17,617 research outputs found
Look-up Tables to Link 1991 Population Statistics to the 1998 Local Government Areas
Between 1995 and 1998 the local authority structure and geography of the United Kingdom was substantially revised. The two-tier system of local government was abolished in Wales, Scotland, and in parts of non-metropolitan England, and replaced with a single-tier system. This involved the creation of a new set of local authority area boundaries which in many places cut across those of the old districts. In addition, many of the local authorities unaffected by the reorganisation nonetheless had experienced small - though demographically significant - boundary changes since the last census. By the time the final phase of the reorganisation came into effect on 1st April 1998 the local government map of the United Kingdom was very different from that of April 1991. There is a need therefore to provide demographic and other geographically based data for the new geography for years prior to 1998. This paper aims to fill a part of this requirement by focusing on two important issues. First, it describes a look-up table detailing exactly how the 1998 local government geography relates to 1991 Census areas, and second, it sets out methods for producing 1991 Census data and mid-1991 population estimates (including single year age detail) for the new geography. A selection of the results produced by the described methods is included in tables and population pyramids
A neural basis for percept stabilization binocular rivalry
When the same visual input has conflicting interpretations, conscious perception can alternate spontaneously between each competing percept. Surprisingly, such bistable perception can be stabilized by intermittent stimulus removal, suggesting the existence of perceptual "memory" across interruptions in stimulation. The neural basis of such a process remains Unknown. Here, we studied binocular rivalry, one type of bistable perception, in two linked experiments in human participants. First, we showed, in a behavioral experiment using binocular rivalry between face and grating stimuli, that the stabilizing effect of stimulus removal was specific to perceptual alternations evoked by rivalry, and did not occur following physical alternations in the absence of rivalry. We then used functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure brain activity in a variable delay period Of Stimulus removal. Activity in the fusiform face area during the delay period following removal of rivalrous Stimuli was greater following face than grating perception, whereas such a difference was absent during removal of non-rivalrous Stimuli. Moreover, activity in areas of fronto-parietal regions during the delay period correlated with the degree to which individual participants tended to experience percept stabilization. Our findings Suggest that percept-related activity in specialized extrastriate visual areas help to stabilize perception during perceptual conflict, and that high-level mechanisms may determine the influence of such signals on conscious perception
Gamma-ray bursts as X-ray depth-gauges of the Universe
We discuss the X-ray flux of gamma-ray burst afterglows at redshifts in the
range 3-30, including the effects of the intergalactic He II absorption. We
point out that strong X-ray lines may form locally in burst afterglows starting
minutes after the trigger. This can provide distinctive X-ray distance
indicators out to the redshifts where the first generation of massive stars
form.Comment: ApJ(Lett) in press 5/31/03; subm. 5/7/0
Delayed Gev Emission from Cosmological Gamma-Ray Bursts : Impact of a Relativistic Wind on External Matter
Sudden collapse of a compact object, or coalescence of a compact binary, can
generate an unsteady relativistic wind that lasts for a few seconds. The wind
is likely to carry a high magnetic field; and its Lorentz factor depends on the
extent to which it is 'loaded' with baryons. If the Lorentz factor is , internal dissipation and shocks in this wind produce a non-thermal
gamma-ray burst, detectable in the range 0.1\MeV \siml E_\gamma \siml
0.1-1\GeV out to cosmological distances. The cooled wind ejecta would
subsequently be decelerated by the external medium. The resultant blast wave
and reverse shock can then give rise to a second burst component, mainly
detectable in the GeV range, with a time delay relative to the MeV burst
ranging from minutes to hours.Comment: 5 pages, plain Te
Gamma-Ray Bursts: Multiwaveband Spectral Predictions for Blast Wave Models
In almost any scenario for 'cosmological' gamma-ray bursts (and in many
models where they originate in our own Galaxy), the initial energy density is
so large that the resulting relativistic plasma expands with
producing a blast wave ahead of it and a reverse shock moving into the ejecta,
as it ploughs into the external medium. We evaluate the radiation expected from
these shocks,for both cosmological and galactic bursts, for various assumptions
about the strength of the magnetic field and the particle acceleration
mechanisms in the shocks. The spectra are evaluated over the whole range from
the IR to GeV, and are compared with the variety of spectral behavior
reported by BATSE, and with the X-ray and optical constraints. For bursts of
duration \simg 1\s acceptable -ray spectra and ratios
are readily obtained for 'cosmological' models. Blast waves in galactic models
can produce bursts of similar gamma-ray fluence and duration, but they violate
the X-ray paucity constraint, except for the shorter bursts (\siml 1\s). We
discuss the prospects for using O/UV and X-ray observations to discriminate
among alternative models.Comment: 7 pages with one figure (figure in uuencoded compressed postscript
file),te
The Options for UK Domestic Water Reduction: A Review
Demand pressure on UK water supplies is expected to increase in the next 20 years driven by increasing population, new housing development and reducing household size. Regionally and locally migration will also afect demand particularly in the South-East.
The water reduction trends that will have the greatest reduction effect on UK consumption are:
1. For new homes; metering and new efficiencies in design and construction (e.g. low flush toilets, heating and plumbing efficiences)
2. For established housing; metering and modern washing machines
The apparent shape of the "Str\"omgren sphere'' around the highest-redshift QSOs with Gunn-Peterson troughs
Although the highest redshift QSOs (z>6.1) are embedded in a significantly
neutral background universe (mass-averaged neutral hydrogen fraction >1%) as
suggested by the Gunn-Peterson absorption troughs in their spectra, the
intergalactic medium in their vicinity is highly ionized. The highly ionized
region is generally idealized as spherical and called the Str\"omgren sphere.
In this paper, by combining the expected evolution of the Str\"omgren sphere
with the rule that the speed of light is finite, we illustrate the apparent
shape of the ionization fronts around the highest redshift QSOs and its
evolution, which depends on the age, luminosity evolution, and environment of
the QSO (e.g., the hydrogen reionization history). The apparent shape may
systematically deviate from a spherical shape, unless the QSO age is
significantly long compared to the hydrogen recombination process within the
ionization front and the QSO luminosity evolution is significantly slow.
Effects of anisotropy of QSO emission are also discussed. The apparent shape of
the "Str\"omgren sphere'' may be directly mapped by transmitted spectra of
background sources behind or inside the ionized regions or by surveys of the
hyperfine transition (21cm) line emission of neutral hydrogen.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures; discussion on effects of anisotropy of QSO
emission expanded; ApJ in pres
Measuring Confidentiality Risks in Census Data
Two trends have been on a collision course over the recent past. The first is the increasing demand by researchers for greater detail and flexibility in outputs from the decennial Census of Population. The second is the need felt by the Census Offices to demonstrate more clearly that Census data have been explicitly protected from the risk of disclosure of information about individuals. To reconcile these competing trends the authors propose a statistical measure of risks of disclosure implicit in the release of aggregate census data. The ideas of risk measurement are first developed for microdata where there is prior experience and then modified to measure risk in tables of counts. To make sure that the theoretical ideas are fully expounded, the authors develop small worked example. The risk measure purposed here is currently being tested out with synthetic and a real Census microdata. It is hoped that this approach will both refocus the census confidentiality debate and contribute to the safe use of user defined flexible census output geographies
- …
