699 research outputs found
Origin of the viewing-angle dependence of the optical continuum emission in quasars
The orientation-dependence of the optical continuum emission in radio-loud
quasars is investigated using a new, complete sample of low-frequency-selected
quasars, the Molonglo Quasar Sample (MQS). The optical continuum is found to be
highly anisotropic, brightening continuously from lobe- to core-dominated
quasars by 3-5 mag. It is argued that aspect-dependent extinction, rather than
relativistic boosting as has been previously proposed, provides the simplest
explanation consistent with the data. The reddening hypothesis is supported by
both the steeper optical slopes and the larger Balmer decrements found in
lobe-dominated quasars, as well as the stronger anisotropy seen at blue
wavelengths. The dust responsible is shown to be physically associated with the
quasar, lying mostly at radii between the broad and narrow-line regions in a
clumpy distribution. Such a geometry is reminiscent of a torus. However,
substantial numbers of dust clouds must lie within the torus opening angle,
contributing to an increasing average optical depth with increasing viewing
angle away from the jet axis.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures, MNRAS accepte
Motivating Secondary Students to Write
This is a study which examines motivation and its implications for the secondary student writer. Included in the study is a synthesization of writing research with a multi-faceted curriculum. The study concludes by challenging teachers to acquire a theory of teaching writing based upon knowledge of research and instructional practices related to that theory
Mitigating the impacts of river flow regulation and barriers to fish spawning migrations
Globally, migratory fish are threatened by anthropogenic modification to rivers. These create barriers that prevent fish accessing spawning grounds required for completion of life cycles. In order to make informed decsions, for mitigating the associated negative impacts, an understanding migratory behaviour when reaching barriers during the spawning migration is required. That said, there is a lack of information about the response of migratory fish to operational regimes in regulated rivers and the areas occupied, delays caused and routes taken around infrastructures. This study investigated the behaviour of three migratory fish species under operational regimes of three different infrastructures during each species’ respective spawning season. The efficiency of a bypass channel that utilised the relationship between migratory behaviour and flow was also investigated for a further species.The literature was reviewed to identify the different types of migratory life histories of fish, the impact of different riverine modification on the respective spawning migrations and how this can be mitigated. Fish have evolved in direct response to the natural flow regime and connectivity of riverine habitats, but barriers to migration exist from source to sea. This regulates or disrupts the flow regime and connectivity that fish depend upon, which has had considerable detriment to many migratory fish species globally. The main conclusion of the review was that knowledge gaps exist for the target species, and understanding the behaviour of the study species during the spawning migration is essential to improve access to spawning grounds in regulated rivers and ultimately conserve populations.The effects of timing, magnitude and duration of eleven artificial flow (freshet) releases from two impounding reservoirs on river-resident brown trout (Salmo trutta L.), a species known to undertake spawning migrations, was investigated using radio telemetry in a regulated upland river in northern England. Most did not perform movements characteristic of spawning migrations; all were located within 10 m of the location occupied before freshets, and fish in a control reach behaved comparably. The largest unidirectional movements mostly occurred during elevated river level due to rainfall and reservoir overtopping events; other varied length movements occurred during natural peaks or low flow, indicating artificial freshets were not directly responsible, and may not be suitable to stimulate migration in river-resident fish in regulated rivers.An acoustic telemetry study was conducted to determine the impact of a high- head hydropower station, associated diversion weir and spillway on downstream migrating shortfin eel (Anguilla australis) in the regulated Wairua catchment, Northland, New Zealand. Despite the diversion weir providing an alternative route, 88% (n = 21) of tagged eels that were detected here entered the power station forebay; of these, 52% were impinged onto intake screens, always when turbines were operating at greater than 3.04 MW/day. The rest (48%) passed the spillway and continued their migration, sometimes after long delays and having spent time immediately upstream of the intake where fitness could have been reduced due to high flows. Based on findings, the most effective mitigation here and at similar power schemes is considered to be operational or physical changes at the diversion weir to minimise entry of downstream migrating eels into the power canal during the migration period. Also discussed as potential solutions are turbine shutdowns, ensuring the spillway is available and provision of a bypass channel in the forebay.At a pumping station in the Anglian