10,901 research outputs found
The distributional effect of the 2008 Pre-Budget Report
The Pre-Budget Report given by the Chancellor on 24th November 2008
contained a number of changes to the tax and benefit system to come into effect
at various points over the next three years.
This briefing note expands on the information provided at a briefing given by
IFS researchers on the day after the Pre-Budget Report1. It gives details of the
changes to taxes, benefits and tax credits directly affecting households, and the
total distributional impact of measures announced in PBR 2008 together with
pre-announced changes, by income and expenditure decile and household type,
at three points in time – January 2009, April 2009 and April 2011.
It also discusses what PBR 2008 does to our impression of all tax and benefit
changes under this Government. Finally, it discusses what PBR 08 did for child
poverty in 2010/11 and the likely effects of the income tax changes for those
earning more than £100,000 a year
Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Effect of Tab Balance on Tab and Control-Surface Characteristics
An investigation was conducted to furnish data on the effect of tab balance on tab and control-surface characteristics. The airfoil tested had a modified NACA 65(1)-012 contour with a plain flap having a chord equal to 25 percent of the wing chord and with a tab having a chord equal to 25 percent of the flap chord and having several nose shapes and overhang lengths. The results of the investigation indicated that, in general, tab balance affected tab hinge-moment characteristics in much the same manner that flap balance affects flap hinge-moment characteristics. A moderate amount of tab balance did not seem to have any adverse effect on flap hinge-moment characteristics
Analytical determination of the effect of thermal property variations on the performance of a charring ablator
Effects of thermal-property variations on performance of charring ablato
Poverty and Inequality in the UK: 2008
In this Commentary, we assess the changes to average incomes, inequality and poverty that have occurred under the first 10 years of the Labour government, with a particular focus on the changes that have occurred in the latest year of data. This analysis is based upon the latest figures from the DWP's Households Below Average Income (HBAI) series, published on 10 June 2008 (Department for Work and Pensions, 2008c). The HBAI series takes household income as its measure of living standards and is derived from the Family Resources Survey, a survey of around 28,000 households in the United Kingdom that asks detailed questions about income from a range of sources
Poverty and inequality in the UK: 2009
In this Commentary, we assess the changes to average incomes, inequality and poverty that have occurred since Labour came to power in 1997, with a particular focus on the changes that have occurred in the latest year of data. This analysis is based upon the latest figures from the DWP's Households Below Average Income (HBAI) series, published on 7 May 2009 (Department for Work and Pensions, 2009). The HBAI series takes household income as its measure of living standards, and is derived from the Family Resources Survey, a survey of around 25,000 households in the United Kingdom that asks detailed questions about income from a range of sources
Superfluidity of Dense He in Vycor
We calculate properties of a model of He in Vycor using the Path Integral
Monte Carlo method. We find that He forms a distinct layered structure with
a highly localized first layer, a disordered second layer with some atoms
delocalized and able to give rise to the observed superfluid response, and
higher layers nearly perfect crystals. The addition of a single He atom was
enough to bring down the total superfluidity by blocking the exchange in the
second layer. Our results are consistent with the persistent liquid layer model
to explain the observations. Such a model may be relevant to the experiments on
bulk solid He, if there is a fine network of grain boundaries in those
systems.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Penile Rehabilitation Therapy with PDE-V Inhibitors Following Radical Prostatectomy: Proceed with Caution
Penile rehabilitation therapy following radical prostatectomy is a much debated topic. Erectile dysfunction is still a significant contributor to postoperative morbidity following radical prostatectomy, despite meticulous nerve-sparing technique. Secondary smooth muscle changes in the penis have been identified as the underlying causes of penile atrophy, veno-occlusive dysfunction, and fibrosis. Initial observations that intracavernous injection therapies used on a regular basis postoperatively resulted in improvements in the return of spontaneous erectile function led to the development of penile rehabilitation protocols. Chronic dosing of PDE-V inhibitors is now commonly used by urologists after radical prostatectomy. Despite the current enthusiasm of penile rehabilitation therapy, current scientific evidence with clinical trials is still limited
Thermodynamically consistent equilibrium properties of normal-liquid Helium-3
The high-precision data for the specific heat C_{V}(T,V) of normal-liquid
Helium-3 obtained by Greywall, taken together with the molar volume V(T_0,P) at
one temperature T_0, are shown to contain the complete thermodynamic
information about this phase in zero magnetic field. This enables us to
calculate the T and P dependence of all equilibrium properties of normal-liquid
Helium-3 in a thermodynamically consistent way for a wide range of parameters.
The results for the entropy S(T,P), specific heat at constant pressure
C_P(T,P), molar volume V(T,P), compressibility kappa(T,P), and thermal
expansion coefficient alpha(T,P) are collected in the form of figures and
tables. This provides the first complete set of thermodynamically consistent
values of the equilibrium quantities of normal-liquid Helium-3. We find, for
example, that alpha(T,P) has a surprisingly intricate pressure dependence at
low temperatures, and that the curves alpha(T,P) vs T do not cross at one
single temperature for all pressures, in contrast to the curves presented in
the comprehensive survey of helium by Wilks.
Corrected in cond-mat/9906222v3: The sign of the coefficient d_0 was
misprinted in Table I of cond-mat/9906222v1 and v2. It now correctly reads
d_0=-7.1613436. All results in the paper were obtained with the correct value
of d_0. (We would like to thank for E. Collin, H. Godfrin, and Y. Bunkov for
finding this misprint.)Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, 9 tables; published version; note added in
proof; v3: misprint correcte
Antigen depot is not required for alum adjuvanticity
Alum adjuvants have been in continuous clinical use for more than 80 yr. While the prevailing theory has been that depot formation and the associated slow release of antigen and/or inflammation are responsible for alum enhancement of antigen presentation and subsequent T- and B-cell responses, this has never been formally proven. To examine antigen persistence, we used the chimeric fluorescent protein EαGFP, which allows assessment of antigen presentation in situ, using the Y-Ae antibody. We demonstrate that alum and/or CpG adjuvants induced similar uptake of antigen, and in all cases, GFP signal did not persist beyond 24 h in draining lymph node antigen-presenting cells. Antigen presentation was first detectable on B cells within 6–12 h of antigen administration, followed by conventional dendritic cells (DCs) at 12–24 h, then finally plasmacytoid DCs at 48 h or later. Again, alum and/or CpG adjuvants did not have an effect on the magnitude or sequence of this response; furthermore, they induced similar antigen-specific T-cell activation in vivo. Notably, removal of the injection site and associated alum depot, as early as 2 h after administration, had no appreciable effect on antigen-specific T- and B-cell responses. This study clearly rules out a role for depot formation in alum adjuvant activity
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