11,997 research outputs found
Transient shear banding in the nematic dumbbell model of liquid crystalline polymers
In the shear flow of liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) the nematic director
orientation can align with the flow direction for some materials, but
continuously tumble in others. The nematic dumbbell (ND) model was originally
developed to describe the rheology of flow-aligning semi-flexible LCPs, and
flow-aligning LCPs are the focus in this paper. In the shear flow of monodomain
LCPs it is usually assumed that the spatial distribution of the velocity is
uniform. This is in contrast to polymer solutions, where highly non-uniform
spatial velocity profiles have been observed in experiments. We analyse the ND
model, with an additional gradient term in the constitutive model, using a
linear stability analysis. We investigate the separate cases of constant
applied shear stress, and constant applied shear rate. We find that the ND
model has a transient flow instability to the formation of a spatially
inhomogeneous flow velocity for certain starting orientations of the director.
We calculate the spatially resolved flow profile in both constant applied
stress and constant applied shear rate in start up from rest, using a model
with one spatial dimension to illustrate the flow behaviour of the fluid. For
low shear rates flow reversal can be seen as the director realigns with the
flow direction, whereas for high shear rates the director reorientation occurs
simultaneously across the gap. Experimentally, this inhomogeneous flow is
predicted to be observed in flow reversal experiments in LCPs.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figure
The experience of whanau caring for members disabled from the effects of stroke : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Philosophy at Massey University
This thesis explores the experience of whanau caring for members disabled from the effects of stroke. The decision to undertake this study arose from my experience in rehabilitation nursing where I observed Maori accepting the responsibility for the care of their whanau member following a stroke with little assistance from existing rehabilitation and community based services. I wanted to understand why this was so, from the perspectives of the whanau. A review of epidemiological data demonstrated the negative disparity in the incidence of stroke in Maori when compared with non-Maori. Further review of the literature specifically related to Maori health issues revealed that whilst there was acknowledgement of the importance of whanau, kaumatua and kuia to Maori as a society, there was little that dealt with disability issues and stroke in particular. Where issues related to the provision of, and access to, health and disability services had been noted, little appears to have been accomplished. A descriptive qualitative research study was undertaken in the Taranaki region with support of the eight Taranaki iwi. Seven whanau focus groups interviews and three key informant interviews were undertaken. From analysis of the data a descriptive account of the whanau experience of onset of the stroke event, hospitalisation and service delivery following discharge of their whanau member is provided. The impact on the whanau of their ongoing provision of care with limited service provision from health and disability services is explored. On the basis of this analysis a number of recommendations are made. The key recommendation is that there needs to be a review of current rehabilitation service provision in Taranaki. From such a review it is hoped that changes will be implemented that will enable service provision to be more beneficial, accessible and acceptable to Taranaki Maori
Tuberculosis in sub-Saharan Africa: opportunities, challenges, and change in the era of antiretroviral treatment.
Rapid scale-up of antiretroviral treatment programmes is happening in Africa, driven by international advocacy and policy directives and supported by unprecedented donor funding and technical assistance. This welcome development offers hope to millions of HIV-infected Africans, among whom tuberculosis is the major cause of serious illness and death. Little in the way of HIV diagnosis or care was previously offered to patients with tuberculosis, by either national tuberculosis or AIDS control programmes, with tuberculosis services focused exclusively on diagnosis and treatment of rising numbers of patients. Tuberculosis control in Africa has yet to adapt to the new climate of antiretroviral availability. Many barriers exist, from drug interactions to historic differences in the way that tuberculosis and HIV are perceived, but failure to successfully integrate HIV and tuberculosis control will threaten the viability of both programmes. Here, we review tuberculosis epidemiology in Africa and policy implications of HIV/AIDS treatment scale-up
Planning for Excellence: Insights from an International Review of Regulators’ Strategic Plans
What constitutes regulatory excellence? Answering this question is an indispensable first step for any public regulatory agency that is measuring, striving towards, and, ultimately, achieving excellence. One useful way to answer this question would be to draw on the broader literature on regulatory design, enforcement, and management. But, perhaps a more authentic way would be to look at how regulators themselves define excellence. However, we actually know remarkably little about how the regulatory officials who are immersed in the task of regulation conceive of their own success.
