7,708 research outputs found
Linear root water uptake by vegetation
The performance of a simple model with a linear root water extraction term that varies with time is presented in this paper. The research is based on the use of a one-dimensional form of Richardâs Equation for unsaturated moisture flow including a sink term. A numerical solution has been achieved via the finite element method for spatial discretisation along with a finite difference time-marching scheme. The model is assessed via a series of simulations of water uptake beneath uniform crop cover. A good correlation between the field data and simulated results has been achieved. This relatively straight forward approach is seemed more suitable for development and application to a range of geoengineering problems such as slope stability, shrinkage and heave prediction
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Examining the Relationships Among Categorization, Stereotype Activation, and Stereotype Application.
Increased category salience is associated with increased stereotyping. Prior research has not examined the processes that may account for this relationship. That is, it is unclear whether category salience leads to increased stereotyping by increasing stereotype activation (i.e., increased accessibility of stereotypic information), application (i.e., increasing the tendency to apply activated stereotypes), or both processes simultaneously. We examined this question across three studies by manipulating category salience in an implicit stereotyping measure and by applying a process model that provides independent estimates of stereotype activation and application. Our results replicated past findings that category salience increases stereotyping. Modeling results showed that category salience consistently increased the extent of stereotype application but increased stereotype activation in more limited contexts. Implications for models of social categorization and stereotyping are discussed
Neutrinos from Early-Phase, Pulsar-Driven Supernovae
Neutron stars, just after their formation, are surrounded by expanding,
dense, and very hot envelopes which radiate thermal photons. Iron nuclei can be
accelerated in the wind zones of such energetic pulsars to very high energies.
These nuclei photo-disintegrate and their products lose energy efficiently in
collisions with thermal photons and with the matter of the envelope, mainly via
pion production. When the temperature of the radiation inside the envelope of
the supernova drops below K, these pions decay before
losing energy and produce high energy neutrinos. We estimate the flux of muon
neutrinos emitted during such an early phase of the pulsar - supernova envelope
interaction. We find that a 1 km neutrino detector should be able to detect
neutrinos above 1 TeV within about one year after the explosion from a
supernova in our Galaxy. This result holds if these pulsars are able to
efficiently accelerate nuclei to energies eV, as postulated
recently by some authors for models of Galactic acceleration of the extremely
high energy cosmic rays (EHE CRs).Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, revised version submitted to Ap
Seventy years of sex education in Health Education Journal: a critical review
This paper examines key debates and perspectives on sex education in Health Education Journal (HEJ), from the date of the journalâs first publication in March 1943 to the present day. Matters relating to sexuality and sexual health are revealed to be integral to HEJâs history. First published as Health and Empire (1921 â 1942), a key purpose of the journal since its inception has been to share information on venereal disease and its prevention within the UK and across the former British Empire. From 1943 to the present day, discussions on sex education in the newly-christened HEJ both reflect and respond to evolving socio-cultural attitudes towards sexuality in the UK. Changing definitions of sex education across the decades are examined, from the prevention of venereal disease and moral decline in war-time Britain in the 1940s, to a range of responses to sexual liberation in the 1960s and 1970s; from a focus on preventing sexually-transmitted infections, teenage pregnancy and HIV in the 1980s, to the provision of sexual health services alongside sex education in the 2000s. Over the past 70 years, a shift from prevention of pre-marital sexual activity to the management of its outcomes is apparent; however, while these changes over time are notable, perhaps the most striking findings of this review are the continuities in arguments for and against the discussion of sexual issues. After more than 70 years of debate, it would seem that there is little consensus concerning motivations for and the content of sex education
Constraining Alternate Models of Black Holes: Type I X-ray Bursts on Accreting Fermion-Fermion and Boson-Fermion Stars
The existence of black holes remains open to doubt until other conceivable
options are excluded. With this motivation, we consider a model of a compact
star in which most of the mass consists of dark particles of some kind, and a
small fraction of the mass is in the form of ordinary nucleonic gas. The gas
does not interact with the dark matter other than via gravity, but collects at
the center as a separate fermionic fluid component. Depending on whether the
dark mass is made of fermions or bosons, the objects may be called
fermion-fermion stars or boson-fermion stars, respectively. For appropriate
choices of the mass of the dark matter particles, these objects are viable
models of black hole candidates in X-ray binaries. We consider models with a
dark mass of 10 solar masses and a range of gas mass from 10^{-6} to nearly one
solar mass, and analyse the bursting properties of the models when they accrete
gas. We show that all the models would experience thermonuclear Type I X-ray
bursts at appropriate mass accretion rates. Since no Type I bursts have been
reported from black hole candidates, the models are ruled out. The case for
identifying black hole candidates in X-ray binaries as true black holes is thus
strengthened.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
Quantum black holes from null expansion operators
Using a recently developed quantization of spherically symmetric gravity
coupled to a scalar field, we give a construction of null expansion operators
that allow a definition of general, fully dynamical quantum black holes. These
operators capture the intuitive idea that classical black holes are defined by
the presence of trapped surfaces, that is surfaces from which light cannot
escape outward. They thus provide a mechanism for classifying quantum states of
the system into those that describe quantum black holes and those that do not.
