2,140 research outputs found
Theoretical Problems in High Resolution Solar Physics, 2
The Science Working Group for the High Resolution Solar Observatory (HRSO) laid plans beginning in 1984 for a series of workshops designed to stimulate a broadbased input from the scientific community to the HRSO mission. These workshops have the dual objectives of encouraging an early start on the difficult theoretical problems in radiative transfer, magnetohydrodynamics, and plasma physics that will be posed by the HRSO data, and maintaining current discussions of results in high resolution solar studies. This workshop was the second in the series. The workshop format presented invited review papers during the formal sessions and contributed poster papers for discussions during open periods. Both are presented
Semi-classical Laguerre polynomials and a third order discrete integrable equation
A semi-discrete Lax pair formed from the differential system and recurrence
relation for semi-classical orthogonal polynomials, leads to a discrete
integrable equation for a specific semi-classical orthogonal polynomial weight.
The main example we use is a semi-classical Laguerre weight to derive a third
order difference equation with a corresponding Lax pair.Comment: 11 page
Higher analogues of the discrete-time Toda equation and the quotient-difference algorithm
The discrete-time Toda equation arises as a universal equation for the
relevant Hankel determinants associated with one-variable orthogonal
polynomials through the mechanism of adjacency, which amounts to the inclusion
of shifted weight functions in the orthogonality condition. In this paper we
extend this mechanism to a new class of two-variable orthogonal polynomials
where the variables are related via an elliptic curve. This leads to a `Higher
order Analogue of the Discrete-time Toda' (HADT) equation for the associated
Hankel determinants, together with its Lax pair, which is derived from the
relevant recurrence relations for the orthogonal polynomials. In a similar way
as the quotient-difference (QD) algorithm is related to the discrete-time Toda
equation, a novel quotient-quotient-difference (QQD) scheme is presented for
the HADT equation. We show that for both the HADT equation and the QQD scheme,
there exists well-posed -periodic initial value problems, for almost all
\s\in\Z^2. From the Lax-pairs we furthermore derive invariants for
corresponding reductions to dynamical mappings for some explicit examples.Comment: 38 page
How primary care can contribute to good mental health in adults.
The need for support for good mental health is enormous. General support for good mental health is needed for 100% of the population, and at all stages of life, from early childhood to end of life. Focused support is needed for the 17.6% of adults who have a mental disorder at any time, including those who also have a mental health problem amongst the 30% who report having a long-term condition of some kind. All sectors of society and all parts of the NHS need to play their part. Primary care cannot do this on its own. This paper describes how primary care practitioners can help stimulate such a grand alliance for health, by operating at four different levels - as individual practitioners, as organisations, as geographic clusters of organisations and as policy-makers
Electron dense staining affinities of mouse oxytalan and elastic fibers
. The staining affinity of electron dense stains to mouse palatal elastic fibers and periodontal oxytalan fibers was assessed and compared. Tissues were stained routinely with uranyl acetate and lead citrate or with elastic tissue stains including: (1) silver tetraphenylporphine sulfonate, (2) tannic acid technique, and (3) a high iron diamine sequence. Staining results were assessed with an electron microscope. Palatal elastic fibers demonstrated staining affinity to all elastic stain techniques. Oxytalan fibers did not demonstrate affinity to elastic fiber stains used. Based on electron dense stains, elastic and oxytalan fibers were dissimilar, in contrast to results reported utilizing light microscopic stains.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72883/1/j.1600-0714.1980.tb00376.x.pd
PATRIOT: A phase I study to assess the tolerability, safety and biological effects of a specific ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) inhibitor (AZD6738) as a single agent and in combination with palliative radiation therapy in patients with solid tumours
Tumour control rates from radiation therapy (RT) are limited by normal tissue toxicities. Novel strategies are required to selectively sensitize tumour cells to radiation-induced DNA damage. The G2 cell cycle checkpoint is an attractive target for this, as normal cells will be protected by their intact G1 checkpoint, which is lost in the majority of cancer cells. ATR is an important mediator of the G2 checkpoint. Preclinical data suggest that ATR inhibition will sensitise to DNA damaging therapies, including RT. This multi-part phase 1 trial aims to assess safety and tolerability and preliminary anti-tumour activity of the ATR inhibitor AZD6738 as monotherapy and in combination with palliative RT, escalating both drug and radiation dose at a dose-fractionation relevant to radical treatment. The design aims to test a novel agent at the earliest stage of clinical development and assess safety in combination with RT, with the aim of moving to a radically-treated