624 research outputs found
Baryogenesis in extended inflation. 2: Baryogenesis via primordial black holes
Baryogenesis at the end of extended inflation is studied. Extended inflation is brought to an end by the collisions of bubble walls surrounding regions of true vacuum, a process which produces particles well out of thermal equilibrium. The possibility that the wall collisions may provide a significant density of primordial black holes is considered and their possible role in generating a baryon asymmetry is examined
Financial Well-Being: Psychological Factors that Affect African Americans\u27 Financial Well-Being
Most families strive toward financial security and well-being, which would allow them to weather financial shocks and accomplish their long-term goals. However, African Americans have not experienced the same level of financial well-being as others, and this study explored psychological factors that may affect their financial well-being. Data from the 2016 National Financial Well-Being survey (NFWBS), including the CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) Financial Well-Being scale, was utilized in this study. Researchers found that the following factors had a significant positive relationship with the financial well-being of African Americans; grasp of financial skills (confidence), mistreatment with financial services (trust), and health status. Whereas materialism and planning had no significant association with African Americans’ financial well-being
Wolverine Food Habitats and Foraging Strategies in Glacier National Park, Montana
From 2003-2007 we captured and instrumented 28 wolverines (Gulo gulo) in Glacier National Park to investigate reproduction and recruitment. We collected 189 scat samples at reproductive den, forage and rendezvous sites, and documented 90 prey species through observation and prey remains found at similar sites. Seasonal scat analysis provided evidence of differences in prey species consumed during winter (n = 170), summer (n = 19), and reproductive den (n = 103) periods. Ungulates were the most frequently observed prey found in all scats (71%; N=135), with Cervid remains being observed most often (37%; n = 70). Hibernating rodents (ground squirrels and marmots) (36%; n = 68) were the next most utilized prey, with the third most documented prey being mice and voles (31%; n = 56). Vegetation (72%; n = 169), soil material (31%; n = 59), and bone (90%; n = 171) were also found in scats. Seasonal importance of prey was documented, with ungulates being the most observed prey in winter scats (75%; n = 128) and den period scats (79%; n = 81), and hibernating rodents being most observed in summer scats (47%; n = 9). A similar condition was found with analysis of all prey remains (n = 90); ungulates were consumed most often (69%; n = 63), with hibernating rodents as the second most documented prey (12%; n = 11). Wolverines exhibited seasonal dietary shifts in that ungulates were consumed most frequently during winter (77%; n = 55) and the den period (78%; n = 17), with hibernating rodents the most frequent prey documented in summer (50%; n = 9). Wolverine foraging strategies, including searching tree wells, fishing, decapitation, and food caching are also discussed
Wolverine Reproductive Den Habitat in Glacier National Park, Montana
Wolverine reproductive dens occur in habitat not easily accessible to humans during the denning period (Feb – May) and can be challenging to find. As such, few den sites have been precisely described. From 2003 – 2007 we located and documented 14 natal and maternal dens of 3 reproductive female wolverine in Glacier National Park. Two females were known to have produced young in multiple years, using different den sites each year. Reproductive dens occurred at an average elevation of 1890m (range: 1805-1999m), on 9° slopes (range: 5-22o), within a variable range of aspects ( =263°), and with an average snow depth of 2.6m (range: 2.4-3.4m). Den structures included downed trees, large boulders, and rock caves associated with alpine cirques, ridges, and cliff bands at, or below, existing tree line. Distance to occupied human development averaged 6.4km, and distance between denning areas of the same female in different years averaged 5.8 km. Various climate change models predict less persistent snowpack in many areas of the conterminous United States, with a resultant potential for increased isolation of island populations of wolverines
Fanny Copeland and the geographical imagination
Raised in Scotland, married and divorced in the English south, an adopted Slovene, Fanny Copeland (1872 – 1970) occupied the intersection of a number of complex spatial and temporal conjunctures. A Slavophile, she played a part in the formation of what subsequently became the Kingdom of Yugoslavia that emerged from the First World War. Living in Ljubljana, she facilitated the first ‘foreign visit’ (in 1932) of the newly formed Le Play Society (a precursor of the Institute of British Geographers) and guided its studies of Solčava (a then ‘remote’ Alpine valley system) which, led by Dudley Stamp and commended by Halford Mackinder, were subsequently hailed as a model for regional studies elsewhere. Arrested by the Gestapo and interned in Italy during the Second World War, she eventually returned to a socialist Yugoslavia, a celebrated figure. An accomplished musician, linguist, and mountaineer, she became an authority on (and populist for) the Julian Alps and was instrumental in the establishment of the Triglav National Park. Copeland’s role as participant observer (and protagonist) enriches our understanding of the particularities of her time and place and illuminates some inter-war relationships within G/geography, inside and outside the academy, suggesting their relative autonomy in the production of geographical knowledge
The Edinburgh Addiction Cohort: recruitment and follow-up of a primary care based sample of injection drug users and non drug-injecting controls.