region, UK, where the upstream river level is maintained primarily by a co-located gravity sluice door, route choice and behaviour of downstream migrating European eel (Anguilla anguilla) (n = 7) immediately upstream of both routes was investigated using acoustic telemetry. During the study, three eels passed through pumps despite only operating for 8% of the time the gravity sluice was open, and only two passed through the gravity sluice after arriving when it was closed; the remaining two retreated upstream. No eels were detected within 15 m of the gravity sluice when it was open and eel behaviour was indicative of reluctance to pass through pumps. Findings are discussed in terms of water resource management to implement operational changes, to make the gravity sluice an attractive downstream passage route for migrating eels and thus reduce passage through hazardous pumps.The efficacy of two bypasses in attracting and passing downstream migrating American eels (Anguilla rostrata), designed to utilise the relationship between eel migratory behaviour and flow through two methods of flow creation, i.e. an airlift and a siphon, was tested in a simulated forebay environment, as a potential remediation measure at infrastructures requiring eel passage. Under entrance velocity of 1.2 m/s in eight test runs, both bypasses performed comparably and eels tested in each readily located, entered and passed. Test findings are discussed in relation to real-world application at sites with different characteristics, and the suitability of each design in successfully providing a safe route for downstream migrating eels
Deep optical imaging of the field of PC1643+4631A&B, II: Estimating the colours and redshifts of faint galaxies
In an investigation of the cause of the cosmic microwave background decrement
in the field of the z = 3.8 quasar pair PC1643+4631, we have carried out a
study to photometrically estimate the redshifts of galaxies in deep
multi-colour optical images of the field taken with the WHT. To examine the
possibility that a massive cluster of galaxies lies in the field, we have
attempted to recover simulated galaxies with intrinsic colours matching those
of the model galaxies used in the photometric redshift estimation. We find that
when such model galaxies are added to our images, there is considerable scatter
of the recovered galaxy redshifts away from the model value; this scatter is
larger than that expected from photometric errors and is the result of
confusion, simply due to ground-based seeing, between objects in the field. We
have also compared the likely efficiency of the photometric redshift technique
against the colour criteria used to select z>3 galaxies via the strong colour
signature of the Lyman-limit break. We find that these techniques may
significantly underestimate the true surface density of z>3, due to confusion
between the high-redshift galaxies and other objects near the line of sight. We
argue that the actual surface density of z=3 galaxies may be as much as 6 times
greater than that estimated by previous ground-based studies, and note that
this conclusion is consistent with the surface density of high-redshift objects
found in the HDF. Finally, we conclude that all ground-based deep field surveys
are inevitably affected by confusion, and note that reducing the effective
seeing in ground-based images will be of paramount importance in observing the
distant universe.Comment: 18 pages, 60 figures, submitted to MNRAS, 2 large figure avaliable at
ftp://ftp.mrao.cam.ac.uk:/pub/PC1643/paper2.figure50.eps and
ftp://ftp.mrao.cam.ac.uk:/pub/PC1643/paper2.figure51.ep
Parents with complicated lives: do child protection services help or hinder?
This paper will outline a research project which seeks to centre the voices of parents who have been involved with Child Protection services. The need for a study which focuses on the experiences of service users who have ‘complicated lives’ is discussed with reference to some literature about the intersection of child protection with multiple difficulties relating to violence, disability and problematic substance use.
The term ‘complicated lives’ is drawn from the work of Liz Kelly (2000). She uses this expression in her analysis of the systemic constraints facing women who experience multiple and repetitive forms of violence and abuse in order to describe the complex and compound difficulties that may characterise people’s lives. We have chosen to use the term ‘complicated lives’ because it enables us to purposefully avoid pathologising approaches and language which rigidly categorise and stigmatise those with such experiences.
Australian research confirms the significant extent to which parents who come to the attention of statutory child protection services are experiencing multiple difficulties. In up to 75% of child protection cases, parents experience problematic substance use, a physical, psychiatric or intellectual disability or ‘family violence’ (Community Care Division, Victorian Government Department of Human Services 2002). The Inquiry into Children in Institutional Care reports an increase in child protection applications resulting from parental issues with substance use, mental illness and/or violence (Senate Community Affairs Committee 2005). Child protection figures from the Australian Institute for Health and Welfare show that 44% of such parents experience two or more of these problems (Australian Institute for Health and Welfare 2003)
- …