS. 12 pages, 10 figures, 5 table
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