27,313 research outputs found
School violence, school differences and school discourses
This article highlights one strand of a study which investigated the concept of the violenceresilient school. In six inner-city secondary schools, data on violent incidents in school and violent crime in the neighbourhood were gathered, and compared with school practices to minimise violence, accessed through interviews. Some degree of association between the patterns of behaviour and school practices was found: schools with a wider range of wellconnected practices seemed to have less difficult behaviour. Interviews also showed that the different schools had different organisational discourses for construing school violence, its possible causes and the possible solutions. Differences in practices are best understood in connection with differences in these discourses. Some of the features of school discourses are outlined, including their range, their core metaphor and their silences. We suggest that organisational discourse is an important concept in explaining school effects and school differences, and that improvement attempts could have clearer regard to this concept
The Chandra Dust Scattering Halo of Galactic Center transient Swift J174540.7-290015
We report the detection of a dust scattering halo around a recently
discovered X-ray transient, Swift J174540.7-290015, which in early February of
2016 underwent one of the brightest outbursts (F_X ~ 5e-10 erg/cm^2/s) observed
from a compact object in the Galactic Center field. We analyze four Chandra
images that were taken as follow-up observations to Swift discoveries of new
Galactic Center transients. After adjusting our spectral extraction for the
effects of detector pileup, we construct a point spread function for each
observation and compare it to the GC field before the outburst. We find
residual surface brightness around Swift J174540.7-290015, which has a shape
and temporal evolution consistent with the behavior expected from X-rays
scattered by foreground dust. We examine the spectral properties of the source,
which shows evidence that the object transitioned from a soft to hard spectral
state as it faded below L_X ~ 1e36 erg/s. This behavior is consistent with the
hypothesis that the object is a low mass X-ray binary in the Galactic Center.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Use of passive scalar tagging for the study of coherent structures in the plane mixing layer
Data obtained from the numerical simulation of a 2-D mixing layer were used to study the feasibility of using the instantaneous concentration of a passive scalar for detecting the typical coherent structures in the flow. The study showed that this technique works quite satisfactorily and yields results similar to those that can be obtained by using the instantaneous vorticity for structure detection. Using the coherent events educed by the scalar conditioning technique, the contribution of the coherent events to the total turbulent momentum and scalar transport was estimated. It is found that the contribution from the typical coherent events is of the same order as that of the time-mean value. However, the individual contributions become very large during the pairing of these structures. The increase is particularly spectacular in the case of the Reynolds shear stress
Energetic Impact of Jet Inflated Cocoons in Relaxed Galaxy Clusters
Jets from active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the cores of galaxy clusters have
the potential to be a major contributor to the energy budget of the
intracluster medium (ICM). To study the dependence of the interaction between
the AGN jets and the ICM on the parameters of the jets themselves, we present a
parameter survey of two-dimensional (axisymmetric) ideal hydrodynamic models of
back-to-back jets injected into a cluster atmosphere (with varying Mach numbers
and kinetic luminosities). We follow the passive evolution of the resulting
structures for several times longer than the active lifetime of the jet. The
simulations fall into roughly two classes, cocoon-bounded and non-cocoon
bounded sources. We suggest a correspondence between these two classes and the
Faranoff-Riley types. We find that the cocoon-bounded sources inject
significantly more entropy into the core regions of the ICM atmosphere, even
though the efficiency with which energy is thermalized is independent of the
morphological class. In all cases, a large fraction (50--80%) of the energy
injected by the jet ends up as gravitational potential energy due to the
expansion of the atmosphere.Comment: 12 pages, Accepted for publication in Ap
Jet power extracted from ADAF and the applications to X-ray binaries and radio galaxy FR dichotomy
We calculate the jet power of the classical Blandford-Znajek(BZ) model and
hybrid model developed by Meier based on the global solutions of advection
dominated accretion flows (ADAFs) surrounding Kerr black holes. We find that
the jet power of the hybrid model is larger than that of the pure BZ model. The
jet power will dominate over the accretion power, and the objects will enter
into "jet-power-dominated advective systems", when the accretion rate is less
than a critical value mdot_c=Mdot_c/Mdot_Edd, where 3*10^-4 < mdot_c < 5*10^-3
is a function of black hole spin parameter. The accretion power will be
dominant when mdot<mdot_c and the objects will enter into
"accretion-power-dominated advective systems." This is roughly consistent with
that constrained from the low/hard-state black hole X-ray binaries (e.g.,
Fender et al.). We calculate the maximal jet power as a function of black hole
mass with the hybrid jet formation model, and find it can roughly reproduce the
dividing line of the Ledlow-Owen relation for FR I/FR II dichotomy in the jet
power-black hole(BH) mass plane (Q_jet-M_BH) if the dimensionless accretion
rate mdot~0.01 and BH spin parameter j~0.9-0.99 are adopted. This accretion
rate mdot~0.01 is consistent with that of the critical accretion rate for the
accretion mode transition of a standard disk to an ADAF constrained from the
state transition of X-ray binaries. Our results imply that most FR I galaxies
may be in the ADAF accretion mode similar to the low/hard-state XRBs.Comment: 6 pages, 3 color figures, ApJ in press, edited with ApJ style and
English is improved as suggested by Edito
In-situ measurements of the optical absorption of dioxythiophene-based conjugated polymers
Conjugated polymers can be reversibly doped by electrochemical means. This
doping introduces new sub-bandgap optical absorption bands in the polymer while
decreasing the bandgap absorption. To study this behavior, we have prepared an
electrochemical cell allowing measurements of the optical properties of the
polymer. The cell consists of a thin polymer film deposited on gold-coated
Mylar behind which is another polymer that serves as a counterelectrode. An
infrared transparent window protects the upper polymer from ambient air. By
adding a gel electrolyte and making electrical connections to the
polymer-on-gold films, one may study electrochromism in a wide spectral range.
