5,466 research outputs found

    Urea adducts of the esters of stearic acid

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    Urea forms crystalline complexes with n-alkanes and their liner derivatives but not with most branched and cyclic hydrocarbons and their derivatives. The compounds are stable enough to be used in separating these types of aliphatic compounds from their branched and cyclic analogs. Linear esters derived from normal saturated acids give adducts as expected. Urea complexation was found to be of great importance in the purification and separation of unsaturated esters of high molecular weight. The object of the present research was to investigate the compositions of urea adducts of various long-chain esters, approaching the class of waxes, to test various methods of determining their compositions, and to determine the suitability of the adduct method for purifying such esters

    (De)constructed binaries: dialogue and monologue in contemporary popular fantasy

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    This thesis explores three works of contemporary popular epic fantasy and the way in which binary oppositions are constructed and resolved in these texts. I argue that the three texts studied represent a wider trend in contemporary fantasy which questions the idea of binary opposition, while working within that same structure. I analyse the resolution of these binaries through the terminology provided by Mikhail Bakhtin, whose work on dialogue and monologue offers a way of comparing the different oppositions prioritised by each author. The texts studied are Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn trilogy (2006-2008), Robin Hobb’s The Farseer Trilogy (1995-1997), and N.K. Jemisin’s The Broken Earth trilogy (2015-2017). My work focuses on three binary oppositions that appear in all three primary texts, and so offers a point of comparison between them. The oppositions studied are the good/evil binary, the Self/Other binary, and the achievement of immortality, which is represented as a result of the contact between binary opposites in all three texts. This thesis will make use of a variety of theoretical frameworks in order to analyse the key oppositions in the texts. When discussing Sanderson, ‘good’ and ‘evil’ are understood through the work of Simon Baron-Cohen’s The Science of Evil (2011), which uses the presence of empathy as the determining moral factor. In The Farseer Trilogy, the work of Ernest Becker is useful in describing how immortality is represented as the fusion of two opposed elements of humanity, the animal and symbolic. For this I turn to Becker’s The Denial of Death (1973). Finally, Jemisin’s representation of the Self is understood using the terminology of Dialogical Self Theory, in which the Self is the result of the interaction between Others, both within and outside the Self. I suggest that each text portrays the interaction between opposites as either dialogical or monological, using the terminology provided by Bakhtin. Ultimately, I show that, rather than simply featuring binary opposition, each of the trilogies studied actively questions the legitimacy of those same oppositions. In this way, these texts resist a common criticism of fantasy literature, which is often seen as ‘simplistic’ precisely because of its reliance on binary opposites

    Divergence or convergence? Health inequalities and policy in a devolved Britain

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    Since the advent of political devolution in the UK, it has been widely reported that markedly different health policies have emerged. However, most of these analyses are based on a comparison of health care policies and, as such, only tell part of a complex and evolving story. This paper considers official responses to a shared public health policy aim, the reduction of health inequalities, through an examination of national policy statements produced in England, Scotland and Wales respectively since 1997. The analysis suggests that the relatively consistent manner in which the ‘policy problem’ of health inequalities has been framed combined with the dominance of a medical model of health have constrained policy responses. Our findings differ from existing analyses, raising some important questions about the actuality of, and scope for, policy divergence since devolution

    Dark matter constraints on the parameter space and particle spectra in the nonminimal SUSY standard model

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    We investigate the dark matter constraints for the nonminimal SUSY standard model (NMSSM). The cosmologically restricted mass spectra of the NMSSM are compared to the minimal SUSY standard model (MSSM). The differences of the two models concerning the neutralino, sfermion and Higgs sector are discussed. The dark matter condition leads to cosmologically allowed mass ranges for the SUSY particles in the NMSSM: m_{\tilde{\chi}^0_1} < 300 GeV, m_{\tilde{e}_R} < 300 GeV, 300 GeV < m_{\tilde{u}_R} < 1900 GeV, 200 GeV < m_{\tilde{t}_1} < 1500 GeV, 350 GeV < m_{\tilde{g}} < 2100 GeV and for the mass of the lightest scalar Higgs m_{S_1} < 140 GeV.Comment: revised version to appear in Phys. Lett. B, 18 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures, uses epsfig.sty and amssymb.st

    Inclusive Recovery in US Cities

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    Some cities have harnessed economic recoveries to improve on inclusion, or the opportunity for all residents—particularly historically excluded populations—to benefit from and contribute to economic prosperity. In this report, we conduct the first empirical analysis of how economic health and inclusion interact in US cities over several decades. We report on trends in economic health and inclusion across many cities and within a smaller subset of cities that have experienced an economic recovery. To better understand whether and how an economic recovery can support inclusive outcomes, we delve deeper into four cities that improved on inclusion measures during their recovery. Through discussions with individuals, an in-person convening, and a review of literature, we identify key lessons and common building blocks that can support progress on inclusion during a city's economic recovery

    One- and two-photon ionization cross sections of the laser excited 6s6p^1P_1 state of barium

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    Stimulated by a recent measurement of coherent control in photoionization of atomic barium, we have calculated one- and two-photon ionization cross sections of the aligned 6s6p^1P_1 state of barium in the energy range between the 5d_{3/2} and 5d_{5/2} states of Ba^+. We have also measured these photionization spectra in the same energy region, driving the one- or two-photon processes with the second or first harmonic of a tunable dye laser, respectively. Our calculations employ the eigenchannel R-matrix method and multichannel quantum defect theory to calculate the rich array of autoionizing resonances in this energy range. The non-resonant two-photon process is described using lowest-order perturbation theory for the photon-atom interactions, with a discretized intermediate state one-electron continuum. The calculations provide an absolute normalization for the experiment, and they accurately reproduce the rich resonance structures in both the one and two-photon cross sections, and confirm other aspects of experimental observations. These results demonstrate the ability of these computationally inexpensive methods to reproduce the experimental observables in one- and two-photon ionization of heavy alkaline earths, and they lay the groundwork for future studies of the phase-controlled interference between one-photon and two-photon ionization processes.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys.Rev.

