184 research outputs found
The heats of combustion of some rare-earth metals
A bomb calorimeter for measuring the heats of combustion of neodymium, samarium, gadolinium and erbium is described. The heats of combustion of these metals and the heats of formation of their oxides are reported
Modeling Spatial Sustainability: Spatial Welfare Economics versus Ecological Footprint
A spatial welfare framework for the analysis of the spatial dimensions of sustainability is developed. It incorporates agglomeration effects, interregional trade, negative environmental externalities and various land use categories. The model is used to compare rankings of spatial configurations according to evaluations based on social welfare and ecological footprint indicators. Five spatial configurations are considered for this purpose. The exercise is operationalized with the help of a two-region model of the economy that is in line with the new economic geography. Various (counter) examples show that the footprint method is not consistent with an approach aimed at maximum social welfare
TLR9 Agonist Protects Mice from Radiation-Induced Gastrointestinal Syndrome
Radiation-induced gastrointestinal syndrome (RIGS) is due to the clonogenic loss of crypt cells and villi depopulation, resulting in disruption of mucosal barrier, bacterial invasion, inflammation and sepsis. Intestinal macrophages could recognize invading bacterial DNA via TLR9 receptors and transmit regenerative signals to the neighboring crypt. We therefore investigated whether systemic administration of designer TLR9 agonist could ameliorate RIGS by activating TLR9.Male C57Bl6 mice were distributed in four experimental cohorts, whole body irradiation (WBI) (8.4-10.4 Gy), TLR9 agonist (1 mg/kg s.c.), 1 h pre- or post-WBI and TLR9 agonist+WBI+iMyd88 (pretreatment with inhibitory peptide against Myd88). Animals were observed for survival and intestine was harvested for histological analysis. BALB/c mice with CT26 colon tumors in abdominal wall were irradiated with 14 Gy single dose of whole abdominal irradiation (AIR) for tumor growth study.Mice receiving pre-WBI TLR9 agonist demonstrated improvement of survival after 10.4 Gy (p<0.03), 9.4 Gy (p<0.008) and 8.4 Gy (p<0.002) of WBI, compared to untreated or iMyd88-treated controls. Post-WBI TLR9 agonist mitigates up to 8.4 Gy WBI (p<0.01). Histological analysis and xylose absorption test demonstrated significant structural and functional restitution of the intestine in WBI+TLR9 agonist cohorts. Although, AIR reduced tumor growth, all animals died within 12 days from RIGS. TLR9 agonist improved the survival of mice beyond 28 days post-AIR (p<0.008) with significant reduction of tumor growth (p<0.0001).TLR9 agonist treatment could serve both as a prophylactic or mitigating agent against acute radiation syndrome and also as an adjuvant therapy to increase the therapeutic ratio of abdominal Radiation Therapy for Gastro Intestinal malignancies
School Vouchers and Student Achievement: Recent Evidence, Remaining Questions
In this article, we review the empirical evidence on the impact of education vouchers on student
achievement, and briefly discuss the evidence from other forms of school choice. The best
research to date finds relatively small achievement gains for students offered education vouchers,
most of which are not statistically different from zero. Further, what little evidence exists
regarding the potential for public schools to respond to increased competitive pressure generated
by vouchers suggests that one should remain wary that large improvements would result from a
more comprehensive voucher system. The evidence from other forms of school choice is also
consistent with this conclusion. Many questions remain unanswered, however, including
whether vouchers have longer-run impacts on outcomes such as graduation rates, college
enrollment, or even future wages, and whether vouchers might nevertheless provide a costneutral
alternative to our current system of public education provision at the elementary and
secondary school level
Political fragmentation and land use changes in the Interior Plains
Recent years have witnessed growing interest in the critical role of local/regional governance structures in shaping physical land development and associated natural resource management processes. This article investigates how political fragmentation in local governance can affect land use patterns through a watershed-level analysis of population and employment density changes in the Interior Plains, the largest physiographic division of the US. Population density change rates are found to be negatively associated with a higher degree of political fragmentation, while employment density does not show such a clear relationship with political fragmentation. This finding shows that political fragmentation may present significant challenges to land and water resource management, a result consistent with the previous empirical research
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