15,904 research outputs found
The Lanczos potential for Weyl-candidate tensors exists only in four dimensions
We prove that a Lanczos potential L_abc for the Weyl candidate tensor W_abcd
does not generally exist for dimensions higher than four. The technique is
simply to assume the existence of such a potential in dimension n, and then
check the integrability conditions for the assumed system of differential
equations; if the integrability conditions yield another non-trivial
differential system for L_abc and W_abcd, then this system's integrability
conditions should be checked; and so on. When we find a non-trivial condition
involving only W_abcd and its derivatives, then clearly Weyl candidate tensors
failing to satisfy that condition cannot be written in terms of a Lanczos
potential L_abc.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, Heavily revised April 200
Interplay between the Reactions to Light and to Gravity in Phycomyces
Sporangiophores of Phycomyces do not grow directly towards a horizontal beam of light, but equilibrate at an angle of about 30° above the horizontal. After describing several related observations, this paper suggests that the dioptric properties of an obliquely illuminated cylindrical lens, illustrated by a dummy cell, as well as a negative geotropic response, play major roles in determining the direction of growth. The shift of the equilibrium direction of growth towards the vertical, or a purely geotropic response, over a tenfold range of very low intensities (around 10^6 quanta/cm^2 sec., or 10^-13 watt/cm^2) has been studied, and an action spectrum made, measuring the quantum fluxes producing a standard intermediate equilibrium direction of growth at different wavelengths. This may differ from the action spectra at higher intensities in lacking conspicuous maxima from 370 to 490 m”. However, in the ultraviolet it parallels the other spectra, although without showing the much higher quantum efficiency of ultraviolet relative to visible light previously noted. Possible interpretations are discussed
Visual Communications on the Road in Arkansas: Analysis of Secondary Students Videos
In the summer of 2010, the Visual Communications on the Road in Arkansas: Creative Photo and Video Projects to Promote Agriculture program was initiated. The program consisted of a two-week agricultural communications curriculum that would be taught by agricultural science teachers in Arkansas. The curriculum was composed of lessons about photography, writing, and videography, and the program introduced students to digital photography and videography equipment and the proper uses of equipment. Once the curriculum was taught in secondary schools, a mobile classroom unitâconsisting of a travel trailer, photography and videography equipment, and laptop computers equipped with editing softwareâwould visit the school to assist students with the creation of short promotional videos about agriculture. The student-created videos were used as a hands-on extension of the curriculum learned in the classroom. Completed videos were posted to YouTube and then analyzed to assess student application of competencies taught in the curriculum. The researchers created a coding sheet to systematically assess all posted videos and inter- and intrarater reliability was maintained. An analysis of data gathered from the video assessment showed that secondary students were able to effectively apply many of the techniques taught in the curriculum through the agricultural videos created. Additional findings and recommendations for application and future research are presented
Awareness, use, and perceptions of biodiesel: A comparison of consumers in Belgium and the United States
Belgian (N = 61) and American (N = 134) fuel consumers were interviewed in the summer of 2012 to determine their awareness, use, and perceptions of biodiesel. Consumers who were aware of biodiesel were asked their perceptions. A significantly P \u3c 0.0001) higher percentage of Belgian consumers (78.7%) reported owning or driving a diesel vehicle compared to American consumers (9.0%). Belgian and American consumers moderately agreed biodiesel is a high-quality fuel. For both Belgian and American consumers, there was no significant association between owning a diesel vehicle and being aware of biodiesel or having purchased biodiesel. Although Belgian and American consumers agreed that using non-food crops for biodiesel is justified, Belgians were significantly less supportive than American consumers of using food crops for biodiesel. Both Belgian and American consumers disagreed with the statement âI would never use biodieselâ, and the two sets of consumers moderately disagreed that diesel engines would not run properly on biodiesel. Belgian and American consumers agreed that global warming is increasing; however, American consumers were more positive about the potential of biodiesel to reduce harmful exhaust emissions and global warming. Belgian consumers moderately agreed and American consumers agreed that biodiesel is better to use because it is made from renewable resources. Belgian and American consumers generally show similar perceptions of biodiesel, with the exception that American consumers were more positive toward the environmental and renewable aspects of biodiesel use. Recommendations for further research include gaining a better understanding of the potential positive influences that impact consumersâ perceptions of biodiesel