    Risk Factors for Development of Chronic Kidney Disease in Cats

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    BACKGROUND: Identification of risk factors for development of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in cats may aid in its earlier detection. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: Evaluation of clinical and questionnaire data will identify risk factors for development of azotemic CKD in cats. ANIMALS: One hundred and forty‐eight client‐owned geriatric (>9 years) cats. METHODS: Cats were recruited into the study and followed longitudinally for a variable time. Owners were asked to complete a questionnaire regarding their pet at enrollment. Additional data regarding dental disease were obtained when available by development of a dental categorization system. Variables were explored in univariable and multivariable Cox regression models. RESULTS: In the final multivariable Cox regression model, annual/frequent vaccination (P value, .003; hazard ratio, 5.68; 95% confidence interval, 1.83–17.64), moderate dental disease (P value, .008; hazard ratio, 13.83; 95% confidence interval, 2.01–94.99), and severe dental disease (P value, .001; hazard ratio, 35.35; 95% confidence interval, 4.31–289.73) predicted development of azotemic CKD. CONCLUSION: Our study suggests independent associations between both vaccination frequency and severity of dental disease and development of CKD. Further studies to explore the pathophysiological mechanism of renal injury for these risk factors are warranted

    The Effect of Moderate Dietary Protein and Phosphate Restriction on Calcium-Phosphate Homeostasis in Healthy Older Cats

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    Background Dietary phosphate and protein restriction decreases plasma PTH and FGF‐23 concentrations and improves survival time in azotemic cats, but has not been examined in cats that are not azotemic. Hypothesis Feeding a moderately protein‐ and phosphate‐restricted diet decreases PTH and FGF‐23 in healthy older cats and thereby slows progression to azotemic CKD. Animals A total of 54 healthy, client‐owned cats (≄ 9 years). Methods Prospective double‐blinded randomized placebo‐controlled trial. Cats were assigned to test diet (protein 76 g/Mcal and phosphate 1.6 g/Mcal) or control diet (protein 86 g/Mcal and phosphate 2.6 g/Mcal) and monitored for 18 months. Changes in variables over time and effect of diet were assessed by linear mixed models. Results A total of 26 cats ate test diet and 28 cats ate control diet. There was a significant effect of diet on urinary fractional excretion of phosphate (P = 0.045), plasma PTH (P = 0.005), and ionized calcium concentrations (P = 0.018), but not plasma phosphate, FGF‐23, or creatinine concentrations. Plasma PTH concentrations did not significantly change in cats fed the test diet (P = 0.62) but increased over time in cats fed the control diet (P = 0.001). There was no significant treatment effect of the test diet on development of azotemic CKD (3 of 26 (12%) test versus 3 of 28 (11%) control, odds ratio 1.09 (95% CI 0.13–8.94), P = 0.92). Conclusions and Clinical Importance Feeding a moderately protein‐ and phosphate‐restricted diet has effects on calcium‐phosphate homeostasis in healthy older cats and is well tolerated. This might have an impact on renal function and could be useful in early chronic kidney disease

    Destabilising Divergences in the NMSSM

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    The problem of destabilising divergences is discussed for singlet extensions of the MSSM. It is shown that models which possess either gauged-RR symmetry or target space duality at the Planck scale are able to circumvent this problem whilst avoiding cosmological domain walls.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures requiring axodraw.sty, plain LaTeX, to appear in Nucl.Phys.

    Higgs Scalars in the Minimal Non-minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model

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    We consider the simplest and most economic version among the proposed non-minimal supersymmetric models, in which the Ό\mu-parameter is promoted to a singlet superfield, whose all self-couplings are absent from the renormalizable superpotential. Such a particularly simple form of the renormalizable superpotential may be enforced by discrete RR-symmetries which are extended to the gravity-induced non-renormalizable operators as well. We show explicitly that within the supergravity-mediated supersymmetry-breaking scenario, the potentially dangerous divergent tadpoles associated with the presence of the gauge singlet first appear at loop levels higher than 5 and therefore do not destabilize the gauge hierarchy. The model provides a natural explanation for the origin of the Ό\mu-term, without suffering from the visible axion or the cosmological domain-wall problem. Focusing on the Higgs sector of this minimal non-minimal supersymmetric standard model, we calculate its effective Higgs potential by integrating out the dominant quantum effects due to stop squarks. We then discuss the phenomenological implications of the Higgs scalars predicted by the theory for the present and future high-energy colliders. In particular, we find that our new minimal non-minimal supersymmetric model can naturally accommodate a relatively light charged Higgs boson, with a mass close to the present experimental lower bound.Comment: 63 pages (12 figures), extended versio
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