2,751 research outputs found

    Carvedilol: Therapeutic Application and Practice Guidelines

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90381/1/j.1875-9114.1998.tb03895.x.pd

    Tunable Low Density Palladium Nanowire Foams

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    Nanostructured palladium foams offer exciting potential for applications in diverse fields such as catalyst, fuel cell, and particularly hydrogen storage technologies. We have fabricated palladium nanowire foams using a cross-linking and freeze-drying technique. These foams have a tunable density down to 0.1% of the bulk, and a surface area to volume ratio of up to 1,540,000:1. They exhibit highly attractive characteristics for hydrogen storage, in terms of loading capacity, rate of absorption and heat of absorption. The hydrogen absorption/desorption process is hysteretic in nature, accompanied by substantial lattice expansion/contraction as the foam converts between Pd and PdHx.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure

    Combining Slaughterhouse Surveillance Data with Cattle Tracing Scheme and Environmental Data to Quantify Environmental Risk Factors for Liver Fluke in Cattle.

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    Liver fluke infection causes serious disease (fasciolosis) in cattle and sheep in many regions of the world, resulting in production losses and additional economic consequences due to condemnation of the liver at slaughter. Liver fluke depends on mud snails as an intermediate host and infect livestock when ingested through grazing. Therefore, environmental factors play important roles in infection risk and climate change is likely to modify this. Here, we demonstrate how slaughterhouse data can be integrated with other data, including animal movement and climate variables to identify environmental risk factors for liver fluke in cattle in Scotland. We fitted a generalized linear mixed model to the data, with exposure-weighted random and fixed effects, an approach which takes into account the amount of time cattle spent at different locations, exposed to different levels of risk. This enabled us to identify an increased risk of liver fluke with increased animal age, rainfall, and temperature and for farms located further to the West, in excess of the risk associated with a warmer, wetter climate. This model explained 45% of the variability in liver fluke between farms, suggesting that the unexplained 55% was due to factors not included in the model, such as differences in on-farm management and presence of wet habitats. This approach demonstrates the value of statistically integrating routinely recorded slaughterhouse data with other pre-existing data, creating a powerful approach to quantify disease risks in production animals. Furthermore, this approach can be used to better quantify the impact of projected climate change on liver fluke risk for future studies

    Meeting report : Ocean ā€˜omics science, technology and cyberinfrastructure : current challenges and future requirements (August 20-23, 2013)

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    Ā© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Standards in Genomic Sciences 9 (2014): 1251-1258, doi:10.4056/sigs.5749944.The National Science Foundationā€™s EarthCube End User Workshop was held at USCā€™s Wrigley Marine Science Center on Catalina Island, California in August 2013. The workshop was designed to explore and characterise the needs and tools available to the community focusing on microbial and physical oceanography research with a particular focus on ā€˜omic research. The assembled researchers outlined the existing concerns regarding the vast data resources that are being generated, and how we will deal with these resources as their volume and diversity increases. Particular attention was focused on the tools for handling and analysing the existing data, and on the need for the construction and curation of diverse federated databases, as well as development of shared interoperable, ā€œbig-data capableā€ analytical tools. The key outputs from this workshop include (i) critical scientific challenges and cyberinfrastructure constraints, (ii) the current and future ocean ā€˜omics science grand challenges and questions, and (iii) data management, analytical and associated and cyber-infrastructure capabilities required to meet critical current and future scientific challenges. The main thrust of the meeting and the outcome of this report is a definition of the ā€˜omics tools, technologies and infrastructures that facilitate continued advance in ocean science biology, marine biogeochemistry, and biological oceanography.We gratefully acknowledge support for the Ocean ā€˜Omics EarthCube end-user workshop by the Geo-sciences Division of the U.S. National Science Foundation

    Beyond ā€˜crude pragmatismā€™ in sports coaching:Insights from C.S. Peirce, William James and John Dewey: a commentary

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    We agree that there is a lack of clarity in the sports coaching literature about philosophical pragmatism, but this is inevitable when there is a lack of consensus in the literature of philosophical pragmatism itself. In the writing of classical pragmatists there are a ā€œplurality of conflicting narrativesā€ (Bernstein, 1995 p.55). For instance, Charles Sanders Peirce acknowledged notable theoretical divergence between his pragmatism and that of William James (Hookway, 2012). In fact, Peirce viewed the availability of nuanced approaches as a mark of the vitality of this school of thought. After all, pragmatists value diversity, they accept that current thinking, hypotheses and practices may require revision ā€“ they are flexibly minded. Such revision, however, must be built upon well-reasoned doubt (Hookway, 2012). In other words, a clear argument is necessary if an alternative proposition is to be considered. In this vein, though we have sympathy for the thrust of his argument, and support calls for more ā€œlegitimate philosophical thinkingā€ and ā€œempirical philosophical enquiryā€ (Cushion & Partington, 2016 p.863), our aim in this commentary is to address a lack of clarity and utility in some of Jenkinsā€™ propositions about philosophical pragmatism and sports coaching