BACKGROUND: Injection drug use is an important public health problem. Epidemiological understanding of this problem is incomplete as longitudinal studies in the general population are difficult to undertake. In particular little is known about early life risk factors for later drug injection or about the life course of injection once established including the influence of medical and social interventions. METHODS: Individuals thought to be drug injectors were identified through a single primary medical care facility in Edinburgh between 1980 and 2006 and flagged with the General Registry Office. From October 2005 - October 2007, these cases were traced and invited to undergo interview assessment covering early life experience, substance use, health and social histories. Age and sex matched controls for confirmed cases (alive and dead) were later recruited through the same health facility. Controls for living cases completed the same structured interview schedule. Data were also collected on cases and controls through linkage to routine primary care records, death registrations, hospital contact statistics and police and prison records. All interviews were conducted with the knowledge and permission of the current GP. RESULTS: The initial cohort size was 814. At start of follow up 227 had died. Of the remaining 587: 20 had no contact details and 5 had embarked from the UK; 40 declined participation; 38 did not respond to invitations; 14 were excluded by their GP on health or social grounds and 22 had their contact details withheld by administrative authorities. 448 were interviewed of whom 16 denied injection and were excluded. Of 191 dead cases with medical records 4 were excluded as their records contained no evidence of injection. 5 interviewed cases died before follow up was concluded though these individuals were counted as "live" cases. 1 control per case (dead and alive) was recruited. Linkage to Scottish Morbidity Records data (available from 1981 onwards) on general acute inpatient and day cases, mental health inpatient and day cases and cancer was provided by Information Services, NHS Scotland, for all cases interviewed and all dead cases. The Scottish Prison Service provided records for 198 (46%) of cases interviewed, 48 cases not interviewed and 34 (18%) of dead cases. For a sub-sample of 100 interviewees a search of the Lothian and Borders police database was made for official criminal records and 94 had criminal records. Data linkage for controls is ongoing. CONCLUSIONS: Injecting drug users recruited from a community setting can be successfully followed-up through interviews and record linkage. Information from injecting cases is being analysed in terms of injecting patterns and possible influences on these. Comparisons between cases and controls will allow identification of possibly modifiable early life risk factors for drug injection and will also clarify the burden of disease associated with injection and the influence on this of different health and social interventions.RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/about/license which is similar to the 'Creative Commons Attribution Licence'. In brief you may : copy, distribute, and display the work; make derivative works; or make commercial use of the work - under the following conditions: the original author must be given credit; for any reuse or distribution, it must be made clear to others what the license terms of this work are
String Necklaces and Primordial Black Holes from Type IIB Strings
We consider a model of static cosmic string loops in type IIB string theory,
where the strings wrap cycles within the internal space. The strings are not
topologically stabilised, however the presence of a lifting potential traps the
windings giving rise to kinky cycloops. We find that PBH formation occurs at
early times in a small window, whilst at late times we observe the formation of
dark matter relics in the scaling regime. This is in stark contrast to previous
predictions based on field theoretic models. We also consider the PBH
contribution to the mass density of the universe, and use the experimental data
to impose bounds on the string theory parameters.Comment: 45 pages, 9 figures, LaTeX; published versio
Kantowski-Sachs String Cosmologies
We present new exact solutions of the low-energy-effective-action string
equations with both dilaton and axion fields non-zero. The
background universe is of Kantowski-Sachs type. We consider the possibility of
a pseudoscalar axion field () that can be either time or
space dependent. The case of time-dependent reduces to that of a stiff
perfect-fluid cosmology. For space-dependent there is just one non-zero
time-space-space component of the axion field , and this corresponds to a
distinguished direction in space which prevents the models from isotropising.
Also, in the latter case, both the axion field and its tensor potential
() are dependent on time and space yet the energy-momentum tensor remains
time-dependent as required by the homogeneity of the cosmological model.Comment: 23 pages, REVTEX, 6 figures available on reques
Non-Abelian (p,q) Strings in the Warped Deformed Conifold
We calculate the tension of -strings in the warped deformed conifold
using the non-Abelian DBI action. In the large flux limit, we find exact
agreement with the recent expression obtained by Firouzjahi, Leblond and
Henry-Tye up to and including order terms if is also taken to be
large. Furthermore using the finite prescription for the symmetrised trace
operation we anticipate the most general expression for the tension valid for
any . We find that even in this instance, corrections to the tension
scale as which is not consistent with simple Casimir scaling.Comment: 18 pages, Latex, 1 figure; Added a discussion of the case when the
warp factor parameter and typos correcte
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