186 research outputs found

    Chave para a identificação das espécies de abóboras (Cucurbita, Cucurbitaceae) cultivadas no Brasil.

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    Metodologia para identificação taxonômica de espécies de abóboras cultivadas (Cucurbita maxima, Cucurbita moschata, Cucurbita pepo, Cucurbita ficifolia e Cucurbita argyrosperma) - As abóboras cultivadas pertencem a cinco diferentes espécies, as quais são conhecidas por uma grande diversidade de nomes populares, particulares ou em comum, que confundem a correta identificação taxonômica da espécie. A carência de chaves taxonômicas no Brasil para a identificação das espécies cultivadas de abóboras, e o fato de que a maioria das chaves disponíveis em outros idiomas permite apenas a determinação taxonômica das três espécies mais comumente cultivadas (C. maxima, C. moschata e C. pepo), dificultam o correto reconhecimento e aproveitamento do potencial que estas culturas podem oferecer. A identificação adequada das espécies é essencial para atividades rotineiras de coleta, conservação, caracterização e multiplicação de acessos em um banco de germoplasma, e crucial para o sucesso de cruzamentos em programas de melhoramento. Além disso, sem uma correta identificação das espécies é difícil obter informações relevantes sobre estes cultivos. Para auxiliar na determinação taxonômica, esta publicação apresenta três chaves complementares de identificação, amplamente ilustradas com fotografias dos acessos do Banco Ativo de Germoplasma de Cucurbitaceae da Embrapa Clima Temperado. A primeira chave foi elaborada para identificação com base em caracteres vegetativos, a segunda em características dos frutos e a terceira para a identificação através de sementes. A diversidade morfológica entre as espécies cultivadas de Cucurbita é notável e, por isso, sempre que possível, mais de uma destas chaves deve ser considerada para confirmar a determinação de uma espécie. As informações das chaves são complementadas pelas fotografias que mostram características importantes para a identificação das espécies.bitstream/item/33837/1/documento-197.pd

    The role of patients in European Clinical Ethics Consultation

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    Clinical ethics committees and consultation services have existed in many European countries for over two decades. Many different modes of operation have emerged, each reflecting a particular health and socio-political context. As additional clinical ethics services become established, the role of patients and their relatives is attracting increased attention. In North America, patient involvement has been theoretically lauded and recommended by policy, but nevertheless is often neglected in practice.1 In Europe, this issue has not yet received a great deal of attention, although the importance of listening to the patient's voice has been recognized for some time.2 Despite this, patients have diverse involvement in European clinical ethics support. Patients or their relatives can, for example: be members of a clinical ethics committee; be notified when an ethics consultation is requested; or be involved in ethical deliberation to the same extent as clinicians. At the 4th International Conference on Clinical Ethics and Consultation,3 Professor Stella Reiter-Theil convened an expert panel to discuss: ‘Whether and how to involve patients and relatives in clinical ethics support’. Panellists from across Europe4 used a case study to engage in a lively and interactive discussion on the different approaches to patient involvement in clinical ethics consultation.This article was written by Dr Ainsley Newson during the time of her employment with the University of Bristol, UK (2006-2012). Self-archived in the Sydney eScholarship Repository with permission of Bristol University, Sept 2014

    The role of patients in European Clinical Ethics Consultation

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    editorialClinical ethics committees and consultation services have existed in many European countries for over two decades. Many different modes of operation have emerged, each reflecting a particular health and socio-political context. As additional clinical ethics services become established, the role of patients and their relatives is attracting increased attention. In North America, patient involvement has been theoretically lauded and recommended by policy, but nevertheless is often neglected in practice.1 In Europe, this issue has not yet received a great deal of attention, although the importance of listening to the patient's voice has been recognized for some time.2 Despite this, patients have diverse involvement in European clinical ethics support. Patients or their relatives can, for example: be members of a clinical ethics committee; be notified when an ethics consultation is requested; or be involved in ethical deliberation to the same extent as clinicians. At the 4th International Conference on Clinical Ethics and Consultation,3 Professor Stella Reiter-Theil convened an expert panel to discuss: ‘Whether and how to involve patients and relatives in clinical ethics support’. Panellists from across Europe4 used a case study to engage in a lively and interactive discussion on the different approaches to patient involvement in clinical ethics consultation.This article was written by Dr Ainsley Newson during the time of her employment with the University of Bristol, UK (2006-2012). Self-archived in the Sydney eScholarship Repository with permission of Bristol University, Sept 2014

    Quantum Attractor Flows

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    Motivated by the interpretation of the Ooguri-Strominger-Vafa conjecture as a holographic correspondence in the mini-superspace approximation, we study the radial quantization of stationary, spherically symmetric black holes in four dimensions. A key ingredient is the classical equivalence between the radial evolution equation and geodesic motion of a fiducial particle on the moduli space M^*_3 of the three-dimensional theory after reduction along the time direction. In the case of N=2 supergravity, M^*_3 is a para-quaternionic-Kahler manifold; in this case, we show that BPS black holes correspond to a particular class of geodesics which lift holomorphically to the twistor space Z of M^*_3, and identify Z as the BPS phase space. We give a natural quantization of the BPS phase space in terms of the sheaf cohomology of Z, and compute the exact wave function of a BPS black hole with fixed electric and magnetic charges in this framework. We comment on the relation to the topological string amplitude, extensions to N>2 supergravity theories, and applications to automorphic black hole partition functions.Comment: 43 pages, 6 figures; v2: typos and references added; v3: published version, minor change

