27,512 research outputs found
Nica-Toeplitz algebras associated with product systems over right LCM semigroups
We prove uniqueness of representations of Nica-Toeplitz algebras associated
to product systems of -correspondences over right LCM semigroups by
applying our previous abstract uniqueness results developed for
-precategories. Our results provide an interpretation of conditions
identified in work of Fowler and Fowler-Raeburn, and apply also to their
crossed product twisted by a product system, in the new context of right LCM
semigroups, as well as to a new, Doplicher-Roberts type -algebra
associated to the Nica-Toeplitz algebra. As a derived construction we develop
Nica-Toeplitz crossed products by actions with completely positive maps. This
provides a unified framework for Nica-Toeplitz semigroup crossed products by
endomorphisms and by transfer operators. We illustrate these two classes of
examples with semigroup -algebras of right and left semidirect products.Comment: Title changed from "Nica-Toeplitz algebras associated with right
tensor C*-precategories over right LCM semigroups: part II examples". The
manuscript accepted in J. Math. Anal. App
Differences in health symptoms among residents living near illegal dump sites in Los Laureles Canyon, Tijuana, Mexico: a cross sectional survey.
Living near landfills is a known health hazard prompting recognition of environmental injustice. The study aim was to compare self-reported symptoms of ill health among residents of four neighborhoods, living in haphazardly constructed settlements surrounded by illegal dumpsites in Tijuana, Mexico. One adult from each of 388 households located in Los Laureles Canyon were interviewed about demographics, health status, and symptoms. Distance from each residence to both the nearest dumpsite and the canyon bottom was assessed. The neighborhoods were selected from locations within the canyon, and varied with respect to proximity to dump sites. Residents of San Bernardo reported significantly higher frequencies of ill-health symptoms than the other neighborhoods, including extreme fatigue (OR 3.01 (95% CI 1.6-5.5)), skin problems/irritations (OR 2.73 (95% CI 1.3-5.9)), stomach discomfort (OR 2.47 (1.3-4.8)), eye irritation/tears (OR 2.02 (1.2-3.6)), and confusion/difficulty concentrating (OR 2.39 (1.2-4.8)). Proximity to dumpsites did not explain these results, that varied only slightly when adjusted for distance to nearest dumpsite or distance to the canyon bottom. Because San Bernardo has no paved roads, we hypothesize that dust and the toxicants it carries is a possible explanation for this difference. Studies are needed to further document this association and sources of toxicants
X-ray Emission from Haloes of Simulated Disc Galaxies
Bolometric and 0.2-2 keV X-ray luminosities of the hot gas haloes of
simulated disc galaxies have been calculated at redshift z=0. The TreeSPH
simulations are fully cosmological and the sample of 44 disc galaxies span a
range in characteristic circular speeds of V_c = 130-325 km/s. The galaxies
have been obtained in simulations with a considerable range of physical
parameters, varying the baryonic fraction, the gas metallicity, the
meta-galactic UV field, the cosmology, the dark matter type, and also the
numerical resolution. The models are found to be in agreement with the (few)
relevant X-ray observations available at present. The amount of hot gas in the
haloes is also consistent with constraints from pulsar dispersion measures in
the Milky Way. Forthcoming XMM and Chandra observations should enable much more
stringent tests and provide constraints on the physical parameters. We find
that simple cooling flow models over-predict X-ray luminosities by up to two
orders of magnitude for high (but still realistic) cooling efficiencies
relative to the models presented here. Our results display a clear trend that
increasing cooling efficiency leads to decreasing X-ray luminosities at z=0.
