56 research outputs found
The Respiratory Form of Pseudorabies in Pigs
Diagnosis of respiratory diseases among growing and finishing swine has become a challenge for food animal practitioners. The incidence and severity of respiratory disease has increased with confinement raising of hogs. Pseudorabies (Aujeszky\u27s Disease. mad itch) caused by Herpesvirus suis. can affect pigs. dogs. cats, cattle, sheep, and goats. There have been no confirmed cases of pseudorabies in horses. Although invariably fatal in other species, pseudorabies virus infection in swine can cause a variety of clinical syndromes characterized by respiratory signs, central nervous system (CNS) symptoms, and reproductive failure. These syndromes vary according to route of infection, viral strain, immune status of the animal and most importantly, age of the pig at the time of infection
QCD strings with spinning quarks
We construct a consistent action for a massive spinning quark on the end of a
QCD string that leads to pure Thomas precession of the quark's spin. The string
action is modified by the addition of Grassmann degrees of freedom to the
string such that the equations of motion for the quark spin follow from
boundary conditions, just as do those for the quark's position.Comment: REVTeX4, 10 pages, no figure
Relativistic two-body system in (1+1)-dimensions
The relativistic two-body system in (1+1)-dimensional quantum electrodynamics
is studied. It is proved that the eigenvalue problem for the two-body
Hamiltonian without the self-interaction terms reduces to the problem of
solving an one-dimensional stationary Schr\"odinger type equation with an
energy-dependent effective potential which includes the delta-functional and
inverted oscillator parts. The conditions determining the metastable energy
spectrum are derived, and the energies and widths of the metastable levels are
estimated in the limit of large particle masses. The effects of the
self-interaction are discussed.Comment: LATEX file, 21 pp., 4 figure
Novel patch biomaterial treatment for colon diverticulosis in swine model
Current leading managements for diverticular disease cannot prevent the recurrence of diverticulitis, bleeding and/or other complications. There is an immediate need for developing new minimal invasive therapeutic strategies to prevent and treat this disease. Through a biomechanical analysis of porcine colon with diverticular lesions, we proposed a novel adhesive patch concept aiming at mechanical reconstruction of the diseased colon wall. This study aims to evaluate the surgical feasibility (safety and efficacy) of pulmonary visceral pleura (PVP) patch therapy using a pig model of diverticulosis. Six female Yucatan miniature pigs underwent collagenase injection (CI) for the development of diverticular lesions. The lesions in each animal either received patch implantation (treated group, n = 40 for 6 pigs) or left intact (untreated group, n = 44 for 6 pigs). The normal colonic wall in each animal received patch implantation at two spots to serve as control (n = 12 for 6 pigs). After 3Â months of observation, the performance and safety of the patch treatment were evaluated through macroscopic and histological examination. We found that 95% of pouch-like herniation of the mucosa was prevented from the colon wall with the treatment. The pouch diameter was significantly reduced in the treated group as compared to the untreated group (p < 0.001). The patch application caused a significant increase in the levels of collagen of the colon tissue as compared to the untreated and control groups (p < 0.001). No difference was found in the lymphocyte and macrophage inflammatory infiltrate between the groups. Our results suggest that patch treatment efficiently inhibits the diverticular pouch deformation and promotes the healing of the colon wall with a normal inflammatory response, which may minimize the risk of diverticulosis reoccurrence and complications over time
Tensionless String in the Notoph Background
We study the interaction between a tensionless (null) string and an
antisymmetric background field B_{ab} using a 2-component spinor formalism. A
geometric condition for the absence of such an interaction is formulated. We
show that only one gauge-invariant degree of freedom of the field B_{ab} does
not satisfy this condition. Identification of this degree of freedom with the
notoph field \phi of Ogievetskii-Polubarinov-Kalb-Ramond is suggested.
Application of a two-component spinor formalism allows us a reduction of the
complete system of non-linear partial differential equations and constraints
governing the interacting null string dynamics to a system of linear
differential equations for the basis spinors of the spin-frame. We find that
total effect of the interaction is contained in a single derivation coefficient
which is identified with the notoph field.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, RevTeX 3.
