54,779 research outputs found
Study of lunar reflective components of solar radio emission semiannual status report
Solar radio frequency reflection from lunar surface for scattering measuremen
Sexual negotiation in the AIDS era: negotiated safety revisited
Objective: To test the safety of the 'negotiated safety' strategy - the strategy of dispensing with condoms within HIV-seronegative concordant regular sexual relationships under certain conditions. Method: Data from a recently recruited cohort of homosexually active men (Sydney Men and Sexual Health cohort, n = 1037) are used to revisit negotiated safety. The men were surveyed using a structured questionnaire and questions addressing their sexual relationships and practice, their own and their regular partner's serostatus, agreements entered into by the men concerning sexual practice within and outside their regular relationship, and contextual and demographic variables. Results: The findings indicate that a significant number of men used negotiated safety as an HIV prevention strategy. In the 6 months prior to interview, of the 181 men in seroconcordant HIV-negative regular relationships, 62% had engaged in unprotected anal intercourse within their relationship, and 91% (165 men) had not engaged in unprotected anal intercourse outside their relationship. Of these 165 men, 82% had negotiated agreements about sex outside their relationship. The safety of negotiation was dependent not only on seroconcordance but also on the presence of an agreement; 82% of the men who had not engaged in unprotected anal intercourse outside their regular relationship had entered into an agreement with their partner, whereas only 56% of those who had engaged in unprotected anal intercourse had an agreement. The safety of negotiation was also related to the nature of the safety agreement reached between the men and on the acceptability of condoms. Agreements between HIV-negative seroconcordant regular partners prohibiting anal intercourse with casual partners or any form of sex with a casual partner were typically complied with, and men who had such negotiated agreements were at low risk of HIV infection. Conclusions: The adoption of the strategy of negotiated safety among men in HIV-seronegative regular relationships may help such men sustain the safety of their sexual practice
Newspaper -The Cleveland Times - Nov 9 1989- Gene Watterson
Gene Watterson\u27s perspective on the issues facing the Southern Baptist Convention and his bid as president of the North Carolina Baptist Convention.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/first-baptist-shelby-gene-watterson/1039/thumbnail.jp
Product renovation and shared ownership: sustainable routes to satisfying the world's growing demand for goods
It has been estimated that by 2030 the number of people who are wealthy enough to be considered as middle class consumers will have tripled. This will have a dramatic impact on the demands for primary materials and energy. Much work has been carried out on sustainable ways of meeting the Worldâs energy demands and some work has been carried out on the sustainable production and consumption of goods. It has been estimated that with improvements in design and manufacturing it is possible to reduce the primary material requirements by 30% to produce the current demand for goods. Whilst this is a crucial step on the production side, there will still be a doubling of primary material requirements by the end of the century because of an absolute rise in demand for goods and services. It is therefore clear that the consumption of products must also be explored. This is a key areas of research for the UK INDEMAND centre, which is investigating ways of reducing the UKâs industrial energy demand and demand for energy intensive materials. Our ongoing work shows that two strategies would result in considerable reductions in the demand for primary materials: product longevity and using goods more intensively (which may requires increased durability). Product longevity and durability are not new ideas, but ones that can be applied across a raft of goods as methods of reducing the consumption of materials. With long life products there is a potential risk of outdated design and obsolescence, consequently there is a need to ensure upgradability and adaptability are incorporated at the design stage. If products last longer, then the production of new products can be diverted to emerging markets rather than the market for replacement goods. There are many goods which are only used occasionally; these goods do not normally wear out. The total demand for such could be drastically reduced if they were shared with other people. Sharing of goods has traditionally been conducted between friends or by hiring equipment. The use of modern communication systems and social media could enable the development of sharing co-ops and swap spaces that will increase the utilisation of goods and hence reduce the demand for new goods. This could also increase access to a range of goods for those on low incomes. From a series of workshops it has been found that the principal challenges are sociological rather than technological. This paper contains a discussion of these challenges and explores possible futures where these two strategies have been adopted. In addition, the barriers and opportunities that these strategies offer for consumers and businesses are identified, and areas where government policy could be instigated to bring about change are highlighted
Leucocytic changes following the intravenous injection of peptones
During the winter 1925-26 a number of patients
who were suffering from Rheumatoid Arthritis were
treated in Ward 25 of the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh,
by intravenous injections of peptone. The observations
on which this thesis is based were made on these
patients. To Professor Murray-Lyon I am grateful
for permission to make the observations and for much
help while the work was in progress.The number of cases is small. Nevertheless, as
the findings in the different series of observations
agree so closely with each other and with related
results obtained by other workers, they do provide
data for a hypothesis.The arrangement of this thesis will be:-
(1) A general survey of the method.
(2) A statement of oases with tables and graphs.
(3) A general description of the results of the
observations made.
(4) A comparison of these results with those of
other observers.
