10,319 research outputs found
Accountability and Moral Competence Promote Ethical Leadership
Accountability and moral competence are two factors that may have a positive effect on ethical leadership in organizations. This study utilized a survey methodology to investigate the relationship among accountability, moral competence and ethical leadership in a sample of 103 leaders from a variety of industries and different countries. Accountability was found to be a significant positive predictor of ethical leadership. Moral competence was also found to moderate this relationship such that increases in moral competence enhanced the positive effects of accountability on ethical leadership. The results of the study suggest that organizations can increase ethical leadership throughout the company via accountability (especially self-accountability) and moral competence by training their leaders to use self-monitoring behaviors and increasing moral education
Motivating Strategies Leaders Employ to Increase Follower Effort
The purpose of this research was to determine which motivating strategies followers desire from their leaders and what motivating strategies are actually displayed by their leaders to increase followers’ effort. Additionally, this research assessed the followers’ level of self-reported extra effort and the amount of extra effort followers perceive their leaders exert. From this data, conclusions were drawn regarding the relationships between followers’ self-reported extra effort and the followers’ perception of their leaders’ extra effort. This quantitative research study was conducted via LinkedIn using Survey Monk ey and is based on Keller’s 42 item ARCS Model (attention, relevance, confidence, and satisfaction). Regression analysis of the survey responses indicated that: 1) Followers perceive their leaders are not displaying the level of motivating strategies desired; 2) The amount of extra effort that followers perceive that their leaders exert is significant in predicting the amount of extra effort that followers exert; and 3) Followers’ perception is that leaders’ extra effort is less than followers’ extra effort. The findings suggest that leaders should be more aware of the motivating strategies that followers desire and demonstrate those strategies since leaders’ extra effort is a significant predictor of followers’ extra effort. Additionally, leaders should also exert the level of effort that they desire from their followers
Are violent events responsible of a Galaxy Morphological loop?
We use cosmological SPH simulations to investigate the effects of mergers and
interactions on the formation of the bulge and disc components of galactic
systems. We find that secular evolution during mergers seems to be a key
process in the formation of stable disc-bulge systems with observational
counterparts and contributes to establish the fundamental relations observed in
galaxies. Our findings suggest that the secular evolution phase couples the
formation mechanisms of the bulge and disc components. According to our
results, depending on the particular stability properties and merger
parameters, violents events could drive a morphological loop in which the
outcome could be a disc or a spheroid.Comment: 2 pages. To appear in the proceedings of the IAUC198 "Near-Field
Cosmology with Dwarf Elliptical Galaxies", 14 - 18 March 2005, Les
Diablerets, Switzerlan
Homodyne detection as a near-optimum receiver for phase-shift keyed binary communication in the presence of phase diffusion
We address binary optical communication channels based on phase-shift keyed
coherent signals in the presence of phase diffusion. We prove theoretically and
demonstrate experimentally that a discrimination strategy based on homodyne
detection is robust against this kind of noise for any value of the channel
energy. Moreover, we find that homodyne receiver beats the performance of
Kennedy receiver as the signal energy increases, and achieves the Helstrom
bound in the limit of large noise
New ATLAS9 And MARCS Model Atmosphere Grids for the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE)
We present a new grid of model photospheres for the SDSS-III/APOGEE survey of
stellar populations of the Galaxy, calculated using the ATLAS9 and MARCS codes.
New opacity distribution functions were generated to calculate ATLAS9 model
photospheres. MARCS models were calculated based on opacity sampling
techniques. The metallicity ([M/H]) spans from -5 to 1.5 for ATLAS and -2.5 to
0.5 for MARCS models. There are three main differences with respect to previous
ATLAS9 model grids: a new corrected H2O linelist, a wide range of carbon
([C/M]) and alpha element [alpha/M] variations, and solar reference abundances
from Asplund et al. 2005. The added range of varying carbon and alpha element
abundances also extends the previously calculated MARCS model grids. Altogether
1980 chemical compositions were used for the ATLAS9 grid, and 175 for the MARCS
grid. Over 808 thousand ATLAS9 models were computed spanning temperatures from
3500K to 30000K and log g from 0 to 5, where larger temperatures only have high
gravities. The MARCS models span from 3500K to 5500K, and log g from 0 to 5.
