3,062 research outputs found

    The Ursinus Weekly, October 24, 1960

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    Sandra Motta new queen; Crowned at dance Saturday • Young Republicans vote new club constitution • Y weekend retreaters discuss Christianity • Students protest new registration fee thru MSGA • $5,000 scholarship to aid Ursinus leaders, athletes • 15 degrees conferred at Founder\u27s Day exercises • Montco names Vern Morgan its outstanding athlete • Jefferson Dean to address pre-medders • Editorial: An analogy • Letters to the editor • Thoughts on freedom • Doubt • What? • Curtain Club to do challenging play • Bears defeat Garnet 26-25 in second win: Bears defeat Wilkes in thriller last week • Intramural corner • Meet coach Pearson • Girls hockey team splits two games • Bears lose to Rutgers, St. Joe\u27s • Young Democrats to hear Kennedy • WAA plans dance; Candy money pilfered • Forum review • French Club hears M. Coulet speak • Curtain Club changes membership rules • Dr. Max Silverstein to speak on social workhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1324/thumbnail.jp

    M87: A Misaligned BL LAC?

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    The nuclear region of M87 was observed with the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) at 6 epochs, spanning 18 months, after the HST image quality was improved with the deployment of the corrective optics (COSTAR) in December 1993. From the FOS target acquisition data, we have established that the flux from the optical nucleus of M87 varies by a factor ~2 on time scales of ~2.5 months and by as much as 25% over 3 weeks, and remains unchanged (<= 2.5%) on time scales of ~1 day. The changes occur in an unresolved central region <= 5 pc in diameter, with the physical size of the emitting region limited by the observed time scales to a few hundred gravitational radii. The featureless continuum spectrum becomes bluer as it brightens while emission lines remain unchanged. This variability combined with the observations of the continuum spectral shape, strong relativistic boosting and the detection of significant superluminal motions in the jet, strongly suggest that M87 belongs to the class of BL Lac objects but is viewed at an angle too large to reveal the classical BL Lac properties.Comment: 12 pages, 3 Postscript figure

    Heat Shock Protein 70 Expression in Juvenile Eastern Oysters, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin, 1791), Exposed to Anoxic Conditions

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    Anoxic water events in conjunction with summer high temperatures are thought to be one of the causes of declines in natural oyster reefs on the eastern shore of Mobile Bay. Work is underway to determine whether tolerance to low oxygen can be selected for in hatchery-produced oysters. As a component of this work, the expression of heat shock protein 70 (HSP 70) was examined in control (normoxia) and anoxia-challenged juvenile oysters. Parental Eastern oysters, Crassostrea virginica were collected from 2 sites, Cedar Point Reef (CP), an area considered to have normoxic conditions, and White House Reef (WH), an area suspected to experience periodic anoxia. F1 generation oysters were produced from CP and WH parents that survived an anoxic exposure of 96 h. Control F1 generation oysters from both parental stocks not exposed to anoxia were also produced. The F1 generation oysters were subsequently exposed to anoxia or control normoxic conditions, and differences in expression of HSP 70 were examined. Nitrogen was used to create the anoxic conditions for both the parental and F1 generations. Three HSP 70 isoforms—2 constitutive forms (HSC 77 and HSC 72) and 1 inducible form (HSP 69)—were expressed in both anoxia- and normoxia-exposed oysters from all groups. Although there were differences among groups of oysters from the 2 sites, there were no differences in the expression of HSC 77 and HSC 72 between the control and anoxia-treated oysters within a group. Interestingly, the expression of HSP 69 was higher in oysters exposed to normoxia than the ones from anoxia treatments. These differences are thought to reflect a combination of responses to nutritional stress in the controls and facultative anaerobiosis and metabolic arrest in the anoxia groups

    CBR Anisotropy from Primordial Gravitational Waves in Two-Component Inflationary Cosmology

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    We examine stochastic temperature fluctuations of the cosmic background radiation (CBR) arising via the Sachs-Wolfe effect from gravitational wave perturbations produced in the early universe. We consider spatially flat, perturbed FRW models that begin with an inflationary phase, followed by a mixed phase containing both radiation and dust. The scale factor during the mixed phase takes the form a(η)=c1η2+c2η+c3a(\eta)=c_1\eta^2+c_2\eta+c_3, where cic_i are constants. During the mixed phase the universe smoothly transforms from being radiation to dust dominated. We find analytic expressions for the graviton mode function during the mixed phase in terms of spheroidal wave functions. This mode function is used to find an analytic expression for the multipole moments ⟨al2⟩\langle a_l^2\rangle of the two-point angular correlation function C(γ)C(\gamma) for the CBR anisotropy. The analytic expression for the multipole moments is written in terms of two integrals, which are evaluated numerically. The results are compared to multipoles calculated for models that are {\it completely} dust dominated at last-scattering. We find that the multipoles ⟨al2⟩\langle a_l^2\rangle of the CBR temperature perturbations for l>10l>10 are significantly larger for a universe that contains both radiation and dust at last-scattering. We compare our results with recent, similar numerical work and find good agreement. The spheroidal wave functions may have applications to other problems of cosmological interest.Comment: 28 pgs + 6 postscript figures, RevTe

    The Ursinus Weekly, November 14, 1960

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    Focus on fraternities • Sixteen men accept bids on Nov. 7 to join four of U.C.\u27s local frats • WAA, Woodruff discuss possible ski weekend • Constitution is changed by Curtain Club members • U.C. groups hear Dr. Adams of Yale • Historical article by Dr. Armstrong printed in Church History • Whitians hold tea in Paisley for 50 women • Dr. Zucker to discuss disarming at International Relations Club • Frosh MSGA reps to prepare report on 1960 customs • Y introduces the Aetheneum Society • Juniors present The Bowery November 19 in T-G gym • ICG plans meeting for Nov. 4 in Bomberger chapel at 7 p.m. • Senior Ball set for December 2 • Pre-medders go to AED conference • Young Democrats got out vote, now drive for new membership • Newman Club schedules trip to Greek Catholic church • Bosniak, Dassler are selected 1962 Ruby editors • Harry Sprogall addresses forum • Shaw\u27s Androcles and the Lion subject of English Club meeting • French Club to be shown slides; Field trip discussion planned • Editorial: Forbearance • Letters to the editor • Review of the student concert • Novembers ago • Book review: We the living • Parting political shots: Meeting of minds; Not quite Lincoln and Douglas • Intramural corner • Soccer team drops three close games • Mariners best Bears; U.C. clobbers Fords • Lassies shut out Drexel, Beaver • French film to be shown at Franklin Institutehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1326/thumbnail.jp
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