population if tolerated. Methods: Participants have advanced solid tumours without standard systemic therapy options. The trial comprises three parts: parts A and B will assess AZD6738 as a single agent in dose escalation to MTD (part A), followed by expansion cohorts enriched for defective DNA damage response (part B). Part C will assess AZD6738 in combination with palliative RT in which participants will receive 20 Gy in 10 fractions, with per cohort escalation of drug dose to monotherapy MTD if tolerated. At the highest tolerated combination dose, the RT dose will be escalated to 30 Gy in 15 fractions. Maintenance AZD6738 post-RT will be tested at the highest tolerated combination dose. The study opened in August 2014. The study is dose escalating in part A and part C has opened and treated its first patient. Part B will open when dose escalation has completed. PATRIOT is sponsored by The Royal Marsden, funded by the Cancer Research UK/AstraZeneca Combinations Alliance and supported by supply of free drug and distribution costs from Astra Zeneca. Clinical trial information: NCT0222392
Engineering The Unicellular Alga Phaeodactylum tricornutum For High-Value Plant Triterpenoid Production
Plant triterpenoids constitute a diverse class of organic compounds that play a major role in development, plant defense and environmental interaction. Several triterpenes have demonstrated potential as pharmaceuticals. One example is betulin, which has shown promise as a pharmaceutical precursor for the treatment of certain cancers and HIV. Major challenges for triterpenoid commercialization include their low production levels and their cost‐effective purification from the complex mixtures present in their natural hosts. Therefore, attempts to produce these compounds in industrially relevant microbial systems such as bacteria and yeasts have attracted great interest. Here we report the production of the triterpenes betulin and its precursor lupeol in the photosynthetic diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum, a unicellular eukaryotic alga. This was achieved by introducing three plant enzymes in the microalga: a Lotus japonicus oxidosqualene cyclase and a Medicago truncatula cytochrome P450 along with its native reductase. The introduction of the L. japonicus oxidosqualene cyclase perturbed the mRNA expression levels of the native mevalonate and sterol biosynthesis pathway. The best performing strains were selected and grown in a 550L pilot scale photobioreactor facility. To our knowledge, this is the most extensive pathway engineering undertaken in a diatom and the first time that a sapogenin has been artificially produced in a microalga, demonstrating the feasibility of the photo‐bio‐production of more complex high‐value, metabolites in microalgae
Noise storm continua: power estimates for electron acceleration
We use a generic stochastic acceleration formalism to examine the power
() input to nonthermal electrons that cause
noise storm continuum emission. The analytical approach includes the derivation
of the Green's function for a general second-order Fermi process, and its
application to obtain the particular solution for the nonthermal electron
distribution resulting from the acceleration of a Maxwellian source in the
corona. We compare with the power observed in noise
storm radiation. Using typical values for the various parameters, we find that
, yielding an efficiency
estimate in the range 10^{-10} \lsim \eta
\lsim 10^{-6} for this nonthermal acceleration/radiation process. These
results reflect the efficiency of the overall process, starting from electron
acceleration and culminating in the observed noise storm emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in Solar Physic
Preparing to work: dramaturgy, cynicism and normative ‘remote’ control in the socialization of graduate recruits in management consulting
online) This paper examines the socialization of graduate recruits into a knowledge intensive labour
process and organizational culture. Theoretically the paper draws upon the idea of ‘preparing
for work’ to position this early socialization as a crucial moment in the production of
subjectivities suited (and booted) for the labour process of management consulting. Empirically
the paper reports on a two-day induction session for new graduate recruits joining a global
management consultancy and their responses to this training. Particular attention is given to
the use of role-play and a dramaturgical workshop used in part of the training process. The paper
argues that the utilization of dramaturgy in training is consistent with the overall approach to
control developed in the firm in response to the fact that the labour process of consulting is
often conducted on client sites, away from any direct supervisory gaze. As such, the consultants
were subjected to a form of cultural control that was designed to function independently of
direct supervision. This control did not operate directly upon the new employees professed
values, however, but at one step removed so that a ‘cynical distance’ from the content of the
organization’s culture was accepted so long as a professional ‘ethic of behaviour’ was
established. By focusing on an ‘ethic of behaviour’ these young professionals were encouraged
to internalize a self-control akin to that of an actor, rather than internalizing the corporate values
entirely
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