6,594 research outputs found
Revision of the types of species of Alloxysta described by Cameron and Fergusson (Hymenoptera: Figitidae: Charipinae) and deposited in the Natural History Museum (London), including a key to the fauna of Great Britain
Type material of the species of Alloxysta described by Cameron and Fergusson and deposited in the Natural History Museum of London has been revised. Seven species are considered valid: Alloxysta abdera Fergusson, 1986, A. basimacula (Cameron, 1886), A. crassa (Cameron, 1889), A. mullensis (Cameron, 1883), A. piceomaculata (Cameron, 1883), A. pleuralis (Cameron, 1879) and A. semiaperta Fergusson, 1986. A. basimacula, A. crassa, A. maculicollis (Cameron, 1886), A. perplexa (Cameron, 1889) and A. piceomaculata are here removed from synonymy with A. macrophadna (Hartig, 1841). A. rufi ceps (Cameron, 1883) is removed from synonymy with A. victrix (Westwood, 1833). A. caledonica (Cameron, 1886) and A. perplexa are here synonymized with A. basimacula. A. maculicollis, A. ruficeps and A. ruficollis (Cameron, 1883) are here synonymized with A. castanea (Hartig, 1841). A. ancylocera (Cameron, 1886) was correctly synonymized with A. fuscicornis (Hartig, 1841), A. curvicornis (Cameron, 1883) was correctly synonymized with A. victrix and A. filicornis (Cameron, 1889) was correctly synonymized with A. macrophadna. Complete redescriptions and illustrations are given for valid species. A key for all the Alloxysta species found so far in Great Britain is given
The Minimal Set of Electroweak Precision Parameters
We present a simple method for analyzing the impact of precision electroweak
data above and below the Z-peak on flavour-conserving heavy new physics. We
find that experiments have probed about ten combinations of new physics
effects, which to a good approximation can be condensed into the effective
oblique parameters Shat, That, Uhat, V, X, W, Y (we prove positivity
constraints W, Y >= 0) and three combinations of quark couplings (including a
distinct parameter for the bottom). We apply our method to generic extra Z'
vectors.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Warming up brane-antibrane inflation
We show that, in constructions with additional intersecting D-branes,
brane-antibrane inflation may naturally occur in a warm regime, such that
strong dissipative effects damp the inflaton's motion, greatly alleviating the
associated eta-problem. We illustrate this for D3-antiD3 inflation in flat
space with additional flavor D7-branes, where for both a Coulomb-like or a
quadratic hybrid potential a sufficient number of e-folds may be obtained for
perturbative couplings and O(10-10^4) branes. This is in clear contrast with
the corresponding cold scenarios, thus setting the stage for more realistic
constructions within fully stabilized compactifications. Such models
generically predict a negligible amount of tensor perturbations and
non-gaussianity f_NL \sim O(10).Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; version to be published in Physical Review
Determining the regimes of cold and warm inflation in the susy hybrid model
The SUSY hybrid inflation model is found to dissipate radiation during the
inflationary period. Analysis is made of parameter regimes in which these
dissipative effects are significant. The scalar spectral index, its running,
and the tensor-scalar ratio are computed in the entire parameter range of the
model. A clear prediction for strong dissipative warm inflation is found for
n_S-1 \simeq 0.98 and a low tensor-scalar ratio much below 10^{-6}. The strong
dissipative warm inflation regime also is found to have no \eta-problem and
with the field amplitude much below the Planck scale. As will be discussed,
this has important theoretical implications in permitting a much wider variety
of SUGRA extensions to the basic model.Comment: paragraph added at the end of section V; references added; accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev.
Semiquantitative activity-based detection of JWH-018, a synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonist, in oral fluid after vaping
The rapid proliferation of new synthetic cannabinoid receptor agonists (SCRAs) has initiated considerable interest in the development of so-called âuntargetedâ screening strategies. One of these new screening technologies involves the activity-based detection of SCRAs. In this study, we evaluated whether (synthetic) cannabinoid activity can be detected in oral fluid (OF) and, if
so, whether it correlates with SCRA concentrations. OF was collected at several time points in a placebo-controlled JWH-018 administration study. The outcome of the cell-based cannabinoid reporter system, which monitored the cannabinoid receptor activation, was compared to the quantitative data for JWH-018, obtained via a validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass
spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method. A total of 175 OF samples were collected and analyzed via both methods. The cannabinoid reporter assay correctly classified the vast majority of the samples as either negative (<0.25 ng/mL; 74/75 = 99%) or having low
(0.25â1.5 ng/mL; 16/16 = 100% and 1.5â10 ng/mL; 37/41 = 90%), mid (10â100 ng/mL; 23/25 = 92%) or high (>100 ng/mL; 16/18 = 89%) JWH-018 concentrations. PassingâBablok regression analysis yielded a good linear correlation, with no proportional difference between both methods (slope 0.97; 95% confidence interval 0.86â1.14) and only a small systematic difference. This is the first study to demonstrate the applicability of an untargeted, activity-based approach for SCRA detection in OF. Additionally, the outcome of the cannabinoid reporter assay was compared to the gold standard (LC-MS/MS), showing a good correlation between
both methods, indicating that the cannabinoid reporter assay can be used for an estimation of drug concentrations
âZombie attackâ a new way to teach Chemistry
The Higher Education requires new models which allow training people able to adapt and survive in changing environments. It is based on the use of technologies and the adaptation of knowledge to people. It is about an education according to circumstances, which is adapted to context and virtual behaviour of people.
One of the main difficulties that lecturers find in the classroom is how to maintain students' attention and interest in their subject, especially when students also think that the subject is not important for their training. In order to motivate these students, innovation in educational techniques and methodologies, such as experiential learning, are progressively being imposed to and/or coordinated with the traditional ones. Escape Room is a very modern concept in education, based on the development of mental skills for the solution of enigmas and problems. It is a tool to develop the cooperative, cognitive, deductive and logical reasoning skills of the students.
In this work, an educational gamification experience based on the escape room concept is presented. The students have 1 hour and 30 minutes to carry out this activity. They will have to solve four puzzles and enigmas that will give them the key to open a treasure chest and finally let them escape from the classroom. Logic, ingenuity and teamwork will allow participants to develop not only chemical competence, but also other basic skills. The story that is told throughout the escape room is a zombie attack: the city has been infected (with a virus) and only the occupants of the room where the activity takes place have not been infected. In addition, they can all protect themselves if they are able to open the chest where the antidote is located. The aim of this activity is to enhance the knowledge acquired throughout the semester as well as the development of skills.Universidad de MĂĄlaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tec
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