As the cell voltage (the potential difference between the two electrodes)
changes, the doping level of the conjugated polymer films is changed
reversibly. Our experiments address electrochromism in
poly(3,4-ethylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PEDOT) and
poly(3,4-dimethyl-propylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PProDOT-Me). This closed
electrochemical cell allows the study of the doping induced sub-bandgap
features (polaronic and bipolaronic modes) in these easily oxidized and highly
redox switchable polymers. We also study the changes in cell spectra as a
function of polymer thickness and investigate strategies to obtain cleaner
spectra, minimizing the contributions of water and gel electrolyte features
Ecological and physical characteristics of the Te Awa O Katapaki Stream, Flagstaff, Waikato
1. The fish, macroinvertebrates, aquatic vegetation, and water quality indicate that the Te Awa O Katapaki Stream is an unpolluted, pastureland stream that is typical of the Waikato region.
2. The stream has very high nutrient concentrations that probably result from the dairy farming upstream.
3. The fish fauna is dominated by the native shortfinned eels. The presence of the migratory common smelt indicates that swimming fish species also have free access to the stream from the Waikato River.
4. Fish of high conservation value, such as giant or banded kokopu (Galaxias argenteus or G. fasciatus) were absent, which is predictable given the warm, unshaded nature of the stream.
5. Fish and invertebrates would soon recolonise the restored stream following any work in the streambed
Improved Si:As BIBIB (Back-Illuminated Blocked-Impurity-Band) hybrid arrays
Results of a program to increase the short wavelength (less than 10 microns) detective quantum efficiency, eta/beta, of Si:As Impurity Band Conduction arrays are presented. The arrays are epitaxially grown Back-Illuminated Blocked (BIB) Impurity-Band (BIBIB) 10x50 detectors bonded to switched-FET multiplexers. It is shown that the 4.7 microns detective quantum efficiency increases proportionately with the thickness of the infrared active layer. A BIB array with a thick active layer, designed for low dark current, exhibits eta/beta = 7 to 9 percent at 4.7 microns for applied bias voltages between 3 and 5 V. The product of quantum efficiency and photoelectric gain, etaG, increases from 0.3 to 2.5 as the voltage increases from 3 to 5 V. Over this voltage range, the dark current increases from 8 to 120 e(-)s(-1) at a device temperature of 4.2 K and is under 70 e(-)s(-1) for all voltages at 2 K. Because of device gain, the effective dark current (equivalent photon rate) is less than 3 e(-)s(-1) under all operating conditions. The effective read noise (equivalent photon noise) is found to be less than 12 electrons under all operating conditions and for integration times between 0.05 and 100 seconds
On The Reddening in X-ray Absorbed Seyfert 1 Galaxies
There are several Seyfert galaxies for which there is a discrepancy between
the small column of neutral hydrogen deduced from X-ray observations and the
much greater column derived from the reddening of the optical/UV emission lines
and continuum. The standard paradigm has the dust within the highly ionized gas
which produces O~VII and O~VIII absorption edges (i.e., a ``dusty warm
absorber''). We present an alternative model in which the dust exists in a
component of gas in which hydrogen has been stripped, but which is at too low
an ionization state to possess significant columns of O~VII and O~VIII (i.e, a
``lukewarm absorber''). The lukewarm absorber is at sufficient radial distance
to encompass much of the narrow emission-line region, and thus accounts for the
narrow-line reddening, unlike the dusty warm absorber. We test the model by
using a combination of photoionization models and absorption edge fits to
analyze the combined ROSAT/ASCA dataset for the Seyfert 1.5 galaxy, NGC 3227.
We show that the data are well fit by a combination of the lukewarm absorber
and a more highly ionized component similar to that suggested in earlier
studies. We predict that the lukewarm absorber will produce strong UV
absorption lines of N V, C IV, Si IV and Mg II. Finally, these results
illustrate that singly ionized helium is an important, and often overlooked,
source of opacity in the soft X-ray band (100 - 500 eV).Comment: 17 pages, Latex, includes 1 figure (encapsulated postscript), one
additional table in Latex (landscape format), to appear in the Astrophysical
Journa
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