1,552 research outputs found
Literacy practices of primary education children in Andalusia (Spain): a family-based perspective
Primary school children develop literacy practices in various domains and situations in everyday life.
This study focused on the analysis of literacy practices of children aged 8–12 years from the perspec-
tive of their families. 1,843 families participated in the non-experimental explanatory study. The
children in these families speak Spanish as a first language and are schooled in this language. The
instrument used was a self-report questionnaire about children’s home-literacy practices. The data
obtained were analysed using categorical principal components analysis (CATPCA) and analysis of
variance (ANOVA). The results show the complex relationship between literacy practices developed
by children in the domains of home and school and the limited development of a literacy-promoting
‘third space’. In conclusion, the families in our study had limited awareness of their role as literacy-
promoting agents and thought of literacy learning as restricted to formal or academic spaces
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Regulating for Responsibility: Reputation and Social Media
The framework brought forward by the United Kingdom's Defamation Act 2013 underlines a traditional hierarchy of expression in which news media are viewed as high-level speech. Although of a different form, social media are a dominant means of expression. The current study explores the rationale for a more robust and forceful discussion of responsibility in speech on social media platforms. The underlying premise here is that speech should be viewed as a qualified good and that a more appropriate paradigm is one found in the phrase ‘freedom to participate’
Cluster Evolution in the ROSAT North Ecliptic Pole Survey
The deepest region of the ROSAT All-Sky Survey, at the North Ecliptic Pole,
has been studied to produce a complete and unbiased X-ray selected sample of
clusters of galaxies. This sample is used to investigate the nature of cluster
evolution and explore potential implications for large-scale structure models.
The survey is 99.6% optically identified. Spectroscopic redshifts have been
measured for all the extragalactic identifications. In this Letter, first
results on cluster evolution are presented based on a comparison between the
number of the observed clusters in the North Ecliptic Pole survey and the
number of expected clusters assuming no-evolution models. At z>0.3 there is a
deficit of clusters with respect to the local universe which is significant at
> 4.7sigma. The evolution appears to commence at L_{0.5-2.0} > 1.8x10^{44} erg
s^{-1} in our data. The negative evolution goes in the same direction as the
original EMSS result, the results from the 160 deg^{2} survey by Vikhlinin et
al. (1998) and the recent results from the RDCS (Rosati et al. 2000). At lower
redshifts there is no evidence for evolution, a result in agreement with these
and other cluster surveys.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
The Dipole Anisotropy of the First All-Sky X-ray Cluster Sample
We combine the recently published CIZA galaxy cluster catalogue with the
XBACs cluster sample to produce the first all-sky catalogue of X-ray clusters
in order to examine the origins of the Local Group's peculiar velocity without
the use of reconstruction methods to fill the traditional Zone of Avoidance.
The advantages of this approach are (i) X-ray emitting clusters tend to trace
the deepest potential wells and therefore have the greatest effect on the
dynamics of the Local Group and (ii) our all-sky sample provides data for
nearly a quarter of the sky that is largely incomplete in optical cluster
catalogues. We find that the direction of the Local Group's peculiar velocity
is well aligned with the CMB as early as the Great Attractor region 40 h^-1 Mpc
away, but that the amplitude of its dipole motion is largely set between 140
and 160 h^-1 Mpc. Unlike previous studies using galaxy samples, we find that
without Virgo included, roughly ~70% of our dipole signal comes from mass
concentrations at large distances (>60 h^-1 Mpc) and does not flatten,
indicating isotropy in the cluster distribution, until at least 160 h^-1 Mpc.
We also present a detailed discussion of our dipole profile, linking observed
features to the structures and superclusters that produce them. We find that
most of the dipole signal can be attributed to the Shapley supercluster
centered at about 150 h^-1 Mpc and a handful of very massive individual
clusters, some of which are newly discovered and lie well in the Zone of
Avoidance.Comment: 15 Pages, 9 Figures. Accepted by Ap
Simulations of three-dimensional dendritic growth using a coupled thermo-solutal phase-field model
Using a phase field model, which fully couples the thermal and solute concentration field, we present simulation results in three dimensions of the rapid dendritic solidification of a class of dilute alloys at the meso scale. The key results are the prediction of steady state tip velocity and radius at varying undercooling and thermal diffusivities. Less computationally demanding 2-dimensional results are directly compared with the corresponding 3-dimensional results, where significant quantitative differences emerge. The simulations provide quantitative predictions for the range of thermal and solutal diffusivities considered and show the effectiveness and potential of the computational techniques employed. These results thus provide benchmark 3-dimensional computations, allow direct comparison with underlying analytical theory, and pave the way for further quantitative results
XMMU J100750.5+125818: A strong lensing cluster at z=1.082
We report on the discovery of the X-ray luminous cluster XMMU
J100750.5+125818 at redshift 1.082 based on 19 spectroscopic members, which
displays several strong lensing features. SED modeling of the lensed arc
features from multicolor imaging with the VLT and the LBT reveals likely
redshifts ~2.7 for the most prominent of the lensed background galaxies. Mass
estimates are derived for different radii from the velocity dispersion of the
cluster members, M_200 ~ 1.8 10^{14} Msun, from the X-ray spectral parameters,
M_500 ~ 1.0 10^{14} Msun, and the largest lensing arc, M_SL ~ 2.3 10^{13} Msun.
