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Evangelicalism in transition : a comparative analysis of the work and theology of D. L. Moody and his protégés, Henry Drummond and R. A. TorreyToone, Mark James January 1988 (has links)
By the turn of the twentieth century, British and American evangelical Christianity was sharply divided over, among other things, the issues of biblical authority, the nature of the person and work of Christ and the validity of modern scientific thought. Dwight L. Moody, the major evangelical figure of the late nineteenth century, found himself in the centre of this controversy. As a man of conservative theology yet ecumenical spirit, both the Fundamentalists and the liberal evangelicals 'claimed' him for their cause. The tension which developed between these two sides is well illustrated in the lives and ministries of Moody's protégés, R. A. Torrey and Henry Drummond, who ended up on opposite sides of the modernist/Fundamentalist debate, one perpetuating Moody's theological beliefs and the other his broad, irenic spirit. Having examined the religious historical context in both Scotland and America, this study will consider Moody's development as an ecumenically minded evangelist. Furthermore, both in the Scottish and in the American settings, it will consider the work of Drummond and Torrey, examining Moody's influence upon them and tracing the development of each man's thought and career from the time of their early contacts with the great evangelist. It will explore the nature of the modern/Fundamentalist controversy within late nineteenth century evangelicalism as illustrated in the lives of these three men: Moody the mentor-father figure and Torrey and Drummond as unlikely stepbrothers. In addition to the theological issues, it will be concerned to investigate the spirit in which this debate was carried on. Most importantly, it will argue that, contrary to the claims of Fundamentalists to the present day, their movement did not perpetuate the work of D. L. Moody because it lost the warm catholicity which was integral to Moody's ministry.
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One-Dimensional Power Spectrum and Neutrino Mass in the Spectra of BOSSBorde, Arnaud 27 June 2014 (has links) (PDF)
The framework of the studies presented in this thesis is the one-dimensional power spectrum of the transmitted flux in the Lyman-alpha forests. The Lyman-alpha forest is an an absorption pattern seen in the spectra of high redshift quasars corresponding to the absorption of the quasar light by the hydrogen clouds along the line of sight. It is a powerful cosmological tool as it probes relatively small scales, of the order of a few Mpc. It is also sensible to small non-linear effects such as the one induced by massive neutrinos.First, we have developed two independent methods to measure the one-dimensional power spectrum of the transmitted flux in the Lyman-alpha forest. The first method is based on a Fourier transform, and the second on a maximum likelihood estimator. The two methods are independent and have different systematic uncertainties. The determination of the noise level in the data spectra was subject to a novel treatment, because of its significant impact on the derived power spectrum. We applied the two methods to 13,821 quasar spectra from SDSS-III/BOSS DR9 selected from a larger sample of over 60,000 spectra on the basis of their high quality, large signal-to-noise ratio, and good spectral resolution. The power spectra measured using either approach are in good agreement over all twelve redshift bins from =2.2 to =4.4, and scales from 0.001 (km/s)^−1 to 0.02 (km/s)^−1. We carefully determined the methodological and instrumental systematic uncertainties of our measurements.Then, we present a suite of cosmological N-body simulations with cold dark matter, baryons and neutrinos aiming at modeling the low-density regions of the IGM as probed by the Lyman-alpha forests at high redshift. The simulations are designed to match the requirements imposed by the quality of BOSS and eBOSS data. They are made using either 768^3 or 192^3 particles of each type, spanning volumes ranging from (25 Mpc/h)^3 for high-resolution simulations to (100 Mpc/h)^3 for large-volume ones. Using a splicing technique, the