549 research outputs found
1000-Mwe SGR. 90% ThO, 10% UO ALTERNATE FUEL CORE THERMAL AND HYDRAULIC ANALYSIS
The thermal and hydraulic core parameters were determined using the SORTD I code for 90% ThO/sub 2/, 10% UO/sub 2/ fuel both for (1) a core containing 592 fuel elements corresponding to the UC reference core with a maximum UC temperature of 2000 deg F and (2) a core containing 784 fuel elements corresponding to a UC core with a maximum UC temperature of 1750 deg F. Eighteen rod elements with 2.5 in./sup 2/ and 3.5 in./sup 2/ fuel areas, and 30 rod elements with 4.5 in./sup 2/ and 5.5 in./sup 2/ fuel areas are analyzed for 8 cases. (auth
The reaction 2H(p,pp)n in three kinematical configurations at E_p = 16 MeV
We measured the cross sections of the H(p,pp)n breakup reaction at
E=16 MeV in three kinematical configurations: the np final-state
interaction (FSI), the co-planar star (CST), and an intermediate-star (IST)
geometry. The cross sections are compared with theoretical predictions based on
the CD Bonn potential alone and combined with the updated 2-exchange
Tucson-Melbourne three-nucleon force (TM99'), calculated without inclusion of
the Coulomb interaction. The resulting excellent agreement between data and
pure CD Bonn predictions in the FSI testifies to the smallness of three-nucleon
force (3NF) effects as well as the insignificance of the Coulomb force for this
particular configuration and energy. The CST also agrees well whereas the IST
results show small deviations between measurements and theory seen before in
the pd breakup space-star geometries which point to possible Coulomb effects.
An additional comparison with EFT predictions (without 3NF) up to order NLO
shows excellent agreement in the FSI case and a rather similar agreement as for
CD Bonn in the CST and IST situations.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figure
Displaced Voices: A Journal of Migration, Archives and Cultural Heritage, Volume 3 Issue 1 (Spring 2023)
Twentieth Century Histories of Civic Societyâs Responses to Crises of Displacement: A Special Issue to mark the 70th Anniversary of Refugee Council
Displaced Voices is a biannual digital magazine produced twice a year by the Living Refugee Archive team at the University of East London. Displaced Voices aims to provide a digital platform for activists, archivists, researchers, practitioners and academics to contribute to issues pertaining to refugee and migration history; refugee and migrant rights; social justice; cultural heritage and archives. We welcome a range of contributions to the magazine including articles of between 1000-2000 words; reports on fieldwork in archival collections; book recommendations and reviews; and more creative pieces including (but not limited too) cartoons; photography; and poetry. We would also welcome news on activities; publication of reports, projects; letters and news from your own networks.
We welcome submissions from all writers whether you are a student, practitioner, activist or established academic. The Displaced Voices online magazine is born out of the collaborative and intersectional work that we have been undertaking through our work with the refugee and migration archives housed at the University of East London. Our work to date has explored the intersections of refugee and migration studies with narrative and life history research linked to oral history methods and archival approaches to the preservation, documentation and accessibility of archival resources recording the refugee experience.
This magazine is a collaborative project between the Living Refugee Archive at the University of East London; the Oral History Society Migration Special Interest Group and the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration Working Group on the History of Forced Migration and Refugees.
Thematically we are looking to engage with articles that explore the intersection of refugee and forced migration studies; history and cultural heritage studies; narrative research; oral history and archival science
Hubble Space Telescope Near-Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of Bright CEMP-s Stars
We present an elemental-abundance analysis, in the near-ultraviolet (NUV)
spectral range, for the bright carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars HD196944
(V = 8.40, [Fe/H] = -2.41) and HD201626 (V = 8.16, [Fe/H] = -1.51), based on
data acquired with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on the
Hubble Space Telescope. Both of these stars belong to the sub-class CEMP-s, and
exhibit clear over-abundances of heavy elements associated with production by
the slow neutron-capture process. HD196944 has been well-studied in the optical
region, but we are able to add abundance results for six species (Ge, Nb, Mo,
Lu, Pt, and Au) that are only accessible in the NUV. In addition, we provide
the first determination of its orbital period, P=1325 days. HD201626 has only a
limited number of abundance results based on previous optical work -- here we
add five new species from the NUV, including Pb. We compare these results with
models of binary-system evolution and s-process element production in stars on
the asymptotic giant branch, aiming to explain their origin and evolution. Our
best-fitting models for HD 196944 (M1,i = 0.9Mo, M2,i = 0.86Mo, for
[Fe/H]=-2.2), and HD 201626 (M1,i = 0.9Mo , M2,i = 0.76Mo , for [Fe/H]=-2.2;
M1,i = 1.6Mo , M2,i = 0.59Mo, for [Fe/H]=-1.5) are consistent with the current
