178 research outputs found
Piezoelectric osteotomy in hand surgery: first experiences with a new technique
BACKGROUND: In hand and spinal surgery nerve lesions are feared complications with the use of standard oscillating saws. Oral surgeons have started using a newly developed ultrasound bone scalpel when performing precise osteotomies. By using a frequency of 25–29 kHz only mineralized tissue is cut, sparing the soft tissue. This reduces the risk of nerve lesions. As there is a lack of experience with this technique in the field of orthopaedic bone surgery, we performed the first ultrasound osteotomy in hand surgery. METHOD: While performing a correctional osteotomy of the 5th metacarpal bone we used the Piezosurgery(® )Device from Mectron [Italy] instead of the usual oscillating saw. We will report on our experience with one case, with a follow up time of one year. RESULTS: The cut was highly precise and there were no vibrations of the bone. The time needed for the operation was slightly longer than the time needed while using the usual saw. Bone healing was good and at no point were there any neurovascular disturbances. CONCLUSION: The Piezosurgery(® )Device is useful for small long bone osteotomies. Using the fine tip enables curved cutting and provides an opportunity for new osteotomy techniques. As the device selectively cuts bone we feel that this device has great potential in the field of hand- and spinal surgery
Soft Electromagnetic Radiations from Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
The production of low mass dileptons and soft photons from thermalized Quark
Gluon Plasma (QGP) and hadronic matter in relativistic heavy ion collisions is
evaluated. A boost invariant longitudinal and cylindrically symmetric
transverse expansion of the systems created in central collision of lead nuclei
at CERN SPS, BNL RHIC, and CERN LHC, and undergoing a first order phase
transition to hadronic matter is considered. A large production of low mass (M<
0.3 GeV) dileptons, and soft photons (p_T< 0.4 GeV) is seen to emanate from the
bremsstrahlung of quarks and pions. We find an increase by a factor of 2--4 in
the low mass dilepton and soft photon yield as we move from SPS to RHIC
energies, and an increase by an order of magnitude as we move from SPS to LHC
energies. Most of the soft radiations are found to originate from pion driven
processes at SPS and RHIC energies, while at the LHC energies the quark and the
pion driven processes contribute by a similar amount. The study of the
transverse mass distribution is seen to provide interesting details of the
evolution. We also find a unique universal behaviour for the ratio of M^2
weighted transverse mass distribution for M= 0.1 GeV to that for M= 0.2 and 0.3
GeV, as a function of M_T, for SPS, RHIC, and LHC energies, in the absence of
transverse expansion of the system. A deviation from this universal behaviour
is seen as a clear indication of the flow.Comment: Revtex fil
Soft Electromagnetic Radiations From Equilibrating Quark-Gluon Plasma
We evaluate the bremsstrahlung production of low mass dileptons and soft
photons from equilibrating and transversely expanding quark gluon plasma which
may be created in the wake of relativistic heavy ion collisions. We use initial
conditions obtained from the self screened parton cascade model. We consider a
boost invariant longitudinal and cylindrically symmetric transverse expansion
of the parton plasma and find that for low mass dileptons ( GeV)
and soft photons ( GeV), the bremsstrahlung contribution is
rather large compared to annihilation process at both RHIC and LHC energies. We
also find an increase by a factor of 15-20 in the low mass dileptons and soft
photons yield as one goes from RHIC to LHC energies.Comment: 8 pages, including 7 figures To appear in Phys. Rev.
