1,993 research outputs found

    A Sweet Home No More?: The Future for Habitat Protection Under the Endangered Species Act

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    20 pages. Includes bibliographical references and biographical information for Federico Cheever and Murray D. Feldman. Contents: Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Greater Oregon / Federico Cheever -- The Sweet Home decision and private property issues / Murray D. Feldman -- Memorandum of Agreement between the State of Colorado and the Department of the Interior concerning programs to manage Colorado\u27s declining native species The U.S. Supreme Court decision in Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Great Oregon,115 S.Ct. 2407 (1995), held that the Department of the Interior reasonably construed Congress\u27 intent when it included habitat modification that injures protected wildlife within the definition of harm prohibited by the Endangered Species Act. Speakers include Professor Federico Cheever, University of Denver College of Law; Paul Seby, attorney with the Mountain States Legal Foundation; and Paul Gertler, Assistant Regional Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Center Director Betsy Rieke will moderate

    Engineering polymer informatics: Towards the computer-aided design of polymers

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    The computer-aided design of polymers is one of the holy grails of modern chemical informatics and of significant interest for a number of communities in polymer science. The paper outlines a vision for the in silico design of polymers and presents an information model for polymers based on modern semantic web technologies, thus laying the foundations for achieving the vision

    Hot Jupiter Magnetospheres

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    (Abridged) The upper atmospheres of close-in gas giant exoplanets are subjected to intense heating/tidal forces from their parent stars. Atomic/ionized hydrogen (H) layers are sufficiently rarefied that magnetic pressure may dominate gas pressure for expected planetary magnetic field strength. We examine the magnetospheric structure using a 3D isothermal magnetohydrodynamic model that includes: a static "dead zone" near the magnetic equator containing magnetically confined gas; a "wind zone" outside the magnetic equator in which thermal pressure gradients and the magneto-centrifugal-tidal effect give rise to transonic outflow; and a region near the poles where sufficiently strong tidal forces may suppress transonic outflow. Using dipole field geometry, we estimate the size of the dead zone to be ~1-10 planetary radii for a range of parameters. To understand appropriate base conditions for the 3D isothermal model, we compute a 1D thermal model in which photoelectric heating from the stellar Lyman continuum is balanced by collisionally-excited Lyman {\alpha} cooling. This 1D model exhibits a H layer with temperatures T=5000-10000K down to pressures of 10-100 nbar. Using the 3D isothermal model, we compute H column densities and Lyman {\alpha} transmission spectra for parameters appropriate to HD 209458b. Line-integrated transit depths of 5-10% can be achieved for the above base conditions. Strong magnetic fields increase the transit signal while decreasing the mass loss, due to higher covering fraction and density of the dead zone. In our model, most of the transit signal arises from magnetically confined gas, some of which may be outside the L1 equipotential. Hence the presence of gas outside the L1 equipotential does not directly imply mass loss. Lastly, we discuss the domain of applicability for the magnetic wind model described in this paper and in the Roche-lobe overflow model.Comment: 26 pages, 17 figures (5 color), 2 appendices; submitted to ApJ; higher resolution version available at http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~gbt8f/HotJupMag_fullres_astroph.pd

    The potential dependence of electrical conductivity and chemical charge storage of poly(pyrrole) films on electrodes

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    The electrical conductivity of solvent and electrolyte-wetted poly(pyrrole) films is measured, both statically and dynamically, as a function of the potential applied to an electrode in contact with the film. The applied potential determines the film cxidation state. Poly(pyrrole) electrical conductivity is ohmic and indeendent of potential from 0 to +0.4V vs. SSCE, and decreases and becomes less ohmic at more negative potentials. Measurements of the chemically reactive charge stored in poly(pyrrole) as a function of potential were combined with the electrical conductivity results to yield a profile of electrical conductivity vs. average darge per monamer site in the polymer. Electrical conductivity is independent of monomer charge above about 0.15 holes/monomer unit

    HNN Extensions of von Neumann Algebras

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    Reduced HNN extensions of von Neumann algebras (as well as CC^*-algebras) will be introduced, and their modular theory, factoriality and ultraproducts will be discussed. In several concrete settings, detailed analysis on them will be also carried out.Comment: Slightly revised versio

    First-time rhesus monkey mothers, and mothers of sons, preferentially engage in face-to-face interactions with infants

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    Face-to-face interactions between mothers and infants occur in both human and non-human primates, but there is large variability in the occurrence of these behaviors and the reason for this variability remains largely unexplored. Other types of maternal investment have been shown to be dependent on infant sex (e.g. milk production and maternal responsiveness) and maternal experience (e.g. symmetrical communication). Thus, we sought to determine whether variability in face-to-face interactions, that is, mutual gazing (MG), which are hypothesized to be important for later socio-cognitive development, could be explained by these variables. We studied 28 semi-free ranging rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) mother-infant dyads (6 primiparous; 12 male infants) born and reared at the Laboratory of Comparative Ethology field station at the NIH Animal Center in Poolesville, MD, across the first 90 postnatal days. Infant sex (i.e. male) was a significant predictor of maternal grooming (β ± SE = 0.359 ± 0.164, Z = 2.19, P = 0.029) whereas both parity (i.e. first time mothers) and infant sex (i.e. male) significantly predicted MG (parity: β ± SE = -0.735 ± 0.223, Z = -3.30, P < 0.001; infant sex: β ± SE = 0.436 ± 0.201, Z = 2.17, P = 0.029). Separation from the mother (outside of arm's reach) was not influenced by parity or infant sex. Together with existing literature, these findings point toward differential maternal investment for sons versus daughters. Mothers may be investing differentially in sons, behaviorally, to ensure their future social competence and thus later reproductive success. Collectively, our findings add to the literature that is beginning to identify early life experiences that may lead to sex differences in neurological and behavioral development.Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen

    On cardinal invariants and generators for von Neumann algebras

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    We demonstrate how virtually all common cardinal invariants associated to a von Neumann algebra M can be computed from the decomposability number, dec(M), and the minimal cardinality of a generating set, gen(M). Applications include the equivalence of the well-known generator problem, "Is every separably-acting von Neumann algebra singly-generated?", with the formally stronger questions, "Is every countably-generated von Neumann algebra singly-generated?" and "Is the gen invariant monotone?" Modulo the generator problem, we determine the range of the invariant (gen(M), dec(M)), which is mostly governed by the inequality dec(M) leq c^{gen(M)}.Comment: 22 pages; the main additions are Theorem 3.8 and Section

    Prospectus, October 3, 1969

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    MORATORIUM MOTION PASSES: CLASSES WILL BE HELD BUT ATTENDANCE IS TEACHER\u27S OPTION; Dairy of Life Art Exhibit; PC May Bid; Election Time; No Dean of Students; David Feldman: Moratorium To Held on October 15; Writer Claims Parkland Fair; 300 Student Presidents, Darrell Farris Urges Students to Run for SG; Simpson Heads Program; Veterans Have Joint Meeting; Movie Scene; Haase Enjoys Personal Involvement; Sorority Forming; Parkland Basketball Begins Second Year; Cheerleaders To Tryout; JCs Pass Recruiting Rules; Intramurals Starthttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1969/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Early postpartum resting‐state functional connectivity for mothers receiving buprenorphine treatment for opioid use disorder: A pilot study

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    Between 1999 and 2014, the prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) among pregnant women quadrupled in the USA. The standard treatment for peripartum women with OUD is buprenorphine. However, the maternal behavior neurocircuit that regulates maternal behavior and mother‐infant bonding has not been previously studied for human mothers receiving buprenorphine treatment for OUD (BT). Rodent research shows opioid effects on reciprocal inhibition between maternal care and defence maternal brain subsystems: the hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray, respectively. We conducted a longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) pilot study in humans to specifically examine resting‐state functional connectivity (rs‐FC) between the periaqueductal gray and hypothalamus, as well as to explore associations with maternal bonding for BT. We studied 32 mothers who completed fMRI scans at 1 month (T1) and 4 months postpartum (T2), including seven mothers receiving buprenorphine for OUD and 25 non‐OUD mothers as a comparison group (CG). The participants underwent a 6‐minute resting‐state fMRI scan at each time point. We measured potential bonding impairments using the Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire to explore how rs‐FC with periaqueductal gray is associated with bonding impairments. Compared to CG, BT mothers differed in periaqueductal gray‐dependent rs‐FC with the hypothalamus, amygdala, insular cortex and other brain regions at T1, with many of these differences disappearing at T2, suggesting potential therapeutic effects of continuing buprenorphine treatment. In contrast, the “rejection and pathological anger” subscale of the Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire at T1 and T2 was associated with the T1‐to‐T2 increases in periaqueductal gray‐dependent rs‐FC with the hypothalamus and amygdala. Preliminary evidence links maternal bonding problems for mothers with OUD early in the postpartum to connectivity between specific care and defence maternal brain circuits, which may be mitigated by buprenorphine treatment. This exploratory study supports a potential mechanism for investigating both the therapeutic benefits and risks of opioids for maternal care and bonding with infants.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151866/1/jne12770.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151866/2/jne12770_am.pd

    An approach for solving the boundary free edge difficulties in SPH modelling: application to a viscous accretion disc in close binaries

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    In this work, we propose a SPH interpolating Kernel reformulation suitable also to treat free edge boundaries in the computational domain. Application to both inviscid and viscous stationary low compressibility accretion disc models in Close Binaries (CB) are shown. The investigation carried out in this paper is a consequence of the fact that a low compressibility modelling is crucial to check numerical reliability. Results show that physical viscosity supports a well-bound accretion disc formation, despite the low gas compressibility, when a Gaussian-derived Kernel (from the Error Function) is assumed, in extended particle range - whose Half Width at Half Maximum (HWHM) is fixed to a constant hh value - without any spatial restrictions on its radial interaction (hereinafter GASPHER). At the same time, GASPHER ensures adequate particle interpolations at the boundary free edges. Both SPH and adaptive SPH (hereinafter ASPH) methods lack accuracy if there are not constraints on the boundary conditions, in particular at the edge of the particle envelope: Free Edge (FE) conditions. In SPH, an inefficient particle interpolation involves a few neighbour particles; instead, in the second case, non-physical effects involve both the boundary layer particles themselves and the radial transport. Either in a regime where FE conditions involve the computational domain, or in a viscous fluid dynamics, or both, a GASPHER scheme can be rightly adopted in such troublesome physical regimes. Despite the applied low compressibiity condition, viscous GASPHER model shows clear spiral pattern profiles demonstrating the better quality of results compared to SPH viscous ones. Moreover a successful comparison of results concerning GASPHER 1D inviscid shock tube with analytical solution is also reported.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
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