(5) A discussion of the meaning of the observations.
(6) A summary.
(7) A list of references
Tributes to Professor Robert Berkley Harper
In 1977, I began teaching at The University of Pittsburgh Law School and in short order one of my closest friends during my tenure there was Professor Robert âBobâ Harper. I wondered when I was hired whether I was selected because I looked strikingly similar to Bob, and perhaps the faculty thought my favoring Professor Harper would make my assimilation into the law school faculty that much easier. Students constantly called me Professor Harper and, indeed, many on the faculty called me Bob for several years; I never bothered to correct them. I thought if they paid that little attention to detail in law school, I would just let them go through life missing some of the finer points their education, and life for that matter, has to offer
A proposed test of the Einstein theory of gravitation by means of an unshielded orbiting gyro using passive telemetry
Proposed test of theory of gravitation by an unshielded earth orbiting gyroscope using passive telemetr
Resumming the large-N approximation for time evolving quantum systems
In this paper we discuss two methods of resumming the leading and next to
leading order in 1/N diagrams for the quartic O(N) model. These two approaches
have the property that they preserve both boundedness and positivity for
expectation values of operators in our numerical simulations. These
approximations can be understood either in terms of a truncation to the
infinitely coupled Schwinger-Dyson hierarchy of equations, or by choosing a
particular two-particle irreducible vacuum energy graph in the effective action
of the Cornwall-Jackiw-Tomboulis formalism. We confine our discussion to the
case of quantum mechanics where the Lagrangian is . The
key to these approximations is to treat both the propagator and the
propagator on similar footing which leads to a theory whose graphs have the
same topology as QED with the propagator playing the role of the photon.
The bare vertex approximation is obtained by replacing the exact vertex
function by the bare one in the exact Schwinger-Dyson equations for the one and
two point functions. The second approximation, which we call the dynamic Debye
screening approximation, makes the further approximation of replacing the exact
propagator by its value at leading order in the 1/N expansion. These two
approximations are compared with exact numerical simulations for the quantum
roll problem. The bare vertex approximation captures the physics at large and
modest better than the dynamic Debye screening approximation.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures. The color version of a few figures are
separately liste
An improved time-dependent Hartree-Fock approach for scalar \phi^4 QFT
The model in a finite volume is studied within a
non-gaussian Hartree-Fock approximation (tdHF) both at equilibrium and out of
equilibrium, with particular attention to the structure of the ground state and
of certain dynamical features in the broken symmetry phase. The mean-field
coupled time-dependent Schroedinger equations for the modes of the scalar field
are derived and the suitable procedure to renormalize them is outlined. A
further controlled gaussian approximation of our tdHF approach is used in order
to study the dynamical evolution of the system from non-equilibrium initial
conditions characterized by a uniform condensate. We find that, during the slow
rolling down, the long-wavelength quantum fluctuations do not grow to a
macroscopic size but do scale with the linear size of the system, in accordance
with similar results valid for the large approximation of the O(N) model.
This behavior undermines in a precise way the gaussian approximation within our
tdHF approach, which therefore appears as a viable mean to correct an unlikely
feature of the standard HF factorization scheme, such as the so-called
``stopping at the spinodal line'' of the quantum fluctuations. We also study
the dynamics of the system in infinite volume with particular attention to the
asymptotic evolution in the broken symmetry phase. We are able to show that the
fixed points of the evolution cover at most the classically metastable part of
the static effective potential.Comment: Accepted for publication on Phys. Rev.
Non-equilibrium dynamics in quantum field theory at high density: the tsunami
The dynamics of a dense relativistic quantum fluid out of thermodynamic
equilibrium is studied in the framework of the Phi^4 scalar field theory in the
large N limit. The time evolution of a particle distribution in momentum space
(the tsunami) is computed. The effective mass felt by the particles in such a
high density medium equals the tree level mass plus the expectation value of
the squared field. The case of negative tree level squared mass is particularly
interesting. In such case dynamical symmetry restoration as well as dynamical
symmetry breaking can happen. Furthermore, the symmetry may stay broken with
vanishing asymptotic squared mass showing the presence of out of equilibrium
Goldstone bosons. We study these phenomena and identify the set of initial
conditions that lead to each case. We compute the equation of state which turns
to depend on the initial state. Although the system does not thermalize, the
equation of state for asymptotically broken symmetry is of radiation type. We
compute the correlation functions at equal times. The two point correlator for
late times is the sum of different terms. One stems from the initial particle
distribution. Another term accounts for the out of equilibrium Goldstone bosons
created by spinodal unstabilities when the symmetry is asymptotically
broken.Both terms are of the order of the inverse of the coupling for distances
where causal signals can connect the two points. The contribution of the out of
equilibrium Goldstones exhibits scaling behaviour in a generalized sense.Comment: LaTex, 49 pages, 15 .ps figure
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