resolution is further enhanced to reach the equivalent of simulations with 3072^3 = 29 billion particles of each type in a (100 Mpc/h)^3 box size, i.e. a mean mass per gas particle of 1.2x10^5 solar masses. We show that the resulting power spectrum is accurate at the 2% level over the full range from a few Mpc to several tens of Mpc. We explore the effect on the one-dimensional transmitted-flux power spectrum of 4 cosmological parameters (n_s, sigma_8, Omega_m ,H_0), 2 astrophysical parameters (T_0, gamma) related to the heating rate of the IGM and the sum of the neutrino masses. By varying the input parameters around a central model chosen to be in agreement with the latest Planck results, we built a grid of simulations that allows the study of the impact on the flux power spectrum of these seven relevant parameters. We improve upon previous studies by not only measuring the effect of each parameter individually, but also probing the impact of the simultaneous variation of each pair of parameters. We thus provide a full second-order expansion, including cross-terms, around our central model. We check the validity of the second-order expansion with independent simulations obtained either with different cosmological parameters or different seeds for the initial condition generation. Finally, a comparison to the one-dimensional Lyman-alpha forest power spectrum obtained in the first part with BOSS data shows an excellent agreement.Eventually, even if there are still some potential biases and systematic errors that need to be studied in our simulation, we performed cosmological fits combining our measurement of the one-dimensional power spectrum and other cosmological probes such as the CMB results provided by Planck. These preliminary results are very encouraging as they lead to some of the tighest cosmological constraints as of today, especially on the sum of the neutrino masses with an upper limit of 0.1 eV.
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Modélisation des émissions aurorales de Jupiter dans l'ultraviolet. Modélisation de l'émission Lyman ¯ de Jupier chaudsMenager, Helene 01 July 2011 (has links) (PDF)
La première partie de cette thèse présente une modélisation des émissions aurorales de Jupiter dans l'ultraviolet. Le but de ce travail est de quantifier comment ces émissions permettent de contraindre l'énergie des électrons qui précipitent dans la haute atmosphère polaire de la planète. Deux types d'émissions sont étudiés : celle de la raie Lyman alpha de l'hydrogène atomique ainsi que celles de H2. Les précipitations d'électrons aurorales sont modélisées à l'aide d'un code de transport cinétique. Le profil et l'intensité de la raie H Lyman alpha sont obtenus avec un code de transfert radiatif. Des spectres synthétiques des émissions de H2 sont calculés. En étudiant la variabilité des raies en fonction de l'énergie des électrons nous montrons que seules des observations à très haute résolution permettront de contraindre fortement les précipitations d'électrons. La deuxième partie de cette thèse présente la première modélisation de l'émission H Lyman alpha d'un Jupiter chaud jamais réalisée. Si elle était détectée, cette raie permettrait de caractériser l'environnement des planètes extrasolaires. L'émission de l'étoile est beaucoup plus intense que celle de la planète, ce qui rend la détection de la raie planétaire très difficile. Les seules estimations de contraste qui avaient été réalisées jusqu'à présent découlaient d'extrapolations basées sur l'émission de Jupiter. Nous introduisons ici des outils appropriés au calcul des émissions des Jupiter chauds, en tenant compte des spécificités de leur haute atmosphère, et notamment leur forte ionisation et leurs températures qui dépassent les 10 000 K. Nous évaluons l'émission Lyman alpha de deux Jupiter chauds, en tenant compte de plusieurs sources d'excitation des particules : les émissions aurorales et thermiques sont calculées, ainsi que l'émission excitée par le rayonnement de l'étoile. Nous montrons que, dans le cas du Jupiter chaud HD 209458b, la détection de l'émission planétaire n'est pas possible avec les instruments actuels. En revanche la raie Lyman alpha du Jupiter chaud HD 189733b semble pouvoir être détectée avec l'instrument STIS du télescope spatial Hubble.
