43,970 research outputs found

    [Review of] Wyatt MacGaffey. Religion and Society in Central Africa: The BaKongo of Lower Zaire

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    MacGaffey, professor of anthropology at Haverford College, has based this carefully crafted book on twenty years of fieldwork and archival research. This is the first systematic study of BaKongo religion. But the study is far more than an analysis of the religion, as MacGaffey demonstrates how BaKongo social structure and power relationships are embedded in its very fabric. Dividing the study into three parts, MacGaffey first focuses on a discussion of BaKongo cosmology, then describes BaKongo ritual and power, and finally deals with issues of change in the BaKongo religion and society. Taking the perspective of the BaKongo themselves, MacGaffey explains the significance of BaKongo cosmology and how it is reflected in their myths and rituals, and in the life cycle of the BaKongo people themselves. The cosmology serves as the model upon which marriage alliances are based and the religion is the basis for the sacred and secular power held by priests and chiefs

    Modeling Evolving Coronal Loops with Observations from STEREO, Hinode, and TRACE

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    The high densities, long lifetimes, and narrow emission measure distributions observed in coronal loops with apex temperatures near 1 MK are difficult to reconcile with physical models of the solar atmosphere. It has been proposed that the observed loops are actually composed of sub-resolution ``threads'' that have been heated impulsively and are cooling. We apply this heating scenario to nearly simultaneous observations of an evolving post-flare loop arcade observed with the EUVI/\textit{STEREO}, XRT/\textit{Hinode}, and \textit{TRACE} imagers and the EIS spectrometer on \textit{HINODE}. We find that it is possible to reproduce the extended loop lifetime, high electron density, and the narrow differential emission measure with a multi-thread hydrodynamic model provided that the time scale for the energy release is sufficiently short. The model, however, does not reproduce the evolution of the very high temperature emission observed with XRT. In XRT the emission appears diffuse and it may be that this discrepancy is simply due to the difficulty of isolating individual loops at these temperatures. This discrepancy may also reflect fundamental problems with our understanding of post-reconnection dynamics during the conductive cooling phase of loop evolution.Comment: Revised version submitted to ApJ in response to referee's comment

    Ab initio studies of structural instabilities in magnesium silicate perovskite

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    Density-functional simulations are used to calculate structural properties and high-symmetry phonons of the hypothetical cubic phase, the stable orthorhombic phase and an intermediate tetragonal phase of magnesium silicate perovskite. We show that the structure of the stable phase is well described by freezing in a small number of unstable phonons into the cubic phase. We use the frequencies of these unstable modes to estimate transition temperatures for cubic--tetragonal and tetragonal--orthorhombic phase transitions. These are investigated further to find that the coupling with the strain suggests that phonons give a better representation than rigid unit modes. The phonons of an intermediate tetragonal phase were found to be stable except for two rotational modes. The eigenvectors of the most unstable mode of each of the cubic and tetragonal phases account for all the positional parameters of the orthorhombic phase. The phase boundary for the orthorhombic--tetragonal transition intersects possible mantle geotherms, suggesting that the tetragonal phase may be present in the lower mantle.Comment: 16 pages, REVTEX, 7 postscript figures (Fig 1 very large, contact Authors if required); submitted to Physics and Chemistry of Mineral

    Retracts of vertex sets of trees and the almost stability theorem

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    Let G be a group, let T be an (oriented) G-tree with finite edge stabilizers, and let VT denote the vertex set of T. We show that, for each G-retract V' of the G-set VT, there exists a G-tree whose edge stabilizers are finite and whose vertex set is V'. This fact leads to various new consequences of the almost stability theorem. We also give an example of a group G, a G-tree T and a G-retract V' of VT such that no G-tree has vertex set V'.Comment: 15 pages, 0 figures. Formerly titled "Some refinements of the almost stability theorem". Version
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