The reason is found to be that increased cooling efficiency leads to a
decreased fraction of hot gas relative to total baryonic mass inside of the
virial radius at present. At gas metal abundances of a third solar this hot gas
fraction becomes as low as just a few percent. We also find that most of the
X-ray emission comes from the inner parts (inner about 20 kpc) of the hot
galactic haloes. Finally, we find for realistic choices of the physical
parameters that disc galaxy haloes possibly were more than one order of
magnitude brighter in soft X-ray emission at z=1, than at present.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, MNRAS LaTeX forma
Manganese-56 coincidence-counting facility precisely measures neutron-source strength
Precise measurement of neutron-source strength is provided by a manganese 56 coincidence-counting facility using the manganese-bath technique. This facility combines nuclear instrumentation with coincidence-counting techniques to handle a wide variety of radioisotope-counting requirements
Crossing the Logarithmic Barrier for Dynamic Boolean Data Structure Lower Bounds
This paper proves the first super-logarithmic lower bounds on the cell probe
complexity of dynamic boolean (a.k.a. decision) data structure problems, a
long-standing milestone in data structure lower bounds.
We introduce a new method for proving dynamic cell probe lower bounds and use
it to prove a lower bound on the operational
time of a wide range of boolean data structure problems, most notably, on the
query time of dynamic range counting over ([Pat07]). Proving an
lower bound for this problem was explicitly posed as one of
five important open problems in the late Mihai P\v{a}tra\c{s}cu's obituary
[Tho13]. This result also implies the first lower bound for the
classical 2D range counting problem, one of the most fundamental data structure
problems in computational geometry and spatial databases. We derive similar
lower bounds for boolean versions of dynamic polynomial evaluation and 2D
rectangle stabbing, and for the (non-boolean) problems of range selection and
range median.
Our technical centerpiece is a new way of "weakly" simulating dynamic data
structures using efficient one-way communication protocols with small advantage
over random guessing. This simulation involves a surprising excursion to
low-degree (Chebychev) polynomials which may be of independent interest, and
offers an entirely new algorithmic angle on the "cell sampling" method of
Panigrahy et al. [PTW10]
Prevalence of Intimate Partner Violence Among the Maternal-Fetal Medicine Population
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is increasingly understood as an important public health issue. It is well understood that intimate partner violence has many negative effects on its survivors ranging from physical to mental health conditions. The population of people who experience intimate partner violence and population of pregnant women are both vulnerable populations. Examining the two populations together demands a trauma-informed approach and an understanding of the intricacies of both pregnancy and intimate partner violence. While IPV has been studied among the pregnant population, intimate partner violence as it relates to the maternal fetal medicine (MFM) or high-risk pregnancy population is not yet well understood. The purpose of this study is to describe the prevalence and effects of IPV among the MFM population at the Methodist Perinatal Center in Omaha, NE. This study analyzed secondary data obtained through the Abuse Assessment Screen (AAS) that was incorporated into the electronic medical record (EMR) at Methodist Perinatal Center. Data were input into SPSS from which descriptive statistics and a bivariate analysis (Chi square test) were entered. This study found that 5.6% of patients at Methodist Perinatal Center have experienced IPV. Further, this study found that seven maternal and fetal health outcomes are associated with IPV including: BMI ≥25, STI, psychiatric disorder, birth weight \u3c 2.499kg, ultrasound anomaly, non-employer-based insurance (self-pay and Medicaid), and non-married status These results show that it is important to screen for IPV in the high-risk pregnancy setting. As this study shows that IPV occurs and negatively affects women and their children, there is a need for further research on the effects of IPV and development of interventions for the high-risk pregnant population
The Language of Leadership
Companies serve their constituents, produce goods and sell services through the relationships they build which serve to increase the company\u27s market share. This sustains the business. Otherwise, they are forgotten. This appears to be the case with any viable company. Companies, across many industries, cultivate their relationships by utilizing many economic and social tools. But, no tool is more important to gain a corporation competitive edge than the corporate commodity called jargon. I began thinking of the corporate arena as a place that needs effective leadership to explain the jargon that describes it. I decided to investigate the common business jargon used, the characteristics of the current business environment, and to postulate a definition that one aspect of effective leadership is successfutly explaining the obscure new vocabulary of the business environment for employees
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