accepted scenario for the formation of CEMP-s stars.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
Modification of Unit Discharges in the Medial Geniculate Nucleus by Click-Shock Pairing
The present experiment was concerned with some discharge properties of single neurons in the medial geniculate body of the locally anesthetized paralyzed cat. The effect of pairing clicks with paw shock upon discharge rate and pattern was of particular concern. Twelve neurons obtained from 11 cats were studied exhaustively for periods up to 4 hr. Under control conditions, rate stationarity for both spontaneous and click-evoked activity was found in only 3/12 of the units. Click-shock pairing produced rate changes in lo/12 of the cells; an increase in rate predominated. The pattern of discharges was altered in 9/E of the cells as a consequence of click-shock pairing. Specifically, the initial short-latency discharge was modified; there was a reduction in the proportion of spikes in the first peak to the total number of spikes in the poststimulus time histogram. This reduction was not merely a consequence of increases in over-all rate of discharge. In the case of one cell which was inhibited rather than excited by click stimulation, the click-shock pairing resulted in a reduction in the duration of inhibition. Control findings indicated that the pattern modifications were not due to a change in stimulus intensity, the unconditioned effects of the shock itself, or to an increase in arousal level
An active vesicle priming machinery suppresses axon regeneration upon adult CNS injury
Axons in the adult mammalian central nervous system fail to regenerate after spinal cord injury. Neurons lose their capacity to regenerate during development, but the intracellular processes underlying this loss are unclear. We found that critical components of the presynaptic active zone prevent axon regeneration in adult mice. Transcriptomic analysis combined with live-cell imaging revealed that adult primary sensory neurons downregulate molecular constituents of the synapse as they acquire the ability to rapidly grow their axons. Pharmacogenetic reduction of neuronal excitability stimulated axon regeneration after adult spinal cord injury. Genetic gain- and loss-of-function experiments uncovered that essential synaptic vesicle priming proteins of the presynaptic active zone, but not clostridial-toxin-sensitive VAMP-family SNARE proteins, inhibit axon regeneration. Systemic administration of Baclofen reduced voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx in primary sensory neurons and promoted their regeneration after spinal cord injury. These findings indicate that functional presynaptic active zones constitute a major barrier to axon regeneration
The Chemodynamics of the Stellar Populations in M31 from APOGEE Integrated Light Spectroscopy
We present analysis of nearly 1,000 near-infrared, integrated light spectra
from APOGEE in the inner 7 kpc of M31. We utilize full spectrum fitting
with A-LIST simple stellar population spectral templates that represent a
population of stars with the same age, [M/H], and [/M]. With this, we
determine the mean kinematics, metallicities, abundances, and ages of
the stellar populations of M31's bar, bulge, and inner disk (4-7 kpc). We
find a non-axisymmetric velocity field in M31 resulting from the presence of a
bar. The bulge of M31 is metal-poor relative to the disk ([M/H] =
dex), features minima in metallicity on either side
of the bar ([M/H] -0.2), and is enhanced in abundance
([/M] = ). The disk of M31 within 7 kpc
is enhanced in both metallicity ([M/H] = ) and
abundance ([/M] = ). Both of these
structural components are uniformly old at 12 Gyr. We find the
metallicity increases with distance from the center of M31, with the steepest
gradient along the disk major axis ( dex/kpc). This gradient is
the result of changing light contributions from the metal-poor bulge and
metal-rich disk. The chemodynamics of stellar populations encodes information
about a galaxy's chemical enrichment, star formation history, and merger
history, allowing us to discuss new constraints on M31's formation. Our results
provide a stepping stone between our understanding of the Milky Way and other
external galaxies
Cross sections and tensor analyzing powers Ayy of the reaction 1H(âd,pp)n in âsymmetric constant relative energyâ geometries at Ed=19 MeV
We measured the cross sections and tensor analyzing powers of the 1H(âd, pp)n breakup reaction at Ed=19 MeV in four symmetric constant relative energy (SCRE) configurations. The data are compared with theoretical predictions from four different approaches: the first based on high-precision (semi)phenomenological potentials alone or, the second, combined with model three-nucleon forces, and the third based on chiral forces up to next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in the chiral expansion. In these cases the Coulomb interaction is not included. In addition, a fourth approach consists in a comparison with predictions based on CD Bonn including the Î excitation and the Coulomb force. In all cases the measured cross sections are significantly below the theoretical values, whereas the magnitudes of the tensor analyzing powers agree within the error bars in three of the four cases. The apparent discrepancies in the breakup cross sections are similar to the known differences for the space-star breakup. This adds to the data base of unsolved low-energy discrepancies (puzzles)
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