On Effective Constraints for the Riemann-Lanczos System of Equations
There have been conflicting points of view concerning the Riemann--Lanczos
problem in 3 and 4 dimensions. Using direct differentiation on the defining
partial differential equations, Massa and Pagani (in 4 dimensions) and Edgar
(in dimensions n > 2) have argued that there are effective constraints so that
not all Riemann tensors can have Lanczos potentials; using Cartan's criteria of
integrability of ideals of differential forms Bampi and Caviglia have argued
that there are no such constraints in dimensions n < 5, and that, in these
dimensions, all Riemann tensors can have Lanczos potentials. In this paper we
give a simple direct derivation of a constraint equation, confirm explicitly
that known exact solutions of the Riemann-Lanczos problem satisfy it, and argue
that the Bampi and Caviglia conclusion must therefore be flawed. In support of
this, we refer to the recent work of Dolan and Gerber on the three dimensional
problem; by a method closely related to that of Bampi and Caviglia, they have
found an 'internal identity' which we demonstrate is precisely the three
dimensional version of the effective constraint originally found by Massa and
Pagani, and Edgar.Comment: 9pages, Te
A local potential for the Weyl tensor in all dimensions
In all dimensions and arbitrary signature, we demonstrate the existence of a
new local potential -- a double (2,3)-form -- for the Weyl curvature tensor,
and more generally for all tensors with the symmetry properties of the Weyl
curvature tensor. The classical four-dimensional Lanczos potential for a Weyl
tensor -- a double (2,1)-form -- is proven to be a particular case of the new
potential: its double dual.Comment: 7 pages; Late
Dimensionally Dependent Tensor Identities by Double Antisymmetrisation
Some years ago, Lovelock showed that a number of apparently unrelated
familiar tensor identities had a common structure, and could all be considered
consequences in n-dimensional space of a pair of fundamental identities
involving trace-free (p,p)-forms where 2p >= n$. We generalise Lovelock's
results, and by using the fact that associated with any tensor in n-dimensional
space there is associated a fundamental tensor identity obtained by
antisymmetrising over n+1 indices, we establish a very general 'master'
identity for all trace-free (k,l)-forms. We then show how various other special
identities are direct and simple consequences of this master identity; in
particular we give direct application to Maxwell, Lanczos, Ricci, Bel and
Bel-Robinson tensors, and also demonstrate how relationships between scalar
invariants of the Riemann tensor can be investigated in a systematic manner.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
Irreducible Killing Tensors from Third Rank Killing-Yano Tensors
We investigate higher rank Killing-Yano tensors showing that third rank
Killing-Yano tensors are not always trivial objects being possible to construct
irreducible Killing tensors from them. We give as an example the Kimura IIC
metric were from two rank Killing-Yano tensors we obtain a reducible Killing
tensor and from third rank Killing-Yano tensors we obtain three Killing
tensors, one reducible and two irreducible.Comment: 10 page
A user evaluation of hierarchical phrase browsing
Phrase browsing interfaces based on hierarchies of phrases extracted automatically from document collections offer a useful compromise between automatic full-text searching and manually-created subject indexes. The literature contains descriptions of such systems that many find compelling and persuasive. However, evaluation studies have either been anecdotal, or focused on objective measures of the quality of automatically-extracted index terms, or restricted to questions of computational efficiency and feasibility. This paper reports on an empirical, controlled user study that compares hierarchical phrase browsing with full-text searching over a range of information seeking tasks. Users found the results located via phrase browsing to be relevant and useful but preferred keyword searching for certain types of queries. Users experiences were marred by interface details, including inconsistencies between the phrase browser and the surrounding digital library interface
The Vertical Structure of Planet-induced Gaps in Proto-Planetary Discs
Giant planets embedded in circumstellar discs are expected to open gaps in
these discs. We examine the vertical structure of the gap edges. We find that
the planet excites spiral arms with significant (Mach number of a half)
vertical motion of the gas, and discuss the implications of these motions. In
particular, the spiral arms will induce strong vertical stirring of the dust,
making the edge appeared `puffed up' relative to the bulk of the disc.
Infra-red observations (sensitive to dust) would be dominated by the light from
the thick inner edge of the disc. Sub-millimetre observations (sensitive to gas
velocities) would appear to be hot in `turbulent' motions (actually the ordered
motion caused by the passage of the spiral arms), but cold in chemistry.
Resolved sub-millimetre maps of circumstellar discs might even be able to
detect the spiral arms directly.Comment: Revision adds new data, and corrects physical intepretatio
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