Differential sound velocity apparatus for the investigation of protein solutions
A differential method for the measurement of sound velocity in solutions is described. The instrument uses two identical acoustic resonators and a newly developed electronic measuring system. The sound velocity is determined with a relative accuracy of ≈3×10-6 over the entire frequency range 0.5-10 MHz. The instrument has been used to determine the compressibility of protein solutions and to study their velocity dispersion
Strengthening global-change science by integrating aeDNA with paleoecoinformatics
Ancient environmental DNA (aeDNA) data are close to enabling insights into past global-scale biodiversity dynamics at unprecedented taxonomic extent and resolution. However, achieving this potential requires solutions that bridge bioinformatics and paleoecoinformatics. Essential needs include support for dynamic taxonomic inferences, dynamic age inferences, and precise stratigraphic depth. Moreover, aeDNA data are complex and heterogeneous, generated by dispersed researcher networks, with methods advancing rapidly. Hence, expert community governance and curation are essential to building high-value data resources. Immediate recommendations include uploading metabarcoding-based taxonomic inventories into paleoecoinformatic resources, building linkages among open bioinformatic and paleoecoinformatic data resources, harmonizing aeDNA processing workflows, and expanding community data governance. These advances will enable transformative insights into global-scale biodiversity dynamics during large environmental and anthropogenic changes
Agri-Environmental Policy Measures in Israel: The Potential of Using Market-Oriented Instruments
This paper examines the possibilities of developing agri-environmental policy measures in Israel, focusing on market-oriented instruments. A conceptual framework for developing agri-environmental policy measures is presented, first in very broad lines (mandatory regulations, economic instruments and advisory measures) and subsequently focusing on economic instruments, and specifically, on market-oriented ones. Two criteria of choice between the measures are suggested: their contribution to improving the effectiveness of the policy; and the feasibility of their implementation. This is the framework used for analyzing agri-environmental measures in Israel. Israel currently implements a mix of mandatory regulations, economic instruments and advisory measures to promote the agri-environment. The use of additional economic instruments may improve the effectiveness of the policy. When comparing the effectiveness of various economic measures, we found that the feasibility of implementation of market-oriented instruments is greater, due to the Israeli public’s preference for strengthening market orientation in the agricultural sector. Four market-oriented instruments were practiced in a pilot project conducted in an Israeli rural area. We found that in this case study, the institutional feasibility and acceptance by stakeholders were the major parameters influencing the implementation of the market-oriented instruments, whereas the instruments’ contribution to enhancing the ecological or economic effectiveness were hardly considered by the stakeholders as arguments in favor of their use
Concentration or representation : the struggle for popular sovereignty
There is a tension in the notion of popular sovereignty, and the notion of democracy associated with it, that is both older than our terms for these notions themselves and more fundamental than the apparently consensual way we tend to use them today. After a review of the competing conceptions of 'the people' that underlie two very different understandings of democracy, this article will defend what might be called a 'neo-Jacobin' commitment to popular sovereignty, understood as the formulation and imposition of a shared political will. A people's egalitarian capacity to concentrate both its collective intelligence and force, from this perspective, takes priority over concerns about how best to represent the full variety of positions and interests that differentiate and divide a community
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Research on Markets for Inventions and Implications for R&D Allocation Strategies
Several streams of literature have examined the phenomenon of “markets for inventions”, that is, the trade of elements of knowledge which are “disembodied” from individuals, organizations, and products. The aims of this paper are to bring together the various streams of research in this area and discuss their major assumptions and limitations, in order to provide a comprehensive framework for understanding the phenomenon, and identify promising paths for future research. We start our review by identifying the object of market exchange—that is, an invention whose knowledge has been codified and disembodied from individuals, organizations, or artifacts. We then identify those factors that enable firms to trade inventions, distinguishing between institutional-, firm-, and industry-level factors. We close our analysis of the extant literature by discussing the implications of markets for inventions for firm behavior and performance. Against this background, we highlight an important avenue for future research. A neglected implication of the development of invention markets is that firms are confronted with a wide variety of technological paths from which to choose, because the opportunity to acquire technologies on the market offers them a greater variety that can their internal R&D departments. However, the streams of research on markets for inventions and on R&D allocation strategies have been surprisingly disconnected so far. Hence, in the final section, we start to establish and explore the link between these literatures, and to identify a research agenda in this domain
Anatomical and physiological evidence for polarisation vision in the nocturnal bee Megalopta genalis
Reconstructing the Deep Population History of Central and South America
We report genome-wide ancient DNA from 49 individuals forming four parallel time transects in Belize, Brazil, the Central Andes, and the Southern Cone, each dating to at least 9,000 years ago. The common ancestral population radiated rapidly from just one of the two early branches that contributed to Native Americans today. We document two previously unappreciated streams of gene flow between North and South America. One affected the Central Andes by 4,200 years ago, while the other explains an affinity between the oldest North American genome associated with the Clovis culture and the oldest Central and South Americans from Chile, Brazil, and Belize. However, this was not the primary source for later South Americans, as the other ancient individuals derive from lineages without specific affinity to the Clovis-associated genome, suggesting a population replacement that began at least 9,000 years ago and was followed by substantial population continuity in multiple regions
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