657 research outputs found
Self Help Group Participation and Employment of the Women: Myths and the Reality
The self help groups were formed to provide micro credit facilities to rural poor women to engage them in economic activities. Present paper investigates the factors influencing the employment status of a selected group of self help group members. The same set of self help group members has been surveyed twice, once during 2005 and again during 2009 to collect information. During 2005 survey all the members were employed but during 2009 it were observed that about 55 percent of the self help group members have turned into housewives. The present study will try to examine the influence of socio economic, demographic and political factors on the employment status of the members based on primary survey conducted in some villages of North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India. The paper has also tried to investigate the loan use pattern of this set of self help group members. Along with the past occupation of the member the local politics at village level have been found to influence the employment status as well as loan use pattern of the members. Jel classification: G21, O12.Self Help Group, Employment Status, Loan use pattern
Lesson of the month 2: An easily missed cause of confusion
We describe the case of an 85-year-old woman who developed acute confusion, acute kidney injury and temperature spikes while on extended courses of beta-lactams for osteomyelitis. The cause of her deterioration was felt to be due to sepsis when in fact it was as a result of toxicity from antibiotics. This was demonstrated by a rapid resolution in her condition following haemodialysis. We also performed a literature review to appraise the neuro and nephrotoxicity of various antibiotics and how best to manage toxicity when it occurs
Evolution of helicity in NOAA 10923 over three consecutive solar rotations
We have studied the evolution of magnetic helicity and chirality in an active
region over three consecutive solar rotations. The region when it first
appeared was named NOAA10923 and in subsequent rotations it was numbered NOAA
10930, 10935 and 10941. We compare the chirality of these regions at
photospheric, chromospheric and coronal heights. The observations used for
photospheric and chromospheric heights are taken from Solar Vector Magnetograph
(SVM) and H_alpha imaging telescope of Udaipur Solar Observatory (USO),
respectively. We discuss the chirality of the sunspots and associated H_alpha
filaments in these regions. We find that the twistedness of superpenumbral
filaments is maintained in the photospheric transverse field vectors also. We
also compare the chirality at photospheric and chromospheric heights with the
chirality of the associated coronal loops, as observed from the HINODE X-Ray
Telescope.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Evolutionary Model of the Personal Income Distribution
The aim of this work is to establish the personal income distribution from
the elementary constituents of a free market; products of a representative good
and agents forming the economic network. The economy is treated as a
self-organized system. Based on the idea that the dynamics of an economy is
governed by slow modes, the model suggests that for short time intervals a
fixed ratio of total labour income (capital income) to net income exists
(Cobb-Douglas relation). Explicitly derived is Gibrat's law from an
evolutionary market dynamics of short term fluctuations. The total private
income distribution is shown to consist of four main parts. From capital income
of private firms the income distribution contains a lognormal distribution for
small and a Pareto tail for large incomes. Labour income contributes an
exponential distribution. Also included is the income from a social insurance
system, approximated by a Gaussian peak. The evolutionary model is able to
reproduce the stylized facts of the income distribution, shown by a comparison
with empirical data of a high resolution income distribution. The theory
suggests that in a free market competition between products is ultimately the
origin of the uneven income distribution
Polaronic Heat Capacity in The Anderson - Hasegawa Model
An exact treatment of the Anderson - Hasegawa two - site model, incorporating
the presence of superexchange and polarons, is used to compute the heat
capacity. The calculated results point to the dominance of the lattice
contribution, especially in the ferromagnetic regime. This behavior is in
qualitative agreement with experimental findings.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, 4 postscript figure
Accelerating Universe from an Evolving Lambda in Higher Dimension
We find exact solutions in five dimensional inhomogeneous matter dominated
model with a varying cosmological constant. Adjusting arbitrary constants of
integration one can also achieve acceleration in our model. Aside from an
initial singularity our spacetime is regular everywhere including the centre of
the inhomogeneous distribution. We also study the analogous homogeneous
universe in (4+d) dimensions. Here an initially decelerating model is found to
give late acceleration in conformity with the current observational demands. We
also find that both anisotropy and number of dimensions have a role to play in
determining the time of flip, in fact the flip is delayed in multidimensional
models. Some astrophysical parameters like the age, luminosity distance etc are
also calculated and the influence of extra dimensions is briefly discussed.