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Determining the characteristic mass of DLA host haloes from 21cm fluctuationsPetrie, Stephen January 2010 (has links)
Absorption profiles are found in the observed spectra from quasars, and the most prominent of these are the Damped Lyman-alpha Absorbers (DLAs). They are caused by large collections of neutral hydrogen (HI) gas, which are thought to be housed in galaxies that lie along the line-of-sight to quasars. HI gas associated with DLAs contains most of the HI gas in the Universe during 2 < z < 5, and hence details about DLAs are important for understanding the history of star formation, as well as the formation and evolution of galaxies. Wyithe (2008) proposed a method of determining the characteristic mass of dark matter haloes that host DLAs. This involves generating an analytic power spectrum of the fluctuations in 21cm brightness temperature caused by the HI gas in the Universe. Calculating this analytic 21cm power spectrum requires a formalism for the HI mass weighted clustering bias of DLAs on both large and small scales. We include this DLA clustering bias by firstly generating an analytic galaxy power spectrum using the halo model of Peacock & Smith (2000), as well as including the occupation of haloes by galaxies -- using the Halo Occupation Distribution (HOD) weighting of Peacock (2003). This weighting is then adapted to account for the occupation of haloes by HI gas. / We then fit the analytic 21cm power spectrum generated using this formalism to a simulated 21cm power spectrum, with the characteristic mass of DLA host haloes being used as a fitting parameter. The DLA host halo mass is in turn dependent upon two parameters in our model: the minimum mass of haloes M_{min} included in our formalism, and the HI weighting index alpha_{HI}. The neutral hydrogen fraction is another parameter, which we can choose to be the same as that from our simulation volume. If we also choose a value for alpha_{HI} that is motivated by analysis of the dark matter and HI gas content of the haloes in the simulation, then we are able to fit the 21cm power spectrum at both large and small scales, with an M_{min} that is the same or similar to the lowest mass in the simulation's halo catalogue. This in turn gives a similar value for the DLA host halo mass that is known to be the case in the simulation. This demonstrates the viability of the Wyithe (2008) method for determining the DLA host halo mass using observations of 21cm fluctuations. However, degeneracies in the free parameters of our analytic formalism would hinder an accurate determination of the DLA host halo mass from actual future observations. This is due to the fact that the real space, spherically averaged 21cm power spectrum is used throughout this thesis. However, extending our analytic formalism to the redshift space, angular-dependent 21cm power spectrum should be capable of breaking the degeneracy between DLA host halo mass and neutral hydrogen fraction.
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Overdense regions in the intergalactic medium and the environments of high-redshift quasars / Régions sur-denses du milieu intergalactique et environnements de quasars à grand décalage spectralFinley, Hayley 25 September 2014 (has links)
Des systèmes d'absorption Lorentziens, qui sondent les nuages de gaz HI de plus hautes densités de colonne, servent ici à sonder les environnements de galaxies hôtes de noyaux actifs à grand décalage spectral (z > 2). Ceci permet d'étudier l'effet des mécanismes de rétroaction des noyaux actifs sur les galaxies hôtes, tel que les vents à haute vitesse et l'ionisation intense. J'implémente deux techniques pour identifier les systèmes Lorentziens au décalage spectral du quasar dans les données du Sloan Digital Sky Survey III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey.Un tel système Lorentzien fait office de coronographe naturel puisqu'il absorbe complètement le rayonnement provenant du noyau actif. Parfois une raie Lyα étroite émise par la galaxie est superposée à l'absorption. J'étudie un échantillon statistiquement complet et je caractérise l'émission. Les systèmes Lorentziens qui révèlent les raies étroites d'émission Lyα les plus lumineuses proviennent de nuages denses et compacts dans la galaxie hôte. Les autres sont dus à des galaxies voisines du quasars.Une deuxième technique consiste à observer des paires de quasars ayant une petite séparation angulaire pour sonder les environnements des galaxies hôtes à des distances transverses inférieures à 90 kpc. J'analyse les propriétés du gaz pour