2,139 research outputs found

    Office of Director of Practice

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    Abuses in the Area of Charitable Solicitation

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    Ethical Issues in Tax Practice

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    Self-organized quasiparticles and other patterns in planar gas-discharge systems

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    A summary is given for the work that has been done on pattern formation in planar ac- and dc- gas-discharge systems with high ohmic and dielectric barrier respectively at the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Muenster. WeIl defined stationary and moving solitary filaments are observed that may be referred to as selforganized quasiparticles. Among others, filaments can be scattered, generated, or annihilated, and the formation of filament clusters ("molecules") is observed. For appropriate parameters filaments in the "gaseous" phase are observed, and the condensation of large assemblies to "crystalline" phase and "liquid" phase is recorded, too. Filaments may generate superstructures e.g. domain patterns. The experimental work demonstrates that a filament is a generic pattern. In addition, reference is made to non-filamentary patterns. Finally, a list of references referring to models and numerical treatment is presented

    Ca2+ uptake to purified secretory vesicles from bovine neurohypophyses

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    Purified secretory vesicles isolated from bovine neurohypophyses were found to take up Ca2+ when incubated at 30°C in media containing 10−7 to 10−4 M free Ca2+. At 10−4 free Ca2+ 19 nmol/mg protein were taken up within 30 min. The initial uptake at this Ca2+ concentration was about 2 nmol/mg protein per min. The uptake of Ca2+ to secretory vesicles was not affected by ATP, oligomycin, ruthenium red, trifluoperazine, Mg2+ or K+, but was inhibited by Na+ and Sr2+. From these characteristics it can be concluded that the uptake system does not utilize directly ATP (as the Ca2+-ATPases known to be present in the cell membrane and the endoplasmic reticulum) and is different from the mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake system driven by respiration and/or ATP hydrolysis. However, Ca2+-Na+ exchange may well operate: In experiments using different concentrations of Na+ we found half-maximal inhibition of Ca2+ uptake with 33.3 mM Na+. An analysis of the data in a Hill plot indicated that at least 2 Na+ would be exchanged for 1 Ca2+. Also, it was found that Ca2+ previously taken up could be released again by external Na+ but not by K+

    Localized patterns in planar gas-discharge systems

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    A summary is given of parts of the work that has been done on pattern formation in planar ac- and dc- gas-discharge systems with high ohmic and dielectric barrier respectively, at the Institute of Applied Physics of the University of Muenster. In addition, a qualitative reactiondiffusion model is reviewed that takes account of many of the effects that have been observed experimentally

    The Vitamin A Content of Soybean Silage and of A.I.V., Molasses, and Common Corn Silages, and the Effect of Feeding these Materials upon the Vitamin A Content of Milk

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    A study was made of the vitamin A content of soybean silage, and of A.l.V., molasses, and common corn silage. The silages were fed to groups of cows and the vitamin A content of their milk determined. The vitamin A determinations were made by feeding the silage or the milk to groups of rats whose body stores of this vitamin had been depleted by being fed a vitamin-A-deficient ration. Approximately 780 rats were used in these experiments. There were no apparent ill effects of feeding as much as 3.2 grams of the A.l.V. silage per rat per day for eight weeks. This was 20 to 30 per cent of the food consumed. The A. l.V. silage contained only slightly more vitamin A than did the molasses silage. The ordinary corn silage contained less vitamin A than either the A.I.V. or molasses silage. The soybean silage was inferior to any of the other silages as a source of vitamin A. Milk produced by cows receiving these silages as the only source of roughage ranked in the same order of vitamin A potency as did the silages, namely A.I.V. silage, molasses silage, and common silage. On the other hand when a good g ade of alfalfa hay served as the only source of roughage, the milk produced contained more vitamin A than did the milk produced by cows receiving A.I.V. silage as the only roughage. In another experiment one group of cows was fed both molasses silage and alfalfa hay, while a second group received A.I.V. silage and alfalfa hay. The hay was fed ad libitum and the group which received the molasses silage consumed the most hay. In this instance the milk produced by the group receiving the molasses silage contained more vitamin A than did the milk produced by the A.l.V. silage group, which was probably due to the greater consumption of alfalfa hay

    Water issues in Hawaii: public attitudes in 2004 and 2010

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    This report examines Hawai‘i residents' awareness of, attitudes about, and actions taken concerning water quality. "Water quality" is a measure of the suitability of water for a particular use, such as drinking, recreation, agricultural irrigation, or protection and maintenance of aquatic life

    The Non-Archimedean Theory of Discrete Systems

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    In the paper, we study behavior of discrete dynamical systems (automata) w.r.t. transitivity; that is, speaking loosely, we consider how diverse may be behavior of the system w.r.t. variety of word transformations performed by the system: We call a system completely transitive if, given arbitrary pair a,ba,b of finite words that have equal lengths, the system A\mathfrak A, while evolution during (discrete) time, at a certain moment transforms aa into bb. To every system A\mathfrak A, we put into a correspondence a family FA\mathcal F_{\mathfrak A} of continuous maps of a suitable non-Archimedean metric space and show that the system is completely transitive if and only if the family FA\mathcal F_{\mathfrak A} is ergodic w.r.t. the Haar measure; then we find easy-to-verify conditions the system must satisfy to be completely transitive. The theory can be applied to analyze behavior of straight-line computer programs (in particular, pseudo-random number generators that are used in cryptography and simulations) since basic CPU instructions (both numerical and logical) can be considered as continuous maps of a (non-Archimedean) metric space Z2\mathbb Z_2 of 2-adic integers.Comment: The extended version of the talk given at MACIS-201
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