44,495 research outputs found
The highway to hooliganism? An evaluation of the impact of combat sport participation on individual criminality
Factors influencing the development and carbohydrate metabolism of Echinococcus granulosus in dogs
Echinococcus granulosus adult worms, 35 days postinfection, were measured for dispersion in the intestines of 10 dogs, a range of morphological characters, and the excreted end products of carbohydrate catabolism following 4 hr incubation in vitro. Most worms were found in the proximal sections of the small intestine, but the pattern of dispersion differed between dogs. Worm development varied both between dogs and between different regions of the small intestine of individual dogs. Overall there was a high level of variability with no simple patterns. Worm metabolism was related to worm development and, also independently, to local population density within the intestine. Larger, more mature worms produced less lactate and, at higher densities. worms tended to produce more acetate and succinate (pathways with a higher energy yield than lactate) and less ethanol. Thus, both more developed worms and high population density are associated with a shift from cytosolic to mitochondrial metabolism. The variation between worm populations along the small intestine along with the observed variation between worm populations from sibling dogs infected with genetically identical parasites suggests that the local host environment has a significant effect on parasite development
Naturalness of the Coleman-Glashow Mass Relation in the 1/N_c Expansion: an Update
A new measurement of the Xi^0 mass verifies the accuracy of the
Coleman-Glashow relation at the level predicted by the 1/N_c expansion. Values
for other baryon isospin mass splittings are updated, and continue to agree
with the 1/N_c hierarchy.Comment: 6 pages, revte
Research instrumentation for tornado electromagnetics emissions detection
Instrumentation for receiving, processing, and recording HF/VHF electromagnetic emissions from severe weather activity is described. Both airborne and ground-based instrumentation units are described on system and subsystem levels. Design considerations, design decisions, and the rationale behind the decisions are given. Performance characteristics are summarized and recommendations for improvements are given. The objectives, procedures, and test results of the following are presented: (1) airborne flight test in the Midwest U.S.A. (Spring 1975) and at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida (Summer 1975); (2) ground-based data collected in North Georgia (Summer/Fall 1975); and (3) airborne flight test in the Midwest (late Spring 1976) and at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida (Summer 1976). The Midwest tests concentrated on severe weather with tornadic activity; the Florida and Georgia tests monitored air mass convective thunderstorm characteristics. Supporting ground truth data from weather radars and sferics DF nets are described
Converting energy from fusion into useful forms
If fusion power reactors are to be feasible, it will still be necessary to
convert the energy of the nuclear reaction into usable form. The heat produced
will be removed from the reactor core by a primary coolant, which might be
water, helium, molten lithium-lead, molten lithium-containing salt, or CO2. The
heat could then be transferred to a conventional Rankine cycle or Brayton (gas
turbine) cycle. Alternatively it could be used for thermochemical processes
such as producing hydrogen or other transport fuels. Fusion presents new
problems because of the high energy neutrons released. These affect the
selection of materials and the operating temperature, ultimately determining
the choice of coolant and working cycle. The limited temperature ranges allowed
by present day irradiated structural materials, combined with the large
internal power demand of the plant, will limit the overall thermal efficiency.
The operating conditions of the fusion power source, the materials, coolant,
and energy conversion system will all need to be closely integrated.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical
Engineers, Part A: Journal of Power and Energy December 11, 201
THE TAX REFORM ACT OF 1986: ITS IMPACT ON PENNSYLVANIA FARMERS
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 was studied to determine its short-run impact on Pennsylvania farmers. For the 3,059 farms studied, the average increase in total tax obligation resulting from the TRA of 1986 was $446 per farm, or a 48 percent increase in federal income taxes actually paid in 1984. Differences in impact were found across farms categorized by commodity type. Egg producers were most severely impacted, while beef cattle producers least affected. In general, the increase in adjusted gross income was due to the loss of 60 percent exclusion on capital gain income.Agricultural Finance,
Experimental creep data for a built-up aluminum/titanium structure subjected to heating and loading
Experimental creep, temperature, and strain data resulting from a laboratory experiment on a built-up aluminum/titanium structure are presented. The structure and the experiment are described in detail. A heating and loading experiment lasting approximately six hours is conducted on a test structure. Considerable creep strain resulted from compressive stresses in the heated skin. Large residual stresses were found after the experiment was completed. The residual stresses in the substructure frames were large enough to preclude further cycles of creep experiments with this built-up structure because of concern that the frame webs would buckle
Bosonic Operator Methods for the Quark Model
Quark model matrix elements can be computed using bosonic operators and the
holomorphic representation for the harmonic oscillator. The technique is
illustrated for normal and exotic baryons for an arbitrary number of colors.
The computations are much simpler than those using conventional quark model
wavefunctions
Review of Bring on the books for everybody: how literary culture became popular culture by Jim Collins [2010]
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