des paires où un système Lorentzien apparait dans le spectre du quasar d'arrière plan coïncident avec le pic d'émission Lyα du quasar de premier plan.Dans une des paires, je détecte une sur-densité de systèmes absorbants à z = 2.69 dans une région correspondant à 6.4 Mpc en distance propre. Les propriétés de cette région suggèrent un filament du milieu intergalactique. / Damped Lyman-α absorbers (DLAs), the highest column density HI Lyman-α (Lyα) absorptions, are used in this thesis to study the environments of high-redshift (z > 2) quasar host galaxies. This is essential for determining how feedback mechanisms from active galactic nuclei (AGN), including high-velocity winds and intense ionizing radiation, impact the host galaxies. Thanks to the large number of quasar sight-lines from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, I implement two techniques to identify DLAs that occur at the quasar redshift.Along the sight-line, these DLAs act as natural coronagraphs and completely absorb the broad Lyα emission from the central AGN. In some cases, a narrow Lyα emission line from the quasar host galaxy is superimposed on the DLA trough. I compare coronagraph DLAs that reveal narrow Lyα emission with those that do not in a statistically complete sample and characterize the emission. DLAs with the most luminous narrow Lyα emission peaks may arise from dense, compact clouds in the host galaxy, while the others may be due to neighboring galaxies. With a second technique, I use pairs of quasars with small angular separations to investigate host galaxy environments at distances of less than 90 kpc in the transverse direction. I analyze the gas properties for pairs where a DLA appears in the background quasar spectrum coincident with the foreground quasar Lyα emission peak.In one of the pairs, I also detect an overdensity of Lyman-limit system absorbers at z = 2.69 in a region spanning 2000 km/s (6.4 Mpc proper distance) along the two sight-lines. The overdense region properties suggest an intergalactic medium filament.
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Recreating Religion: The Response to Joseph Smith’s Innovations in the Second Prophetic Generation of MormonismBlythe, Christopher James 01 May 2011 (has links)
On June 27, 1844, Joseph Smith, the founder of The Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter-day Saints, was assassinated. In the wake of his death, a number of would-besuccessors emerged. Each of these leaders - part of what I call the second propheticgeneration - established a unique vision of Mormonism.
In 1844, Mormonism was in the middle of a major shift in its character. JosephSmith’s death left numerous theological and practical questions unresolved. This thesis argues that, rather than merely a succession struggle of competition and power, a principal function of the second prophetic generation in Mormonism was to respond to Joseph Smith’s innovations and to forge alternate coherent (re-)interpretations of the Mormon faith that could continue into the future without access to the original prophet.
Two major issues that required reframing in a post-Smith world were issues ofdomesticity and marriage and hierarchical structure. One or both of these issues areconsidered in the thought of four second-generation prophets: Alpheus Cutler, William Smith, Charles Thompson, and Lyman Wight. Their response to these questions,ultimately, resulted in distinct traditions within the Mormon movement.
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"Yet I Must Submit": Mormon Women's Perspectives on Death and Dying 1847-1900Savage, Julie Paige Hemming 01 January 1995 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis explores Mormon women's experiences with death as revealed in their personal writings from 1847-1900. The study includes an examination of women's involvement in caring for the sick and tending to the dead, as well as an exploration of women's personal reactions to death. A careful reading of Mormon women's writings from this period reveals that Mormonism equipped believers with powerful doctrines and rituals which helped women cope with the sorrow and profound grief that accompanied the deaths of those they loved. In addition, members living in Mormon communities rendered invaluable physical, emotional, and spiritual support to each other as they cared for the sick and dying, prepared the dead for burial, and dealt with the lingering sense of loss brought on by death. Significantly, special community-sanctioned customs and traditions associated with illness and death provided solace in difficult times.