Interestingly our model yields a larger age of the universe compared to many
other quintessential models.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Drawdown prepreg coating method using epoxy terminated butadiene nitrile rubber to improve fracture toughness of glass epoxy composites
Laminates of fibre-reinforced prepreg have excellent in-plane mechanical properties, but have inadequate performance in the through thickness direction. Here, we address this issue by application of epoxy-terminated butadiene nitrile (ETBN) liquid rubber between the prepreg laminae using an automatic draw bar coating technique. Test results reveal that by adding ETBN in small quantities in the range of 9.33–61.33 g/m2, the interlaminar critical energy release rates (GIc and GIIc) are improved by up to 122% in mode-I and 49% in mode-II. Moreover, this finding is further supported by the dynamic mechanical analysis thermograms that clearly indicate that coating has not altered the Tg of ETBN-coated samples. Scanning electron microscopic analysis of fracture surfaces showed that rubber particles formed micro cavitations in the epoxy, causing localised rubber rich regions. These resin-rich regions require more energy to fracture, resulting in increased toughness of the glass epoxy prepreg systems. </jats:p
Cycloadditions in mixed aqueous solvents: the role of the water concentration
We examined the kinetics of a series of cycloaddition reactions in mixtures of water with methanol, acetonitrile and poly(ethylene glycol) (MW 1000). The reactions include the Diels–Alder (DA) reaction between cyclopentadiene and N-n-butylmaleimide or acridizinium bromide, the retro-Diels-Alder (RDA) reaction of 1,4,4a,9a-tetrahydro-4a-methyl-(1α,4α,4aα,9aα)-1,4-methaneanthracene-9,10-dione and the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of benzonitrile oxide with N-n-butylmaleimide. Plots of logk vs the molar concentration or volume fraction of water are approximately linear, but with a characteristic break around 40 M water. This break, absent for the RDA reaction, is ascribed to hydrophobic effects. Comparison with aqueous mixtures of the more hydrophobic 1-propanol shows that these mixtures induce qualitatively similar effects on the rate, but that preferential solvation effects cause the mixtures of 1-propanol to exhibit a more complex behavior of logk on composition. The results are analyzed using the Abraham–Kamlett–Taft model. The solvent effects in aqueous mixtures are not satisfactorily described by this model. For some cycloadditions, small maxima in rate are observed in highly aqueous mixtures of alcohols. The origin of these maxima and the aforementioned breaks is most likely the same.
Coulomb and nuclear breakup effects in the single neutron removal reaction 197Au(17C,16C gamma)X
We analyze the recently obtained new data on the partial cross sections and
parallel momentum distributions for transitions to ground as well as excited
states of the 16C core, in the one-neutron removal reaction 197Au(17C,16C
gamma)X at the beam energy of 61 MeV/nucleon. The Coulomb and nuclear breakup
components of the one-neutron removal cross sections have been calculated
within a finite range distorted wave Born approximation theory and an eikonal
model, respectively. The nuclear contributions dominate the partial cross
sections for the core excited states. By adding the nuclear and Coulomb cross
sections together, a reasonable agreement is obtained with the data for these
states. The shapes of the experimental parallel momentum distributions of the
core states are described well by the theory.Comment: Revtex format, two figures included, to appear in Phys. Rev. C.
(Rapid communications
Osteosclerosis in the extinct Cayaoa Bruneti (Aves, anseriformes) : insights on behavior and fligftlessness
Fil: Mendoza, Ricardo de. División Paleontología Vertebrados. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. Universidad Nacional de La PlataFil: Tambussi, Claudia Patricia. Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Tierra (CICTERRA). Universidad Nacional de Córdoba; Argentin
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