The projected spatial distribution of cluster galaxies appears to be elongated,
and the brightest galaxy lies off center with respect to the X-ray emission
indicating a not yet relaxed structure. XMMU J100750.5+125818 offers excellent
diagnostics of the inner mass distribution of a distant cluster with a
combination of strong and weak lensing, optical and X-ray spectroscopy.Comment: A&A, accepted for publicatio
Spectroscopic confirmation of a galaxy cluster associated with 7C1756+6520 at z=1.416
We present spectroscopic follow-up of an overdensity of galaxies
photometrically selected to be at 1.4<z<2.5 found in the vicinity of the radio
galaxy 7C1756+6520 at z=1.4156. Using the DEIMOS optical multi-object
spectrograph on the Keck 2 telescope, we observed a total of 129 BzK-selected
sources, comprising 82 blue, star-forming galaxy candidates (sBzK) and 47 red,
passively-evolving galaxy candidates (pBzK*), as well as 11 mid-infrared
selected AGN candidates. We obtain robust spectroscopic redshifts for 36 blue
galaxies, 7 red galaxies and 9 AGN candidates. Assuming all foreground
interlopers were identified, we find that only 16% (9%) of the sBzK (pBzK*)
galaxies are at z<1.4. Therefore, the BzK criteria are shown to be relatively
robust at identifying galaxies at moderate redshifts. Twenty-one galaxies,
including the radio galaxy, four additional AGN candidates and three red galaxy
candidates are found with 1.4156 +/- 0.025, forming a large scale structure at
the redshift of the radio galaxy. Of these, eight have projected offsets <2Mpc
relative to the radio galaxy position and have velocity offsets <1000km/s
relative to the radio galaxy redshift. This confirms that 7C1756+6520 is
associated with a high-redshift galaxy cluster. A second compact group of four
galaxies is found at z~1.437, forming a sub-group offset by Dv~3000km/s and
approximately 1.5' east of the radio galaxy.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
The Cool-Core Bias in X-ray Galaxy Cluster Samples I: Method And Application To HIFLUGCS
When selecting flux-limited cluster samples, the detection efficiency of
X-ray instruments is not the same for centrally-peaked and flat objects, which
introduces a bias in flux-limited cluster samples. We quantify this effect in
the case of a well-known cluster sample, HIFLUGCS. We simulate a population of
X-ray clusters with various surface-brightness profiles, and use the
instrumental characteristics of the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS) to select
flux-limited samples similar to the HIFLUGCS sample and predict the expected
bias. For comparison, we also estimate observationally the bias in the HIFLUGCS
sample using XMM-Newton and ROSAT data. We find that the selection of X-ray
cluster samples is significantly biased () in favor of the peaked,
Cool-Core (CC) objects, with respect to Non-Cool-Core (NCC) systems.
Interestingly, we find that the bias affects the low-mass, nearby objects
(groups, poor clusters) much more than the more luminous objects (i.e massive
clusters). We also note a moderate increase of the bias for the more distant
systems. Observationally, we propose to select the objects according to their
flux in a well-defined physical range excluding the cores,
, to get rid of the bias. From the fluxes in this range, we
reject 13 clusters out of the 64 in the HIFLUGCS sample, none of which appears
to be NCC. As a result, we estimate that less than half (35-37%) of the galaxy
clusters in the local Universe are strong CC. In the paradigm where the CC
objects trace relaxed clusters as opposed to unrelaxed, merging objects, this
implies that to the present day the majority of the objects are not in a
relaxed state. From this result, we estimate a rate of heating events of
Gyr per dark-matter halo.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
A new (2+1)D cluster finding algorithm based on photometric redshifts: large scale structure in the Chandra Deep Field South
Aims: We study galaxy clustering and explore the dependence of galaxy
properties on the the environment up to a redshift z~1, on the basis of a deep
multi-band survey in the Chandra Deep Field South.
Methods: We have developed a new method which combines galaxy angular
positions and photometric redshifts to estimate the local galaxy
number-density. This allows both the detection of overdensities in the galaxy
distribution and the study of the properties of the galaxy population as a
function of the environmental density.
Results: We detect two moderate overdensities at z~0.7 and z~1 previously
identified spectroscopically. We find that the fraction of red galaxies within
each structure increases with volume density, extending to z~1 previous
results. We measure ``red sequence'' slopes consistent with the values found in
X-ray selected clusters, supporting the notion that the mass-metallicity
relation hold constant up to z~1.
Conclusions: Our method based on photometric redshifts allows to extend
structure detection and density estimates up to the limits of photometric
surveys, i.e.considerably deeper than spectroscopic surveys. Since X-ray
cluster detection at high redshift is presently limited to massive relaxed
structures, galaxy volume density based on photometric redshift appears as a
valuable tool in the study of galaxy evolution.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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