    Clinical ethics consultation in Europe: A comparative and ethical review of the role of patients

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    Clinical ethics has developed significantly in Europe over the past 15 years and remains an evolving process. While sharing our experiences in different European settings, we were surprised to discover marked differences in our practice, especially regarding the position and role of patients. In this paper, we describe these differences, such as patient access to and participation or representation in ethics consults. We propose reasons to explain these differences, hypothesizing that they relate to the historic and sociocultural context of implementation of clinical ethics consultation services (Cecs), as well as the initial aims for which each structure was established. Then, we analyse those differences with common ethical arguments arising in patient involvement. We conclude that there is no unique model of best practice for patient involvement in clinical ethics, as far as Cecs reflect on how to deal with the challenging ethical issues raised by patient role and position.This article was written by Dr Ainsley Newson during the time of her employment with the University of Bristol, UK (2006-2012). Self-archived in the Sydney eScholarship Repository with permission of Bristol University, Sept 2014

    From the Hitchin section to opers through nonabelian Hodge

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    For a complex simple simply connected Lie group GG, and a compact Riemann surface CC, we consider two sorts of families of flat GG-connections over CC. Each family is determined by a point u{\mathbf u} of the base of Hitchin's integrable system for (G,C)(G,C). One family ,u\nabla_{\hbar,{\mathbf u}} consists of GG-opers, and depends on C×\hbar \in {\mathbb C}^\times. The other family R,ζ,u\nabla_{R,\zeta,{\mathbf u}} is built from solutions of Hitchin's equations, and depends on ζC×,RR+\zeta \in {\mathbb C}^\times, R \in {\mathbb R}^+. We show that in the scaling limit R0R \to 0, ζ=R\zeta = \hbar R, we have R,ζ,u,u\nabla_{R,\zeta,{\mathbf u}} \to \nabla_{\hbar,{\mathbf u}}. This establishes and generalizes a conjecture formulated by Gaiotto

    Kommentar II zum Fall: „Palliativmedizin im interkulturellen Kontext“

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    D-instantons and twistors: some exact results

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    We present some results on instanton corrections to the hypermultiplet moduli space in Calabi-Yau compactifications of Type II string theories. Previously, using twistor methods, only a class of D-instantons (D2-instantons wrapping A-cycles) was incorporated exactly and the rest was treated only linearly. We go beyond the linear approximation and give a set of holomorphic functions which, through a known procedure, capture the effect of D-instantons at all orders. Moreover, we show that for a sector where all instanton charges have vanishing symplectic invariant scalar product, the hypermultiplet metric can be computed explicitly.Comment: 32 pages, 3 figures, uses JHEP3.cls; some changes in section 3.3.3; corrected formula for the contact potentia

    Twistors and Black Holes

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    Motivated by black hole physics in N=2, D=4 supergravity, we study the geometry of quaternionic-Kahler manifolds M obtained by the c-map construction from projective special Kahler manifolds M_s. Improving on earlier treatments, we compute the Kahler potentials on the twistor space Z and Swann space S in the complex coordinates adapted to the Heisenberg symmetries. The results bear a simple relation to the Hesse potential \Sigma of the special Kahler manifold M_s, and hence to the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy for BPS black holes. We explicitly construct the ``covariant c-map'' and the ``twistor map'', which relate real coordinates on M x CP^1 (resp. M x R^4/Z_2) to complex coordinates on Z (resp. S). As applications, we solve for the general BPS geodesic motion on M, and provide explicit integral formulae for the quaternionic Penrose transform relating elements of H^1(Z,O(-k)) to massless fields on M annihilated by first or second order differential operators. Finally, we compute the exact radial wave function (in the supergravity approximation) for BPS black holes with fixed electric and magnetic charges.Comment: 47 pages, v2: typos corrected, reference added, v3: minor change

    Cubic Twistorial String Field Theory

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    Witten has recently proposed a string theory in twistor space whose D-instanton contributions are conjectured to compute N=4 super-Yang-Mills scattering amplitudes. An alternative string theory in twistor space was then proposed whose open string tree amplitudes reproduce the D-instanton computations of maximal degree in Witten's model. In this paper, a cubic open string field theory action is constructed for this alternative string in twistor space, and is shown to be invariant under parity transformations which exchange MHV and googly amplitudes. Since the string field theory action is gauge-invariant and reproduces the correct cubic super-Yang-Mills interactions, it provides strong support for the conjecture that the string theory correctly computes N-point super-Yang-Mills tree amplitudes.Comment: 19+1 pages, 4+1 EPS figures, JHEP3 LaTeX; v2: minor corrections, references added; v3: the final version published in JHEP with a new footnote on the d=0 on-shell contributio
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