The Relativistic N-body Problem in a Separable Two-Body Basis
We use Dirac's constraint dynamics to obtain a Hamiltonian formulation of the
relativistic N-body problem in a separable two-body basis in which the
particles interact pair-wise through scalar and vector interactions. The
resultant N-body Hamiltonian is relativistically covariant. It can be easily
separated in terms of the center-of-mass and the relative motion of any
two-body subsystem. It can also be separated into an unperturbed Hamiltonian
with a residual interaction. In a system of two-body composite particles, the
solutions of the unperturbed Hamiltonian are relativistic two-body internal
states, each of which can be obtained by solving a relativistic
Schr\"odinger-like equation. The resultant two-body wave functions can be used
as basis states to evaluate reaction matrix elements in the general N-body
problem. We prove a relativistic version of the post-prior equivalence which
guarantees a unique evaluation of the reaction matrix element, independent of
the ways of separating the Hamiltonian into unperturbed and residual
interactions. Since an arbitrary reaction matrix element involves composite
particles in motion, we show explicitly how such matrix elements can be
evaluated in terms of the wave functions of the composite particles and the
relevant Lorentz transformations.Comment: 42 pages, 2 figures, in LaTe
Perspectives on Continental Rifting Processes From Spatiotemporal Patterns of Faulting and Magmatism in the Rio Grande Rift, USA
Analysis of spatiotemporal patterns of faulting and magmatism in the Rio Grande rift (RGR) in New Mexico and Colorado, USA, yields insights into continental rift processes, extension accommodation mechanisms, and rift evolution models. We combine new apatite (UâThâSm)/He and zircon (UâTh)/He thermochronometric data with previously published thermochronometric data to assess the timing of fault initiation, magnitudes of fault exhumation, and growth and linkage patterns of rift faults. Thermal history modeling of these data reveals contemporaneous rift initiation at ca. 25 Ma in both the northern and southern RGR with continued fault initiation, growth, and linkage progressing from ca. 25 to ca. 15 Ma. The central RGR, however, shows no evidence of Cenozoic faultârelated exhumation as observed with thermochronometry and instead reveals extension accommodated through Late Cenozoic magmatic injection. Furthermore, faulting in the northern and southern RGR occurs along an approximately northâsouth strike, whereas magmatism in the central RGR occurs along the northeast to southwest trending Jemez lineament. Differences in deformation orientation and rift accommodation along strike appear to be related to crustal and lithospheric properties, suggesting that rift structure and geometry are at least partly controlled by inherited lithosphericâscale architecture. We propose an evolutionary model for the RGR that involves initiation of faultâaccommodated extension by oblique strain followed by block rotation of the Colorado Plateau, where extension in the RGR is accommodated by faulting (southern and northern RGR) and magmatism (central RGR). This study highlights different processes related to initiation, geometry, extension accommodation, and overall development of continental rifts.Plain Language SummaryWe identify patterns of faulting and volcanism in the Rio Grande rift (RGR) in the western United States to better understand how continental rifts evolve. Using methods for documenting rock cooling ages (thermochronology), we determined that rifting began around 25 million years ago (Ma) in both the northern and southern RGR. Rift faults continued to develop and grow for another 10 to 15 million years. The central RGR, however, shows that rift extension occurred through volcanic activity both as eruptions at the surface and as magma injection below the surface since ~15 Ma. Interestingly, RGR faulting in the north and south parts of the rift occurs on a northâsouth line, while volcanism in the central RGR is along a northeast to southwest line. The differences in the location and orientation of faulting and volcanic activity may be related to the thickness of the lithosphere beneath different parts of the rift. Using these patterns of faulting and magmatism, we propose the RGR evolved through a combination of (1) oblique strainâextension diagonal to the rift and (2) block rotationâwhere the Colorado Plateau is the rotating block. This detailed study highlights different processes related to the accommodation of extension and the overall development of continental rifts.Key PointsInitiation of the Rio Grande rift appears to be synchronous ~25 Ma and does not support a northward propagation modelExtension is accommodated by faulting in the northern and southern Rio Grande rift and by magmatic injection in the central Rio Grande riftDifferent rift accommodation mechanisms may be controlled by preexisting weaknesses and lithospheric properties (i.e., thickness)Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/152704/1/tect21226.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/152704/2/wrcr21226-sup-00001-2019TC005635-SI.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/152704/3/tect21226_am.pd
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Environmental justice and conceptions of the green economy
Green economy has become one of the most fashionable terms in global environmental public policy discussions and forums. Despite this popularity, and its being selected as one of the organizing themes of the United Nations Rio+20 Conference in Brazil, June 2012, its prospects as an effective mobilization tool for global environmental sustainability scholarship and practice remains unclear. A major reason for this is that much like its precursor concepts such as environmental sustainability and sustainable development, green economy is a woolly concept which lends itself to many interpretations. Hence, rather than resolve long-standing controversies, green economy merely reinvigorates existing debates over the visions, actors and policies best suited to secure a more sustainable future for all. In this review article, we aim to fill an important gap in scholarship by suggesting various ways in which green economy may be organized and synthesized as a concept, and especially in terms of its relationship with the idea of social and environmental justice. Accordingly, we offer a systemization of possible interpretations of green economy mapped onto a synthesis of existing typologies of environmental justice. This classification provides the context for future analysis of which, and how, various notions of green economy link with various conceptions of justice
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