6,273 research outputs found
GATE convection subprogramme: field phase report
Assisted by J. L. Rasmussen and W. Murray of the U.S. GATE Project Office.February, 1975.Includes bibliographical references.A summary of the in-field decisions affecting the GATE Convection Subprogramme (C.S.P.) objectivesa preliminary tabulation and discussion of the data collectionand a discussion of the work of the Special Analysis Group in Dakar. Preliminary tables are presented of the upper air data coverage for the B and A/B ship arrays, the C-band ship radars, the SMS satellite coverage and the multi-aircraft missions flown in support of the C.S.P.A preliminary assessment of the subprogramme observational objectives is given
The role of parental alcohol use, parental discipline and antisocial behaviour on adolescent drinking trajectories
Backgrounds: : Parental drinking, harsh parental discipline and adolescent antisocial behaviour have been independently implicated in adolescent alcohol use. Robust prospective studies are required to examine developmental relationships between these factors and their effect on trajectories of alcohol use across adolescence
Transnationalism and Social Work Education
Transnational movements, networks, and relationships are everywhere in this âworld on the moveâ (Williams & Graham, 2014, p. i1). Transnational peoples maintain relationships of interdependence and support with families and communities in their places of origin, often returning regularly, while starting new lives and making new connections. Transnationalism is characterized by mobilities and networks, by social integration, and by extended and extensive relationship ties of family, neighborhood, religious faith, or combinations thereof (Valtonen, 2008). While disciplines across the world including sociology, human geography, and cultural anthropology engage with the implications of transnationalism (Bauböck & Faist, 2010), social work in England and mainland Europe has not achieved similar levels of engagement. As Cox and Geisen state: âthe social world is being transformed by migration and social work is playing catch-upâ (2014, p. i162)
Galactose Ingested with a High-Fat Beverage Increases Postprandial Lipemia Compared with Glucose but Not Fructose Ingestion in Healthy Men.
BACKGROUND: Fructose ingestion with a high-fat beverage increases postprandial lipemia when compared with glucose. It is unknown whether other sugars, such as galactose, also increase postprandial lipemia. OBJECTIVES: The objective was to assess whether galactose ingestion within a high-fat beverage increases postprandial lipemia relative to glucose or fructose. METHODS: Two experiments were conducted, which contrasted different test drinks under otherwise standardized conditions. In Experiment 1, 10 nonobese men (age: 22 ± 1 y; BMI, 23.5 ± 2.2 kg/2) ingested either galactose or glucose (0.75 g supplemented carbohydrate perâ
kilogram body mass) within a high-fat test drink (0.94 g fat per kilogram body mass). In Experiment 2, a separate group of 9 nonobese men (age: 26 ± 6 y; BMI: 23.5 ± 2.6 kg/m2) ingested either galactose or fructose (identical doses as those in Experiment 1) within the same high-fat test drink. Capillary blood was sampled before and at frequent intervals after ingestion of the test drinks for a 300-min period to determine plasma triacylglycerol, glucose, lactate, nonesterified fatty acid, and insulin concentrations. Paired t tests and 2-way, repeated-measures ANOVA were used to compare conditions within each experiment. RESULTS: The incremental AUC for triacylglycerol was greater following galactose ingestion compared with glucose (127 ± 59 compared with 80 ± 48 mmolâ
L-1 Ă 300 min, respectively; P = 0.04) but not compared with fructose (136 ± 74 compared with 133 ± 63 mmolâ
L-1 Ă300 min, respectively; PÂ =Â 0.91). Plasma lactate concentrations also increased to a greater extent with galactose compared with glucose ingestion (time-condition interaction: PÂ <Â 0.001) but not fructose ingestion (time-condition interaction: PÂ =Â 0.17). CONCLUSIONS: Galactose ingestion within a high-fat beverage exacerbates postprandial lipemia and plasma lactate concentrations compared with glucose but not fructose in nonobese men. These data suggest that galactose metabolism may be more similar to fructose than to glucose, providing a rationale to reassess the metabolic fate of galactose ingestion in humans. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03439878
Vanishing spin alignment : experimental indication of triaxial nuclear molecule
Fragment-fragment- coincidences have been measured for at an energy corresponding to the population of a conjectured
resonance in Ni. Fragment angular distributions as well as -ray
angular correlations indicate that the spin orientations of the outgoing
fragments are perpendicular to the orbital angular momentum. This differs from
the and the resonances, and
suggests two oblate nuclei interacting in an equator-to-equator
molecular configuration.Comment: 14 pages standard REVTeX file, 3 ps Figures -- Accepted for
publication in Physical Review C (Rapid Communication
Response of Laryngeal and Tracheo-Bronchial Surface Lining to Inhaled Cigarette Smoke in Normal and Vitamin A-Deficient Rats: A Scanning Electron Microscopic Study.
