9,408 research outputs found
The Moroccan Women\u27s Rights Movement
Among various important efforts to address womenâs issues in Morocco, a particular set of individuals and associations have formed around two specific goals: reforming the Moroccan Family Code and raising awareness of womenâs rights. Evrard chronicles the history of the womenâs rights movement, exploring the organizational structure, activities, and motivations with specific attention to questions of legal reform and family law. Employing ethnographic scrutiny, Evrard presents the stories of the individual women behind the movement and the challenges they faced. Given the vast reform of the Moroccan Family Code in 2004, and the emphasis on the role of women across the Middle East and North Africa today, this book makes a timely argument for the analysis of womenâs rights as both global and local in origin, evolution, and application. [From the publisher]https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/books/1055/thumbnail.jp
What All Americans Should Know about Women in the Muslim World: An Introduction
This brief introduction to the âWhat All Americans Should Know About Women in the Muslim Worldâ series provides information about women in the Muslim world, why they are important for Americans to understand, some challenges that arise in the study of Muslim women, and what these particular papers bring to bear on the topic
Early Fieldwork at the Beijing Farmersâ Market
Now that Iâve passed tenure review, published a book, cemented my teaching skills, and learned how to be a productive member of a college committee, I feel confident, self-assured, and filled with certainty about every aspect of my career as a professor. The same certainty extends to research and fieldwork. From choosing a topic to developing research questions to getting a good start in the fieldâitâs all a piece of cake.
Ha! I wish I felt this confidence. The truth is that passing the tenure phase two years ago, as wonderful as it was, opened up a whole new set of questions: Who am I as a scholar? What truly interests me now? What kinds of fieldwork am I able and willing to pursue at this point in my life? (excerpt
Simulations of Clusters of Galaxies
The degree of complexity and, to a somewhat lesser degree, realism in
simulations has advanced rapidly in the past few years. The simplest approach -
modeling a cluster as collisionless dark matter and collisonal, non--radiative
gas is now fairly well established. One of the most fruitful results of this
approach is the {\sl morphology--cosmology connection} for X-ray clusters.
Simulations have provided the means to make concrete predictions for the X-ray
morphologies of clusters in cosmologies with different , with the
result that low cosmologies fair rather poorly when compared to
observations. Another result concerns the accuracy of \xray binding mass
estimates. The standard, hydrostatic, isothermal model estimator is found to be
accurate to typically better than at radii where the density contrast is
between and . More complicated approaches, which attempt to
explicitly follow galaxy formation within the proto--cluster environment are
slowly being realized. The key issue of {\sl dynamical biasing} of the galaxy
population within a cluster is being probed, but conclusive answers are
lacking. The dynamics of multi--phase gas, including conversion of cold, dense
gas into stars and the feedback therefrom, is the largest obstacle hindering
progress. An example demonstrating the state--of--the--art in this area is
presented.Comment: to appear in Proceedings of the XIVth Moriond Astrophysics Meeting.
10 pages, uuencoded, compressed postscript file includes figures (~1 Mb after
unpacked
Gas dynamic simulations of galaxy formation
Results are presented from a simulation modeling the formation of a group of galaxies in a 'standard' cold, dark matter universe with delta = 1, h sub 0 = 50 km/(s(Mpc)), baryon fraction omega sub b = 0.1 and spectrum normalization sigma sub 8 = 0.6 (bias parameter b = 1.7). Initial conditions are generated within a periodic box with comoving length 16 Mpc in a manner constrained to produce a small cluster of total mass approximately 10 exp 14 solar mass. Two sets of 643 particles are used to model the dark matter and baryon fluids. Each gas particle represents 1.08 x 10 exp -8 solar mass, implying an L* galaxy is resolved by approximately 1000 particles. The system is evolved self-consistently in three dimensions using the combined N-body/hydrodynamic scheme P3MSPH up to a final redshift z = 1. Evolving to the present is prohibited by the fact that the mean density in the simulated volume is above critical and the entire volume would be going nonlinear beyond this point, We are currently analyzing another run with somewhat poorer mass resolution which was evolved to the present
Clues to galaxy activity from rich cluster simulations
New simulations of rich cluster evolution are used to evaluate the first infall hypothesis of Gunn and Dressler - the idea that the enhanced fraction of active galaxies seen in high redshift clusters is due to a one-time burst of star formation triggered by the rapid rise in external pressure as a galaxy plows into the hot intracluster medium (ICM). Using three-dimensional simulations which contain both baryonic gas and collisionless dark material, local static pressure histories for test orbits of galaxies are generated and a simple trigger threshold based on dP/dt/P sub ISM is applied to define an active fraction of the population. The results lend qualitative and quantitative support to the first infall interpretation
The Lx-T Relation and Intracluster Gas Fractions of X-ray Clusters
We re-examine the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation using a nearly
homogeneous data set of 24 clusters selected for statistically accurate
temperature measurements and absence of strong cooling flows. The data exhibit
a remarkably tight power-law relation between bolometric luminosity and
temperature with a slope 2.88 \pm 0.15. With reasonable assumptions regarding
cluster structure, we infer an upper limit on fractional variations in the
intracluster gas fraction <(\delta\fgas/\fgas)^2)^1/2 \le 15%. Imaging data
from the literature are employed to determine absolute values of fgas within
spheres encompassing density contrast 500 and 200 with respect to the critical
density. Comparing binding mass estimates based on the virial theorem (VT) and
the hydrostatic, betamodel (BM), we find a temperature-dependent discrepancy in
fgas between the two methods caused by sytematic variation of the outer slope
parameter beta with temperature. There is evidence that cool clusters have a
lower mean gas fraction that hot clusters, but it is not possible to assess the
statistical significance of this effect in the present dataset. The temperature
dependance of the ICM density structure, coupled with the increase of the gas
fraction with T in the VT aproach, explains the steepening of the Lx-T
relation. The small variation about the mean gas fraction within this majority
sub-population of clusters presents an important constraint for theories of
galaxy formation and supports arguments against an Einstein-deSitter universe
based on the population mean gas fraction and primordial nucleosynthesis. The
apparent trend of lower gas fractions and more extended atmospheres in low T
systems are consistent with expectations of models incorporating the effects of
galactic winds on the ICM. ABRIDGEDComment: 11 pages, 4 figures, uses mn.sty and epsf.sty, accepted for
publication in MNRAS; minor modifications: discussion added on CF LX (Sec.
3.1);comparison with Allen & Fabian L-T results (Sec.3.1 & Sec.4.4);
statistics precised (3.1), discussion clarified (Sec. 2.2,Sec. 4.4); slight
mistake in the r-T and M-T relation calibration corrected and thus fgas in
Fig.3, Fig 4, Tab 2 slightly change
The temperature-mass relation in magnetized galaxy clusters
We use cosmological, magneto-hydrodynamic simulations of galaxy clusters to
quantify the dynamical importance of magnetic fields in these clusters. The
set-up of initial magnetic field strengths at high redshifts is chosen such
that observed Faraday-rotation measurements in low-redshift clusters are well
reproduced in the simulations. We compute the radial profiles of the
intracluster gas temperature and of the thermal and magnetic pressure in a set
of clusters simulated in the framework of an Einstein-de Sitter and a
low-density, spatially-flat CDM cosmological model. We find that, for a
realistic range of initial magnetic field strengths, the temperature of the
intracluster gas changes by less than .Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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