1,776 research outputs found
Keloid Formation A Horse
In equines the formation of exuberant granulation tissue is of common occurrence in wounds which are attended by considerable irritation. However, certain individuals have what is known as blastoma constitution , which is a tendency to produce enormous amounts of connective tissue from comparatively slight irritation. Frequent sequelae of these exuberations are keloids, which are not true tumors but excessive formations of scar tissue
A study of the interrelatedness of the Christian ministry and Christian education
https://place.asburyseminary.edu/ecommonsatsdissertations/2217/thumbnail.jp
A mathematical model for predator and prey populations
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147043/1/pope0127.pd
Representations of celestial coordinates in FITS
In Paper I, Greisen & Calabretta (2002) describe a generalized method for
assigning physical coordinates to FITS image pixels. This paper implements this
method for all spherical map projections likely to be of interest in astronomy.
The new methods encompass existing informal FITS spherical coordinate
conventions and translations from them are described. Detailed examples of
header interpretation and construction are given.Comment: Consequent to Paper I: "Representations of world coordinates in
FITS". 45 pages, 38 figures, 13 tables, aa macros v5.2 (2002/Jun). Both
papers submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics (2002/07/19). Replaced to try to
get figure and table placement right (no textual changes
Parameter Estimation with Mixed-State Quantum Computation
We present a quantum algorithm to estimate parameters at the quantum
metrology limit using deterministic quantum computation with one bit. When the
interactions occurring in a quantum system are described by a Hamiltonian , we estimate by zooming in on previous estimations and by
implementing an adaptive Bayesian procedure. The final result of the algorithm
is an updated estimation of whose variance has been decreased in
proportion to the time of evolution under H. For the problem of estimating
several parameters, we implement dynamical-decoupling techniques and use the
results of single parameter estimation. The cases of discrete-time evolution
and reference-frame alignment are also discussed within the adaptive approach.Comment: 12 pages. Improved introduction and technical details moved to
Appendi
Grey matter volume correlates with virtual water maze task performance in boys with androgen excess
Major questions remain about the specific role of testosterone in human spatial navigation. We tested 10 boys (mean age 11.65 years) with an extremely rare disorder of androgen excess (Familial Male Precocious Puberty, FMPP) and 40 healthy boys (mean age 12.81 years) on a virtual version of the Morris Water Maze task. In addition, anatomical magnetic resonance images were collected for all patients and a subsample of the controls (n=21) after task completion. Behaviourally, no significant differences were found between both groups. However, in the MRI analyses, grey matter volume (GMV) was correlated with performance using voxel-based morphometry (VBM). Group differences in correlations of performance with GMV were apparent in medial regions of the prefrontal cortex as well as the middle occipital gyrus and the cuneus. By comparison, similar correlations for both groups were found in the inferior parietal lobule. These data provide novel insight into the relation between testosterone and brain development and suggest that morphological differences in a spatial navigation network covary with performance in spatial ability. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of IBRO
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Kinetics of the Reactions of CH2OO with Acetone, α‑Diketones, and β‑Diketones
Rate constants for the reactions between the simplest Criegee intermediate, CH2OO, with acetone, the α-diketones biacetyl and acetylpropionyl, and the β-diketones acetylacetone and 3,3-dimethyl-2,4-pentanedione have been measured at 295 K. CH2OO was produced photochemically in a flow reactor by 355 nm laser flash photolysis of diiodomethane in the presence of excess oxygen. Time-dependent concentrations were measured using broadband transient absorption spectroscopy, and the reaction kinetics was characterized under pseudo-first-order conditions. The bimolecular rate constant for the CH2OO + acetone reaction is measured to be (4.1 ± 0.4) × 10-13 cm3 s-1, consistent with previous measurements. The reactions of CH2OO with the β-diketones acetylacetone and 3,3-dimethyl-2,5-pentanedione are found to have broadly similar rate constants of (6.6 ± 0.7) × 10-13 and (3.5 ± 0.8) × 10-13 cm3 s-1, respectively; these values may be cautiously considered as upper limits. In contrast, α-diketones react significantly faster, with rate constants of (1.45 ± 0.18) × 10-11 and (1.29 ± 0.15) × 10-11 cm3 s-1 measured for biacetyl and acetylpropionyl. The potential energy surfaces for these 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions are characterized at the M06-2X/aug-cc-pVTZ and CBS-QB3 levels of theory and provide additional support to the observed experimental trends. The reactivity of carbonyl compounds with CH2OO is also interpreted by application of frontier molecular orbital theory and predicted using Hammett substituent constants. Finally, the results are compared with other kinetic studies of Criegee intermediate reactions with carbonyl compounds and discussed within the context of their atmospheric relevance
One-loop effective potential for SO(10) GUT theories in de Sitter space
Zeta-function regularization is applied to evaluate the one-loop effective
potential for SO(10) grand-unified theories in de Sitter cosmologies. When the
Higgs scalar field belongs to the 210-dimensional irreducible representation of
SO(10), attention is focused on the mass matrix relevant for the
SU(3)xSU(2)xU(1) symmetry-breaking direction, to agree with low-energy
phenomenology of the particle-physics standard model. The analysis is
restricted to those values of the tree-level-potential parameters for which the
absolute minima of the classical potential have been evaluated. As shown in the
recent literature, such minima turn out to be SO(6)xSO(4)- or
SU(3)xSU(2)xSU(2)xU(1)-invariant. Electroweak phenomenology is more naturally
derived, however, from the former minima. Hence the values of the parameters
leading to the alternative set of minima have been discarded. Within this
framework, flat-space limit and general form of the one-loop effective
potential are studied in detail by using analytic and numerical methods. It
turns out that, as far as the absolute-minimum direction is concerned, the
flat-space limit of the one-loop calculation about a de Sitter background does
not change the results previously obtained in the literature, where the
tree-level potential in flat space-time was studied. Moreover, when curvature
effects are no longer negligible in the one-loop potential, it is found that
the early universe remains bound to reach only the SO(6)xSO(4) absolute
minimum.Comment: 25 pages, plain Tex, plus Latex file of the tables appended at the
end. Published in Classical and Quantum Gravity, Vol. 11, pp. 2031-2044,
August 199
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