We find that quantum horizons fluctuate, confirming long-held heuristic
expectations. We also give explicit examples of quantum black hole states. The
work sets a framework for addressing the puzzles of black hole physics in a
fully quantized dynamical setting.Comment: 5 pages, version to appear in CQ
ASCA observations of the young rotation-powered pulsars PSR B1046-58 and PSR B1610-50
We present X-ray observations of two young energetic radio pulsars, PSRs
B1046-58 and B1610-50, and their surroundings, using archival data from the
Advanced Satellite for Cosmology and Astrophysics (ASCA).
The energetic pulsar PSR B1046-58 is detected in X-rays with a significance
of 4.5 sigma. The unabsorbed flux, estimated assuming a power-law spectrum and
a neutral hydrogen column density N_H of 5E21 cm^-2 is (2.5 +/- 0.3) x 10E-13
ergs/cm^2/s in the 2-10 keV band. Pulsed emission is not detected; the pulsed
fraction is less than 31% at the 90% confidence level for a 50% duty cycle. We
argue that the emission is best explained as originating from a pulsar-powered
synchrotron nebula. The X-ray counterpart of the pulsar is the only hard source
within the 95% error region of the previously unidentified gamma-ray source 3EG
J1048-5840. This evidence supports the results of Kaspi et al. (1999), who in a
companion paper, suggest that PSR B1046-58 is the counterpart to 3EG
J1048-5840.
X-ray emission from PSR B1610-50 is not detected. Using similar assumptions
as above, the derived 3 sigma upper limit for the unabsorbed 2-10 keV X-ray
flux is 1.5E-13 ergs/cm^2/s. We use the flux limit to estimate the pulsar's
velocity to be less than ~170 km/s, casting doubt on a previously reported
association between PSR B1610-50 and supernova remnant Kes 32. Kes 32 is
detected, as is evident from the correlation between X-ray and radio emission.
The ASCA images of PSR B1610-50 are dominated by mirror-scattered emission from
the X-ray-bright supernova remnant RCW 103, located 33' away.
We find no evidence for extended emission around either pulsar, in contrast
to previous reports of large nebulae surrounding both pulsars.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ (v.528, pp.436-444) Correcting
typo in abstract of .tex fil
Will Jets Identify the Progenitors of Type Ia Supernovae?
We use the fact that a Type Ia supernova has been serendipitously discovered
near the jet of the active galaxy 3C 78 to examine the question of whether jets
can enhance accretion onto white dwarfs. One interesting outcome of such a
jet-induced accretion process is an enhanced rate of novae in the vicinity of
jets. We present results of observations of the jet in M87 which appear to have
indeed discovered 11 novae in close proximity to the jet. We show that a
confirmation of the relation between jets and novae and Type Ia supernovae can
finally identify the elusive progenitors of Type Ia supernovae.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Probing the Pulsar Wind Nebula of PSR B0355+54
We present XMM-Newton and Chandra X-ray observations of the middle-aged radio
pulsar PSR B0355+54. Our X-ray observations reveal emission not only from the
pulsar itself, but also from a compact diffuse component extending ~50'' in the
opposite direction to the pulsar's proper motion. There is also evidence for
the presence of fainter diffuse emission extending ~5' from the point source.
The compact diffuse feature is well-fitted with a power-law, the index of which
is consistent with the values found for other pulsar wind nebulae. The
morphology of the diffuse component is similar to the ram-pressure confined
pulsar wind nebulae detected for other sources. The X-ray emission from the
pulsar itself is described well by a thermal plus power-law fit, with the
thermal emission most likely originating in a hot polar cap.Comment: 9 pages (uses emulateapj.cls), 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for
publication in Ap
VLA Limits for Intermediate Mass Black Holes in Three Globular Clusters
The observational evidence for central black holes in globular clusters has
been argued extensively, and their existence has important consequences for
both the formation and evolution of the cluster. Most of the evidence comes
from dynamical arguments, but the interpretation is difficult, given the short
relaxation times and old ages of the clusters. One of the most robust
signatures for the existence of a black hole is radio and/or X-ray emission. We
observed three globular clusters, NGC6093 (M80), NGC6266 (M62), and NGC7078
(M15), with the VLA in the A and C configuration with a 3-sigma noise of 36, 36
and 25 microJy, respectively. We find no statistically-significant evidence for
radio emission from the central region for any of the three clusters. NGC6266
shows a 2-sigma detection. It is difficult to infer a mass from these upper
limits due to uncertainty about the central gas density, accretion rate, and
accretion model.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa
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