4,805 research outputs found

    John B. Mason to Dr. Silver, 18 October 1963

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    Personal correspondenc

    The Federal Republic of Germany

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    It is my job this morning to specialize on the subject of The Federal Republic of Germany; to see what Germany looks like in American eyes; and to try to understand Germans, and our relationship with them, which is not always simple

    Higgs Boson Decays to Neutralinos in Low-Scale Gauge Mediation

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    We study the decays of a standard model-like MSSM Higgs boson to pairs of neutralinos, each of which subsequently decays promptly to a photon and a gravitino. Such decays can arise in supersymmetric scenarios where supersymmetry breaking is mediated to us by gauge interactions with a relatively light gauge messenger sector (M_{mess} < 100 TeV). This process gives rise to a collider signal consisting of a pair of photons and missing energy. In the present work we investigate the bounds on this scenario within the minimal supersymmetric standard model from existing collider data. We also study the prospects for discovering the Higgs boson through this decay mode with upcoming data from the Tevatron and the LHC.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, added references and discussion of neutralino couplings, same as journal versio

    Note and Comment

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    The Death of Professor Knowlton - The loss to the Law School and to his colleagues of the law faculty in the death of Jerome Cyril Knowlton cannot be expressed. For thirty-one years, the longest period of active service ever given by any man to this Law School, Mr. Knowlton was an effective factor in the development of the institution and in the moulding of the character and the legal ideas and ideals of the thousands of graduates who have passed through the Law School into the service of community and state and country, at the bar, upon the bench, in legislative halls, and indeed in all of the walks of life. Few if any men now living have been known to as many law students as was Mr. Knowlton. And few indeed are they whose influence has been as widely felt, for he made a vivid and lasting impression upon all who came in contact with him

    IMMUNODEFICIENT R2G2 MOUSE STRAIN YIELDS SPLEENS WITH UNUSUAL CYTOARCHITECTURE AND SYMPATHETIC INNERVATION

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    The nervous system and immune system contact one another through two-way communication in order to establish and preserve homeostasis. The sympathetic neurotransmitter norepinephrine has an impact on how the immune system responds by affecting regional blood flow and activation of adrenergic receptors on leukocytes. Former studies showed that immune cells are capable of releasing nerve growth factor allowing for the establishment and continuation of sympathetic nerves in targeted tissues. From this gathered information, it was hypothesized that sympathetic nerves would prove to be less frequent in spleens from the immunodeficient R2G2 mouse strain (Envigo) when compared to 129P3/J (129) and C57BL/6 (C57) strains. R2G2 mice are an immunodeficient strain that lacks functional T, B, and natural killer cells. Ten to eleven week aged-matched male mice were measured by body weight, spleen weight, and temperature. Spleens were cut and fixed for histological investigation. Sympathetic nerves were labeled by immunostaining tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) was used to stain spleen sections in order to evaluate cytoarchitecture. Von Willebrand factor (VWF) was used to immunostain for megakaryocytes. R2G2 mice showed slightly higher temperatures and body weights but yielded a significantly smaller spleen weight (R2G2, 38.20 ± 1.48; 129, 65.08 ± 11.71; C57, 81.33 ± 8.38; P\u3c 0.0001, ANOVA). TH stain revealed sympathetic innervation in all strains but location and morphology differed in R2G2 mice compared to controls. Control spleens had nerves which entered white pulp regions of the spleen and were closely related to leukocytes. Fiber profiles in the controls were filamentous with small acute bends. R2G2 differed by having (TH+) nerve fibers more associated with arteries and less localized in the surrounding parenchyma. The fibers were abnormally swollen and held a more granular shape instead of a filamentous shape. The H&E stain showed clear red and white pulp zones in the control spleens with 129 showing more distinct germinal centers than C57. R2G2 H&E sections showed cytoarchitecture with indistinct pulp areas. VWF staining revealed R2G2 mice had an abundant amount of megakaryocytes versus control mice megakaryocyte counts (R2G2, 11.28 ± 3.87 per 20X field; 129, 1.73 ± 0.70; C57, 1.42 ± 0.13; P\u3c 0.0001, ANOVA) and extramedullary hematopoiesis was highly prominent. This evidence supports that leukocytes secrete neurotrophic factors or are vital to establishing normal growth of TH+ nerves toward the white pulp. Leukocytes may not be required for sympathetic innervation of blood vessels in the spleen, however, lack of leukocytes shows TH+ nerve fibers with abnormal morphology in severely immune threatened mice

