74,266 research outputs found
A role for doctors in assisted dying? An analysis of legal regulations and medical professional positions in six European countries
An extensive debate about assisted suicide and euthanasia has been taking place in westernized countries during the last twenty years. Traditionally, the medical profession has maintained a clear distance from euthanasia and assisted suicide, but this distance can no longer be justified by simply referring to the law.
This paper analyses the legal and, in particular, medical professional positions with respect to the doctor’s role in assisted dying in certain Western European countries (Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, United Kingdom) and discusses their implications for doctors
Emittance of TD-NiCr after simulated reentry
The effects of simulated reentry heating on the emittance of TD-NiCr were investigated. Groups of specimens with three different preconditioning treatments were exposed to 6, 24, and 30 half-hour simulated reentry exposure cycles in a supersonic arc tunnel at each of three conditions intended to produce surface temperatures of 1255, 1365, and 1475 K. Emittance was determined at 1300 K on specimens which were preconditioned only and specimens after completion of reentry simulation exposure. Oxide morphology and chemistry were studied by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis. A consistent relationship was established between oxide morphology and total normal emittance. Specimens with coarser textured oxides tended to have lower emittances than specimens with finer textured oxides
An assessment of the impact of water impoundment and diversion structures on vegetation in Southern Arizona
High-altitude color infrared photography was used to survey existing conditions, both upstream and downstream, from nineteen diversion structures in Southern Arizona to determine their effect upon vegetation health, vigor, and cover. A diversion structure is defined as a man/made feature constructed to control storm runoff. The results are used to determine the policy for future structure design
Prospective cognitions in anxiety and depression: Replication and methodological extension
The present study presents a replication and methodological extension of MacLeod, Tata, Kentish, and Jacobsen (1997) with a nonclinical sample, using future-directed imagery to assess prospective cognitions. Results showed that only anxiety (but not depression) was related to enhanced imagery for future negative events. Both anxiety and depression showed significant zero-order correlations with reduced imagery for future positive events. However, when the overlap between anxiety and depression was controlled for, only depression (but not anxiety) showed a unique association with reduced imagery for positive events. Implications of these findings for cognitive models of anxiety and depression are discussed
Generation of pulsed bipartite entanglement using four-wave mixing
Using four-wave mixing in a hot atomic vapor, we generate a pair of entangled
twin beams in the microsecond pulsed regime near the D1 line of Rb,
making it compatible with commonly used quantum memory techniques. The beams
are generated in the bright and vacuum-squeezed regimes, requiring two separate
methods of analysis, without and with local oscillators, respectively. We
report a noise reduction of up to dB below the standard quantum
limit in the pulsed regime and a level of entanglement that violates an
Einstein--Podolsky--Rosen inequality.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in New Journal Of
Physici
Study for prediction of rotor/wake/fuselage interference. Part 2: Program users guide
A method was developed which permits the fully coupled calculation of fuselage and rotor airloads for typical helicopter configurations in forward flight. To do this, an iterative solution is carried out based on a conventional panel representation of the fuselage and a blade element representation of the rotor where fuselage and rotor singularity strengths are determined simultaneously at each step and the rotor wake is allowed to relax (deform) in response to changes in rotor wake loading and fuselage presence. On completion of the iteration, rotor loading and inflow, fuselage singularity strength (and, hence, pressure and velocity distributions) and rotor wake are all consistent. The results of a fully coupled calculation of the flow around representative helicopter configurations are presented. The effect of fuselage components on the rotor flow field and the overall wake structure is discussed as well as the aerodynamic interference between the different parts of the aircraft. Details of the computer program are given
Final-state interactions and superscaling in the semi-relativistic approach to quasielastic electron and neutrino scattering
The semi-relativistic approach to electron and neutrino quasielastic
scattering from nuclei is extended to include final-state interactions.
Starting with the usual non-relativistic continuum shell model, the problem is
relativized by using the semi-relativistic expansion of the current in powers
of the initial nucleon momentum and relativistic kinematics. Two different
approaches are considered for the final-state interactions: the Smith-Wambach
2p-2h damping model and the Dirac-equation-based potential extracted from a
relativistic mean-field plus the Darwin factor. Using the latter the scaling
properties of and cross sections for intermediate
momentum transfers are investigated.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figure
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