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D.L. Moody and his schools: an historical analysis of an educational ministryWells, Donald Austin January 1972 (has links)
[The problem of this dissertation is to describe and analyze the educational ideal and ministry of the American
evangelist, Dwight L. Moody, as it expressed itself in the establishment of the Northfield Schools in Northfield,
Massachusett, (comprising the Northfield Seminary for Girls, founded in 1879 and Mount Hermon School for Boys, founded in 1881) and the Bible Institute in Chicago, Illinois, (founded in 1886 and now called Moody Bible Institute) by tracing this ministry from the founding of these schools down to the time of Moody's death in 1899.]
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Modélisation du transfert radiatif dans les atmosphères de Jupiter et Saturne : application à l'étude des chevauchements des raies Lyman alpha, beta et gamma de l'hydrogène atomique avec des raies des systèmes de Lyman et Werner de l'hydrogène moléculaireBarthelemy, Mathieu 17 December 2003 (has links) (PDF)
L'étude du rayonnement UV de la haute atmosphère des planètes géantes ne peut se faire qu'à l'aide de techniques de transfert radiatif. Ces hautes atmosphères étant constituées essentiellement d'hydrogène, il convient d'étudier les raies de la série de Lyman de l'hydrogène atomique. Cependant, la présence dans ces atmosphères, de H et de H2, génère des chevauchements, entre les raies de la série de Lyman et les bandes de l'hydrogène moléculaire. Nous avons modélisé les effets de ces chevauchements pour les raies Lyman alpha, beta et gamma. On constate que ces effets sont souvent importants surtout à cause de l'auto-absorption des raies dues à H2 à la fois sur Jupiter et Saturne. On peut obtenir via cette méthode, des informations sur l'état et les concentrations de l'hydrogène moléculaire et atomique, en particulier les températures vibrationnelles de l'hydrogène moléculaire. Cette technique pourra être étendue aux zones aurorales et éventuellement aux planètes extrasolaires.
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Spectroscopic analysis of primeval galaxy candidatesCaruana, Joseph January 2013 (has links)
This thesis presents spectroscopic observations of z ≥ 7 galaxy candidates in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, which were selected with HST WFC3 imaging, using the Lyman-Break technique. Four z-band (z ≈ 7) dropout galaxies were targeted with Gemini/GNIRS, one z-band dropout galaxy and three Y -band (z ≈ 8 − 9) dropout galaxies with VLT/XSHOOTER, and 22 z-band dropouts with VLT/FORS2, where 15 of the latter are strong candidates. No evidence of Lyman-α emission is found, and the upper limits on the Lyman-α flux and the broad-band magnitudes are used to constrain the rest-frame equivalent widths for this line emission. Amongst the targeted objects, observations were made of HUDF.YD3, a relatively bright Y -band dropout galaxy likely to be at z ≈ 8 − 9 on the basis of its colours in the HST ACS and WFC3 images. Lehnert et al. (2010) observed this galaxy using the VLT/SINFONI integral field spectrograph and claim that it exhibits Lyman-α emission at z = 8.55. In observations of this object described in this thesis, which were made with VLT/XSHOOTER and Subaru/MOIRCS, this line was not reproduced despite the expected signal in the combined MOIRCS & XSHOOTER data being 5σ. Hence it appears unlikely that the reported Lyman-α line emission at z > 8 is real. Accounting for incomplete spectral coverage, in total (across all spectro- graphs) 9.63 z-band dropouts and 1.15 Y -band dropouts are surveyed to a Lyman-α rest-frame Equivalent Width better than 75 ̊A. A model where the fraction of high rest-frame equivalent width emitters follows the trend seen at z = 3−6.5 is inconsistent with these non-detections at z = 7−9 at a confidence level of ∼ 91%, which may indicate that a significant neutral HI fraction (χHI) in the intergalactic medium suppresses the Lyman-α line at z > 7. In particular, the lack of detection of Lyman-α emission in this spectroscopy is compared with results at lower redshift by Stark et al. (2010), who derive a mapping between Lyman-α fractions and χHI based on radiative transfer simulations by McQuinn et al. (2007). These results suggest a lower limit of χHI ~ 0.5.
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