    THE FUTURE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS AS AN ACADEMIC FIELD: YOUR FATE IN 1998

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    The academic study of information systems is dynamic and exciting. It tends to have very fluid boundaries. Researchers in information systems venture into problem areas associated with such diverse fields as computer science, communications, cognitive psychology, and sociology. Information systems are studied in the context of innovation, organizational change, and competitive advantage. The changing technology provides new and revisited opportunities for investigation and problem solving. Until quite recently, the information systems faculty were the custodians in schools of management of most of the technical knowledge of organizational computing. That technical knowledge is being rapidly diffused to the entire faculty. Faculty in accounting at one time fled from computers; they now embrace them. The same is true of other functional areas in schools of management. What will happen to the academic field of information systems when the computer expertise is shared by most faculty members

    Child Acute Malnutrition and Mortality in Populations Affected by Displacement in the Horn of Africa, 1997–2009

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    Drought and conflict in the Horn of Africa are causing population displacement, increasing risks of child mortality and malnutrition. Humanitarian agencies are trying to mitigate the impact, with limited resources. Data from previous years may help guide decisions. Trends in different populations affected by displacement (1997–2009) were analyzed to investigate: (1) how elevated malnutrition and mortality were among displaced compared to host populations; (2) whether the mortality/malnutrition relation changed through time; and (3) how useful is malnutrition in identifying high mortality situations. Under-five mortality rates (usually from 90-day recall, as deaths/10,000/day: U5MR) and global acute malnutrition (wasting prevalences, < −2SDs of references plus edema: GAM) were extracted from reports of 1,175 surveys carried out between 1997–2009 in the Horn of Africa; these outcome indicators were analyzed by livelihood (pastoral, agricultural) and by displacement status (refugee/internally displaced, local resident/host population, mixed); associations between these indicators were examined, stratifying by status. Patterns of GAM and U5MR plotted over time by country and livelihood clarified trends and showed substantial correspondence. Over the period GAM was steady but U5MR generally fell by nearly half. Average U5MR was similar overall between displaced and local residents. GAM was double on average for pastoralists compared with agriculturalists (17% vs. 8%), but was not different between displaced and local populations. Agricultural populations showed increased U5MR when displaced, in contrast to pastoralist. U5MR rose sharply with increasing GAM, at different GAM thresholds depending on livelihood. Higher GAM cut-points for pastoralists than agriculturalists would better predict elevated U5MR (1/10,000/day) or emergency levels (2/10,000/day) in the Horn of Africa; cut-points of 20–25% GAM in pastoral populations and 10–15% GAM in agriculturalists are suggested. The GAM cut-points in current use do not vary by livelihood, and this needs to be changed, tailoring cut points to livelihood groups, to better identify priorities for intervention. This could help to prioritize limited resources in the current situation of food insecurity and save lives

    Infectious Mononucleosis: Medical Staff Conference

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    Theory of decoherence in a matter wave Talbot-Lau interferometer

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    We present a theoretical framework to describe the effects of decoherence on matter waves in Talbot-Lau interferometry. Using a Wigner description of the stationary beam the loss of interference contrast can be calculated in closed form. The formulation includes both the decohering coupling to the environment and the coherent interaction with the grating walls. It facilitates the quantitative distinction of genuine quantum interference from the expectations of classical mechanics. We provide realistic microscopic descriptions of the experimentally relevant interactions in terms of the bulk properties of the particles and show that the treatment is equivalent to solving the corresponding master equation in paraxial approximation.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures (minor corrections; now in two-column format
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