7,911 research outputs found
How useful are the stages of change for targeting interventions? randomized test of a brief intervention to reduce smoking
Objectives. To see whether the stages of change are useful for targeting a brief intervention to reduce smoking based on implementation intentions. A second objective was to rule out demand characteristics as an alternative explanation for the findings of intervention studies based on the transtheoretical model and implementation intentions. Design. Participants (N = 350) were randomized to a passive control condition (questionnaire only), active control condition (questionnaire-plus-instruction to plan to quit) or experimental condition (questionnaire, plan to quit, form an implementation intention). Their behavior and psychosocial orientation to quit were measured at baseline and 2-month follow-up. Main Outcome Measures. Theory of planned behavior variables, nicotine dependence and quitting. Results. Significantly more people quit smoking in the experimental condition than in the control conditions, and the planning instructions changed intention to quit and perceived control over quitting, but not behavior. Stage of change moderated these effects such that implementation intentions worked best for individuals who were in the preparation stage at baseline. Conclusion. Harnessing both motivational and volitional processes seems to enhance the effectiveness of smoking cessation programs, although further work is required to clarify inconsistencies in the literature using the stages of change.</p
On the formation time scale and core masses of gas giant planets
Numerical simulations show that the migration of growing planetary cores may
be dominated by turbulent fluctuations in the protoplanetary disk, rather than
by any mean property of the flow. We quantify the impact of this stochastic
core migration on the formation time scale and core mass of giant planets at
the onset of runaway gas accretion. For standard Solar Nebula conditions, the
formation of Jupiter can be accelerated by almost an order of magnitude if the
growing core executes a random walk with an amplitude of a few tenths of an au.
A modestly reduced surface density of planetesimals allows Jupiter to form
within 10 Myr, with an initial core mass below 10 Earth masses, in better
agreement with observational constraints. For extrasolar planetary systems, the
results suggest that core accretion could form massive planets in disks with
lower metallicities, and shorter lifetimes, than the Solar Nebula.Comment: ApJL, in pres
MHD simulations of the collapsar model for GRBs
We present results from axisymmetric, time-dependent magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) simulations of the collapsar model for gamma-ray bursts. Our main
conclusion is that, within the collapsar model, MHD effects alone are able to
launch, accelerate and sustain a strong polar outflow. We also find that the
outflow is Poynting flux-dominated, and note that this provides favorable
initial conditions for the subsequent production of a baryon-poor fireball.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in proceedings of "2003 GRB Conference" (Santa Fe,
NM, September 8-12, 2003), needs aipprocs LaTeX class, movies are available
at http://rocinante.colorado.edu/~proga
Resonant state expansion applied to planar waveguides
The resonant state expansion, a recently developed method in electrodynamics,
is generalized here to planar open optical systems with non-normal incidence of
light. The method is illustrated and verified on exactly solvable examples,
such as a dielectric slab and a Bragg reflector microcavity, for which explicit
analytic formulas are developed. This comparison demonstrates the accuracy and
convergence of the method. Interestingly, the spectral analysis of a dielectric
slab in terms of resonant states reveals an influence of waveguide modes in the
transmission. These modes, which on resonance do not couple to external light,
surprisingly do couple to external light for off-resonant excitation
Astrometric signatures of self-gravitating protoplanetary discs
We use high resolution numerical simulations to study whether gravitational
instabilities within circumstellar discs can produce astrometrically detectable
motion of the central star. For discs with masses of M_disc = 0.1 M_star, which
are permanantly stable against fragmentation, we find that the magnitude of the
astrometric signal depends upon the efficiency of disc cooling. Short cooling
times produce prominent filamentary spiral structures in the disc, and lead to
stellar motions that are potentially observable with future high precision
astrometric experiments. For a disc that is marginally unstable within radii of
\~10 au, we estimate astrometric displacements of 10-100 microarcsec on decade
timescales for a star at a distance of 100 pc. The predicted displacement is
suppressed by a factor of several in more stable discs in which the cooling
time exceeds the local dynamical time by an order of magnitude. We find that
the largest contribution comes from material in the outer regions of the disc
and hence, in the most pessimistic scenario, the stellar motions caused by the
disc could confuse astrometric searches for low mass planets orbiting at large
radii. They are, however, unlikely to present any complications in searches for
embedded planets orbiting at small radii, relative to the disc size, or Jupiter
mass planets or greater orbiting at large radii.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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