268 research outputs found
Recent Developments in Nova Scotian Administrative Law
Unlike a number of the subject areas covered by this symposium, Administrative Law in a Nova Scotia context has been much written about in the last three years. There have been two conferences on judicial review of administrative action sponsored by the Dalhousie University Law School Public Services Committee. Many of the papers appearing in the proceedings of those conferences have a distinctly Nova Scotian flavour. Indeed, the 1975 University and the Law Conference sponsored by the same Committee also featured a number of papers with a Nova Scotia Administrative Law bent,4 albeit of a much more specialized kind. Then in recent months there have been two further Continuing Legal Education conferences at Dalhousie on Regulation. Hudson Janisch has madetwo contributions to Nova Scotia Law News on the subject of Administrative Law, while Tim McBride has written of Nova Scotia\u27s Ombudsman in the Dalhousie Law Journal. Finally, I have contributed a piece to an earlier issue of the Law Journal on the use of the declaration as an Administrative Law remedy in this province
Mapping warm molecular hydrogen with Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera (IRAC)
Photometric maps, obtained with Spitzer's Infrared Array Camera (IRAC), can
provide a valuable probe of warm molecular hydrogen within the interstellar
medium. IRAC maps of the supernova remnant IC443, extracted from the Spitzer
archive, are strikingly similar to spectral line maps of the H2 pure rotational
transitions that we obtained with the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) instrument on
Spitzer. IRS spectroscopy indicates that IRAC Bands 3 and 4 are indeed
dominated by the H2 v=0-0 S(5) and S(7) transitions, respectively. Modeling of
the H2 excitation suggests that Bands 1 and 2 are dominated by H2 v=1-0 O(5)
and v=0-0 S(9). Large maps of the H2 emission in IC433, obtained with IRAC,
show band ratios that are inconsistent with the presence of gas at a single
temperature. The relative strengths of IRAC Bands 2, 3, and 4 are consistent
with pure H2 emission from shocked material with a power-law distribution of
gas temperatures. CO vibrational emissions do not contribute significantly to
the observed Band 2 intensity. Assuming that the column density of H2 at
temperatures T to T+dT is proportional to T raised to the power -b for
temperatures up to 4000 K, we obtained a typical estimate of 4.5 for b. The
power-law index, b, shows variations over the range 3 to 6 within the set of
different sight-lines probed by the maps, with the majority of sight-lines
showing b in the range 4 to 5. The observed power-law index is consistent with
the predictions of simple models for paraboloidal bow shocks.Comment: 27 pages, including 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Effects of Autism Spectrum Disorder Insurance Mandates on the Treated Prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder
Key Findings: State mandates requiring commercial health plans to cover services for children with autism spectrum disorder increased the number of children diagnosed with the disorder. However, diagnosis rates remain much lower than community estimates, suggesting that many commercially insured children with ASD remain undiagnosed or are insured through public plans
Spitzer observations of HH54 and HH7-11: mapping the H2 ortho-to-para ratio in shocked molecular gas
We report the results of spectroscopic mapping observations carried out
toward the Herbig-Haro objects HH7-11 and HH54 over the 5.2 - 37 micron region
using the Infrared Spectrograph of the Spitzer Space Telescope. These
observations have led to the detection and mapping of the S(0) - S(7) pure
rotational lines of molecular hydrogen, together with emissions in fine
structure transitions of Ne+, Si+, S, and Fe+. The H2 rotational emissions
indicate the presence of warm gas with a mixture of temperatures in the range
400 - 1200 K, consistent with the expected temperature behind nondissociative
shocks of velocity ~ 10 - 20 km/s, while the fine structure emissions originate
in faster shocks of velocity 35 - 90 km/s that are dissociative and ionizing.
Maps of the H2 line ratios reveal little spatial variation in the typical
admixture of gas temperatures in the mapped regions, but show that the H2
ortho-to-para ratio is quite variable, typically falling substantially below
the equilibrium value of 3 attained at the measured gas temperatures. The
non-equilibrium ortho-to-para ratios are characteristic of temperatures as low
as ~ 50 K, and are a remnant of an earlier epoch, before the gas temperature
was elevated by the passage of a shock. Correlations between the gas
temperature and H2 ortho-to-para ratio show that ortho-to-para ratios < 0.8 are
attained only at gas temperatures below ~ 900 K; this behavior is consistent
with theoretical models in which the conversion of para- to ortho-H2 behind the
shock is driven by reactive collisions with atomic hydrogen, a process which
possesses a substantial activation energy barrier (E_A/k ~ 4000 K) and is
therefore very inefficient at low temperature.Comment: 45 pages, including 16 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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