    A New Spectroscopic and Photometric Analysis of the Transiting Planet Systems TrES-3 and TrES-4

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    We report new spectroscopic and photometric observations of the parent stars of the recently discovered transiting planets TrES-3 and TrES-4. A detailed abundance analysis based on high-resolution spectra yields [Fe/H] = ā€“0.19 Ā± 0.08, T_(eff) = 5650 Ā± 75 K, and log g = 4.4 Ā± 0.1 for TrES-3, and [Fe/H] = +0.14 Ā± 0.09, T_(eff) = 6200 Ā± 75 K, and log g = 4.0 Ā± 0.1 for TrES-4. The accuracy of the effective temperatures is supported by a number of independent consistency checks. The spectroscopic orbital solution for TrES-3 is improved with our new radial velocity measurements of that system, as are the light-curve parameters for both systems based on newly acquired photometry for TrES-3 and a reanalysis of existing photometry for TrES-4. We have redetermined the stellar parameters taking advantage of the strong constraint provided by the light curves in the form of the normalized separation a/R_* (related to the stellar density) in conjunction with our new temperatures and metallicities. The masses and radii we derive are M_* = 0.928^(+0.028)_(ā€“0.048) M_āŠ™, R_* = 0.829^(+0.015)_(ā€“0.022) R_āŠ™, and M_* = 1.404^(+0.066)_(ā€“0.134) M_āŠ™, R_* = 1.846^(+0.096)_(ā€“0.087) R_āŠ™ for TrES-3 and TrES-4, respectively. With these revised stellar parameters, we obtain improved values for the planetary masses and radii. We find M_p = 1.910^(+0.075)_(ā€“0.080) M_(Jup), R_p = 1.336^(+0.031)_(ā€“0.036) R_(Jup) for TrES-3, and M_p = 0.925 Ā± 0.082 M_(Jup), R_p = 1.783^(+0.093)_(ā€“0.086) R_(Jup) for TrES-4. We confirm TrES-4 as the planet with the largest radius among the currently known transiting hot Jupiters

    TrES-2: The First Transiting Planet in the Kepler Field

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    We announce the discovery of the second transiting hot Jupiter discovered by the Trans-atlantic Exoplanet Survey. The planet, which we dub TrES-2, orbits the nearby star GSC 03549-02811 every 2.47063 days. From high-resolution spectra, we determine that the star has T_eff = 5960 +/- 100 K and log(g) = 4.4 +/- 0.2, implying a spectral type of G0V and a mass of 1.08 +0.11/-0.05 M_sun. High-precision radial-velocity measurements confirm a sinusoidal variation with the period and phase predicted by the photometry, and rule out the presence of line-bisector variations that would indicate that the spectroscopic orbit is spurious. We estimate a planetary mass of 1.28 +0.09/-0.04 M_Jup. We model B, r, R, and I photometric timeseries of the 1.4%-deep transits and find a planetary radius of 1.24 +0.09/-0.06 R_Jup. This planet lies within the field of view of the NASA Kepler mission, ensuring that hundreds of upcoming transits will be monitored with exquisite precision and permitting a host of unprecedented investigations.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. 15 pages, 2 figure

    Photodissociation dynamics of the iodide-uracil (I-U) complex

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    Photofragment action spectroscopy and femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron imaging are utilized to probe the dissociation channels in iodide-uracil (Iāˆ’ ā‹… U) binary clusters upon photoexcitation. The photofragment action spectra show strong Iāˆ’ and weak [U- H]āˆ’ ion signal upon photoexcitation. The action spectra show two bands for Iāˆ’ and [U- H]āˆ’ production peaking around 4.0 and 4.8 eV. Time-resolved experiments measured the rate of Iāˆ’ production resulting from excitation of the two bands. At 4.03 eV and 4.72 eV, the photoelectron signal from Iāˆ’ exhibits rise times of 86 Ā± 7 ps and 36 Ā± 3 ps, respectively. Electronic structure calculations indicate that the lower energy band, which encompasses the vertical detachment energy (4.11 eV) of Iāˆ’U, corresponds to excitation of a dipole-bound state of the complex, while the higher energy band is primarily a Ļ€-Ļ€āˆ— excitation on the uracil moiety. Although the nature of the two excited states is very different, the long lifetimes for Iāˆ’ production suggest that this channel results from internal conversion to the Iāˆ’ ā‹… U ground state followed by evaporation of Iāˆ’. This hypothesis was tested by comparing the dissociation rates to Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus calculations
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