12,271 research outputs found
Marriage Matters: Spousal Similarity in Life Satisfaction
Examined the concurrent and cross-lagged spousal similarity in life satisfaction over a 21-year period. Analyses were based on married couples (N = 847) in the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Concurrent spousal similarity was considerably higher than one-year retest similarity, revealing spousal similarity in the variable component of life satisfac-tion. Spousal similarity systematically decreased with length of retest interval, revealing simi-larity in the changing component of life satisfaction. Finally, there was considerable spousal similarity in the stable component of life satisfaction over 20-years. The implications of these findings for causal theories of life satisfaction and studies in line with behavioural genetics are discussedSubjective Well Being, Life Satisfaction, Marriage, Couples, Spousal Similarity, Heritability, Assortative Mating, Longitudinal Panel, SOEP
Do people really adapt to marriage?
Although cross-sectional studies have shown a reliable association between marital status and subjective well-being, a recent longitudinal study (Lucas, Clark, Georgellis, & Diener, 2003) found no support for the idea that happiness increases after marriage. Instead, participants who got married reported short-term increases followed by complete adaptation back to baseline levels of well-being. However, researchers have criticized this study on two grounds. First, these results contradict cohort-based analyses from a nationally representative sample. Second, these analyses do not control for pre-marriage cohabitation, which could potentially inflate baseline levels of well-being. The original data (plus four additional waves) are reanalyzed to address these concerns. Results confirm that individuals do not get a lasting boost in life satisfaction following marriage.life satisfaction anticipation ; habituation ; marriage ; cohabitation
Temperature dependence of core loss in cobalt substituted Ni-Zn-Cu ferrites
The temperature dependence of core loss in cobalt substituted Ni-Zn-Cu
ferrites was investigated. Co2+ ions are known to lead to a compensation of the
magneto-crystalline anisotropy in Ni-Zn ferrites, at a temperature depending on
the cobalt content and the Ni/Zn ratio. We observed similar behaviour in
Ni-Zn-Cu and it was found that the core loss goes through a minimum around this
magneto-crystalline anisotropy compensation. Moreover, the anisotropy induced
by the cobalt allowed a strong decrease of core loss, a ferrite having a core
loss of 350 mW/cm3 at 80 ^\circ C was then developed (measured at 1.5 MHz and
25 mT). This result represents an improvement of a factor 4 compared to the
state of art Ni-Zn ferrites
Temperature dependence of spin resonance in cobalt substituted NiZnCu ferrites
Cobalt substitutions were investigated in Ni0.4Zn0.4Cu0.2Fe2O4 ferrites,
initial complex permeability was then measured from 1 MHz to 1 GHz. It appears
that cobalt substitution led to a decrease in the permeability and an increase
in the \mus\timesfr factor. As well, it gave to the permeability spectrum a
sharp resonance character. We also observed a spin reorientation occurring at a
temperature depending on the cobalt content. Study of the complex permeability
versus temperature highlighted that the most resonant character was obtained at
this temperature. This shows that cobalt contribution to second order
magnetocrystalline anisotropy plays a leading role at this temperature
On the multiaxial fatigue assessment of complex three-dimensional stress concentrators
This paper assesses and quantifies the detrimental effects of complex tri-dimensional notches subjected to uniaxial and multiaxial fatigue loading. A number of experimental results taken from the technical literature and generated by testing specimens containing complex geometrical features were reanalysed using a critical distance/plane method. The investigated notched samples were tested under uniaxial and multiaxial constant amplitude load histories, considering also the effects of non-zero mean stresses as well as non-proportional loading. The common feature of the considered notched geometries was that the position of the critical location changed as the degree of multiaxiality of the applied loading varied. The relevant linear-elastic stress fields in the vicinity of the crack initiation points were calculated by the Finite Element method and subsequently post-processed using the Modified Wöhler Curve Method in conjunction with the Theory of Critical Distances (the latter theory being applied in the form of the Point Method). This validation exercise confirms the accuracy and reliability of our multiaxial fatigue life assessment technique, which can be efficiently used in situations of practical interest by directly post-processing the relevant linear-elastic stress fields calculated with commercial Finite Element software packages.Safe Technology Limite
Surface Structure Determination of Black Phosphorus Using Photoelectron Diffraction
Atomic structure of single-crystalline black phosphorus was studied by high
resolution synchrotron-based photoelectron diffraction (XPD). The results show
that the topmost phosphorene layer in the black phosphorus is slightly
displaced compared to the bulk structure and presents a small contraction in
the direction perpendicular to the surface. Furthermore, the XPD results show
the presence of a small buckling among the surface atoms, in agreement with
previously reported scanning tunneling microscopy results. The contraction of
the surface layer added to the presence of the buckling indicates an uniformity
in the size of the sp3 bonds between P atoms at the surface
Lags and Leads in Life Satisfaction: A Test of the Baseline Hypothesis
We use fourteen waves of the German panel data to ask whether individuals, after life and labour market events, return to some baseline wellbeing level. Although the strongest life satisfaction effect is often at the time of the event, significant lag and lead effects are present. Men are more affected by labour market events (unemployment and layoffs) and women by life events (marriage and divorce). Anticipation is an important component of individual wellbeing. Last, we show that happiness does not provide insurance against hard knocks: those with high baseline satisfaction are most adversely affected by negative events.Life Satisfaction; Anticipation; Habituation; Baseline Satisfaction; Labour Market and Family Events
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