In this Article, we investigate regulators’ definitions of regulatory excellence by drawing on a unique source of data that provides an important window on regulators’ own aspirations: their strategic plans. Strategic plans have been required or voluntarily undertaken for the past decade or longer by regulators around the globe. In these plans, regulators offer mission statements, strategic goals, and measurable and achievable outcomes, all of which indicate what regulators value and are striving to become. Occasionally, they even state explicitly where they have fallen short of “best-in-class” status and how they intend to improve. To date, a voluminous literature exists examining agency practices in strategic planning, but we are aware of no study that tries to glean from the substance of a sizeable number of plans how regulators themselves construe regulatory excellence. The main task of this Article is undertaking this effort. This Article draws on twenty plans from different regulators in nine countries. We found most generally that excellent regulators describe themselves (though not necessarily using exactly these words) as institutions that are more (1) efficient, (2) educative, (3) multiplicative, (4) proportional, (5) vital, (6) just, and (7) honest. In addition to these seven shared attribute categories, our reading of the plans also revealed five other “unusual” attributes that only one or two agencies mentioned. Beyond merely cataloguing the attributes identified by agencies, this Article also discusses commonalities (and differences) between plan structures, emphases, and framings. We found that the plans differed widely in features such as the specificity of their mission statements, the extent to which they emphasized actions over outcomes (or vice versa), and the extent to which commitments were organized along organizational fiefdoms or cut across bureaucratic lines.
We urge future scholarship to explore alternative methods of text mining, and to study strategic plans over time within agencies, in order to track how agencies’ notions of regulatory excellence respond to changes in the regulatory context and the larger circumstances within which agencies operate. Looking longitudinally will also shed light on how agencies handle strategic goals that are either met or that prove to be unattainable
Constraining anomalous Higgs interactions
The recently announced Higgs discovery marks the dawn of the direct probing
of the electroweak symmetry breaking sector. Sorting out the dynamics
responsible for electroweak symmetry breaking now requires probing the Higgs
interactions and searching for additional states connected to this sector. In
this work we analyze the constraints on Higgs couplings to the standard model
gauge bosons using the available data from Tevatron and LHC. We work in a
model--independent framework expressing the departure of the Higgs couplings to
gauge bosons by dimension--six operators. This allows for independent
modifications of its couplings to gluons, photons and weak gauge bosons while
still preserving the Standard Model (SM) gauge invariance. Our results indicate
that best overall agreement with data is obtained if the cross section of Higgs
production via gluon fusion is suppressed with respect to its SM value and the
Higgs branching ratio into two photons is enhanced, while keeping the
production and decays associated to couplings to weak gauge bosons close to
their SM prediction.Comment: v3: Added acknowledgment to FP7 ITN INVISIBLES (Marie Curie Actions
PITN-GA-2011-289442). Nothing else changed with respect to v
Low effective surface recombination in In(Ga)As/GaAs quantum dot diodes
Size dependent current-voltage measurements were performed on InGaAs quantum dot active region mesa diodes and the surface recombination velocity was extracted from current density versus perimeter/area plots using a diffusion model. An effective surface recombination value of 5.5 x 10(4) cm/s was obtained that can be reduced by more than an order of magnitude by selective oxidation of Al(0.9)Ga(0.1)As cladding layers. The values are three times smaller than those obtained for a single quantum well. The effect of p-type doping in the active region was investigated and found to increase the effective surface recombination. (C) 2011 American Institute of Physics. [doi:10.1063/1.3611387
Clerocidin selectively modifies the gyrase-DNA gate to induce irreversible and reversible DNA damage
Clerocidin (CL), a microbial diterpenoid, reacts with DNA via its epoxide group and stimulates DNA cleavage by type II DNA topoisomerases. The molecular basis of CL action is poorly understood. We establish by genetic means that CL targets DNA gyrase in the gram-positive bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae, and promotes gyrase-dependent single- and double-stranded DNA cleavage in vitro. CL-stimulated DNA breakage exhibited a strong preference for guanine preceding the scission site (-1 position). Mutagenesis of -1 guanines to A, C or T abrogated CL cleavage at a strong pBR322 site. Surprisingly, for double-strand breaks, scission on one strand consistently involved a modified (piperidine-labile) guanine and was not reversed by heat, salt or EDTA, whereas complementary strand scission occurred at a piperidine-stable -1 nt and was reversed by EDTA. CL did not induce cleavage by a mutant gyrase (GyrA G79A) identified here in CL-resistant pneumococci. Indeed, mutations at G79 and at the neighbouring S81 residue in the GyrA breakage-reunion domain discriminated poisoning by CL from that of antibacterial quinolones. The results suggest a novel mechanism of enzyme inhibition in which the -1 nt at the gyrase-DNA gate exhibit different CL reactivities to produce both irreversible and reversible DNA damage
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