All model atmospheres are publically available online.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
HUMAN INTERVENTIONS AND ALTERATIONS OF THE GEOMORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS IN PARTS OF THE COASTAL AREA IN THE IONIAN COAST (IPIROS - GREECE)
non disponibil
Searching for star-forming dwarf galaxies in the Antlia cluster
The formation and evolution of dwarf galaxies in clusters need to be
understood, and this requires large aperture telescopes. In this sense, we
selected the Antlia cluster to continue our previous work in the Virgo, Fornax,
and Hydra clusters and in the Local Volume (LV). Because of the scarce
available literature data, we selected a small sample of five blue compact
dwarf (BCD) candidates in Antlia for observation. Using the Gemini South and
GMOS camera, we acquired the Halpha imaging needed to detect star-forming
regions in this sample. With the long-slit spectroscopic data of the brightest
seven knots detected in three BCD candidates, we derived their basic chemical
properties. Using archival VISTA VHS survey images, we derived K_S magnitudes
and surface brightness profile fits for the whole sample to assess basic
physical properties. FS90-98, FS90-106, and FS90-147 are confirmed as BCDs and
cluster members, based on their morphology, K_S surface photometry, oxygen
abundance, and velocity redshift. FS90-155 and FS90-319 did not show any
H{\alpha} emission, and they could not be confirmed as dwarf cluster
star-forming galaxies. Based on our data, we studied some fundamental relations
to compare star forming dwarfs (BCDs and dIs) in the LV and in the Virgo,
Fornax, Hydra, and Antlia clusters. Star-forming dwarfs in nearby clusters
appear to follow same fundamental relations in the near infrared with similar
objects in the LV, specifically the size-luminosity and the
metallicity-luminosity, while other more fundamental relations could not be
checked in Antlia due to lack of data.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (early 2014
POLLUX : a database of synthetic stellar spectra
Synthetic spectra are needed to determine fundamental stellar and wind
parameters of all types of stars. They are also used for the construction of
theoretical spectral libraries helpful for stellar population synthesis.
Therefore, a database of theoretical spectra is required to allow rapid and
quantitative comparisons to spectroscopic data. We provide such a database
offering an unprecedented coverage of the entire Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
We present the POLLUX database of synthetic stellar spectra. For objects with
Teff < 6 000 K, MARCS atmosphere models are computed and the program
TURBOSPECTRUM provides the synthetic spectra. ATLAS12 models are computed for
stars with 7 000 K <Teff <15 000 K. SYNSPEC gives the corresponding spectra.
Finally, the code CMFGEN provides atmosphere models for the hottest stars (Teff
> 25 000 K). Their spectra are computed with CMF_FLUX. Both high resolution
(R>150 000) optical spectra in the range 3 000 to 12 000 A and spectral energy
distributions extending from the UV to near--IR ranges are presented. These
spectra cover the HR diagram at solar metallicity. We propose a wide variety of
synthetic spectra for various types of stars in a format that is compliant with
the Virtual Observatory standards. A user--friendly web interface allows an
easy selection of spectra and data retrieval. Upcoming developments will
include an extension to a large range of metallicities and to the near--IR high
resolution spectra, as well as a better coverage of the HR diagram, with the
inclusion of models for Wolf-Rayet stars and large datasets for cool stars. The
POLLUX database is accessible at http://pollux.graal.univ-montp2.fr/ and
through the Virtual Observatory.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy ans
Astrophysic
The Distance of the First Overtone RR Lyrae Variables in the MACHO LMC Database: A New Method to Correct for the Effects of Crowding
Previous studies have indicated that many of the RR Lyrae variables in the
LMC have properties similar to the ones in the Galactic globular cluster M3.
Assuming that the M3 RR Lyrae variables follow the same relationships among
period, temperature, amplitude and Fourier phase parameter phi31 as their LMC
counterparts, we have used the M3 phi31-logP relation to identify the M3-like
unevolved first overtone RR Lyrae variables in 16 fields near the LMC bar. The
temperatures of these variables were calculated from the M3 logP-logTe relation
so that the extinction could be derived for each star separately. Since blended
stars have lower amplitudes for a given period, the period amplitude relation
should be a useful tool for identifying which stars are affected by crowding.
We find that the low amplitude stars are brighter. We remove them from the
sample and derive an LMC distance modulus 18.49+/-0.11.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
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