The effects on surface morphology of airway epithelium of cigarette smoke (CS) inhalation alone (experiments one and two) or of CS in combination with hypovitaminosis A (experiment two) was investigated using specific pathogen free rats. Eight morphologically distinct cell types were distinguished overall. Apart from atypical squamous lesions each of the other cell types could be found in varying proportions in all experimental groups. CS alone caused an increase in the frequency with which intra-lumenal mucus was seen and an increase in the occurrence of secretory cells of types IV (i.e.,\u27merocrine\u27) and V (i.e.,\u27apocrine\u27). In experiment one, the area of trachea covered by cilia as determined by point counting increased significantly (P\u3c0.01). Hypovitaminosis A was induced by lowering the dietary intake of vitamin A to a minimum, defined level. Rats showed an approximately 75% decrease in plasma retinol levels and a 95-100% decrease in hepatic stores of vitamin A. At this level, hypovitaminosis A alone had no significant effect on airway epithelial morphology. Foci of squamous metaplasia (squamous cells of type VIIIa) were found in all groups but extensive squamous metaplasia of the larynx and squamous lesions of atypical appearance (type VIIIb) were found only in the vitamin deficient group exposed to CS. The results suggest the synergistic effects of reduced vitamin A and CS may be important in the induction of atypical squamous changes which may predispose the airway to the development of squamous carcinoma
Quantum limit transport and destruction of the Weyl nodes in TaAs
Weyl fermions are a new ingredient for correlated states of electronic
matter. A key difficulty has been that real materials also contain non-Weyl
quasiparticles, and disentangling the experimental signatures has proven
challenging. We use magnetic fields up to 95 tesla to drive the Weyl semimetal
TaAs far into its quantum limit (QL), where only the purely chiral 0th Landau
levels (LLs) of the Weyl fermions are occupied. We find the electrical
resistivity to be nearly independent of magnetic field up to 50 tesla: unusual
for conventional metals but consistent with the chiral anomaly for Weyl
fermions. Above 50 tesla we observe a two-order-of-magnitude increase in
resistivity, indicating that a gap opens in the chiral LLs. Above 80 tesla we
observe strong ultrasonic attenuation below 2 kelvin, suggesting a
mesoscopically-textured state of matter. These results point the way to
inducing new correlated states of matter in the QL of Weyl semimetals
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JULES-crop: a parametrisation of crops in the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator
Studies of climate change impacts on the terrestrial biosphere have been completed without recognition of the integrated nature of the biosphere. Improved assessment of the impacts of climate change on food and water security requires the development and use of models not only representing each component but also their interactions. To meet this requirement the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) land surface model has been modified to include a generic parametrisation of annual crops. The new model, JULES-crop, is described and evaluation at global and site levels for the four globally important crops; wheat, soybean, maize and rice. JULES-crop demonstrates skill in simulating the inter-annual variations of yield for maize and soybean at the global and country levels, and for wheat for major spring wheat producing countries. The impact of the new parametrisation, compared to the standard configuration, on the simulation of surface heat fluxes is largely an alteration of the partitioning between latent and sensible heat fluxes during the later part of the growing season. Further evaluation at the site level shows the model captures the seasonality of leaf area index, gross primary production and canopy height better than in the standard JULES. However, this does not lead to an improvement in the simulation of sensible and latent heat fluxes. The performance of JULES-crop from both an Earth system and crop yield model perspective is encouraging. However, more effort is needed to develop the parametrisation of the model for specific applications. Key future model developments identified include the introduction of processes such as irrigation and nitrogen limitation which will enable better representation of the spatial variability in yield
Spin-1/2 J1-J2 model on the body-centered cubic lattice
Using exact diagonalization (ED) and linear spin wave theory (LSWT) we study
the influence of frustration and quantum fluctuations on the magnetic ordering
in the ground state of the spin-1/2 J1-J2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet (J1-J2
model) on the body-centered cubic (bcc) lattice. Contrary to the J1-J2 model on
the square lattice, we find for the bcc lattice that frustration and quantum
fluctuations do not lead to a quantum disordered phase for strong frustration.
The results of both approaches (ED, LSWT) suggest a first order transition at
J2/J1 0.7 from the two-sublattice Neel phase at low J2 to a collinear
phase at large J2.Comment: 6.1 pages 7 figure
Scalar arguments of the mathematical functions defining molecular and turbulent transport of heat and mass in compressible fluids
The advectionâdiffusion equations defining control volume conservation laws in micrometeorological research are analysed to resolve discrepancies in their appropriate scalar variables for heat and mass transport. A scalar variable that is conserved during vertical motions enables the interpretation of turbulent mixing as âdiffusionâ. Gas-phase heat advection is shown to depend on gradients in the potential temperature (Ξ), not the temperature (T). Since conduction and radiation depend on T, advectionâdiffusion of heat depends on gradients of both Ξ and T. Conservation of Ξ (the first Law of Thermodynamics) requires including a pressure covariance term in the definition of the turbulent heat flux. Mass advection and diffusion are universally agreed to depend directly on gradients in the gas âconcentrationâ (c), a nonetheless ambiguous term. Depending upon author, c may be defined either as a dimensionless proportion or as a dimensional density, with non-trivial differences for the gas phase. Analyses of atmospheric law, scalar conservation and similarity theory demonstrate that mass advectionâdiffusion in gases depends on gradients, not in density but rather in a conserved proportion. Flux-tower researchers are encouraged to respect the meteorological tradition of writing conservation equations in terms of scalar variables that are conserved through simple air motions.The authors received funding support from Andalusian regional
government project GEOCARBO (P08-RNM-3721),
the National Institute for Agrarian Research and Technology
(INIA; SUM2006â00010-00â00), the Spanish flux-tower network
CARBORED-ES (Science Ministry project CGL2010-
22193-C04â02), and the European Commission collaborative
project GHG Europe (FP7/2007-2013; grant agreement
244122)
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