1,510 research outputs found
Parliamentary Engagement with the Charter: Rethinking the Idea of Legislative Rights Review
Canada has contributed an important idea to constitutional thought about how to conceive of legislative responsibilities under a bill of rights. This idea, which can be referred to as legislative rights review, suggests that rights should become a core consideration when evaluating proposed legislation. The idea has been borrowed by several other parliamentary jurisdictions, despite the fact that it has never functioned effectively in Canada. The paper argues that Canada should revisit the benefits associated with legislative rights review, and discusses reforms to revitalize how it operates in Canada, which are influenced by the United Kingdom’s adaptation of the idea of legislative rights review
Spatially resolved ultrafast precessional magnetization reversal
Spatially resolved measurements of quasi-ballistic precessional magnetic
switching in a microstructure are presented. Crossing current wires allow
detailed study of the precessional switching induced by coincident longitudinal
and transverse magnetic field pulses. Though the response is initially
spatially uniform, dephasing occurs leading to nonuniformity and transient
demagnetization. This nonuniformity comes in spite of a novel method for
suppression of end domains in remanence. The results have implications for the
reliability of ballistic precessional switching in magnetic devices.Comment: 17 pages (including 4 figures), submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Vetting bills in the Scottish Parliament for legislative competence
Unlike Acts of the United Kingdom Parliament, primary legislation made by the Scottish Parliament is not immune from judicial review. The devolved legislature is a parliament of limited competence, the boundaries of which are found in both statute and the common law. Accordingly, an Act of the Scottish Parliament (ASP) "is not law" in so far as, inter alia, it "relates to" a reserved matter, or is incompatible with a Convention right or with EU law, and, in extreme circumstances, it is also invalid to the extent that it violates the fundamental principle(s) of the rule of law. Where the Parliament does legislate beyond those limits, courts have the power to set aside the offending Act
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ASCI Grid Services summary report.
The ASCI Grid Services (initially called Distributed Resource Management) project was started under DisCom{sup 2} when distant and distributed computing was identified as a technology critical to the success of the ASCI Program. The goals of the Grid Services project has and continues to be to provide easy, consistent access to all the ASCI hardware and software resources across the nuclear weapons complex using computational grid technologies, increase the usability of ASCI hardware and software resources by providing interfaces for resource monitoring, job submission, job monitoring, and job control, and enable the effective use of high-end computing capability through complex-wide resource scheduling and brokering. In order to increase acceptance of the new technology, the goal included providing these services in both the unclassified as well as the classified user's environment. This paper summarizes the many accomplishments and lessons learned over approximately five years of the ASCI Grid Services Project. It also provides suggestions on how to renew/restart the effort for grid services capability when the situation is right for that need
Towards single-molecule nanomechanical mass spectrometry
Mass spectrometry provides rapid and quantitative identification of protein species with relatively low sample consumption. The trend towards biological analysis at increasingly smaller scales, ultimately down to the volume of an individual cell, continues, and mass spectrometry with a sensitivity of a few to single molecules will be necessary. Nanoelectromechanical systems provide unparalleled mass sensitivity, which is now sufficient for the detection of individual molecular species in real time. Here, we report the first demonstration of mass spectrometry based on single biological molecule detection with a nanoelectromechanical system. In our nanoelectromechanical–mass spectrometry system, nanoparticles and protein species are introduced by electrospray injection from the fluid phase in ambient conditions into vacuum, and are subsequently delivered to the nanoelectromechanical system detector by hexapole ion optics. Precipitous frequency shifts, proportional to the mass, are recorded in real time as analytes adsorb, one by one, onto a phase-locked, ultrahigh-frequency nanoelectromechanical resonator. These first nanoelectromechanical system–mass spectrometry spectra, obtained with modest mass sensitivity from only several hundred mass adsorption events, presage the future capabilities of this approach. We also outline the substantial improvements that are feasible in the near term, some of which are unique to nanoelectromechanical system based-mass spectrometry
Time-resolved ferromagnetic resonance in epitaxial Fe1-xCox films
Magnetodynamics in epitaxial Fe1-xCox films on GaAs (100) are studied using
time-resolved ferromagnetic resonance, in which the free precession of the
magnetization after an impulsive excitation is measured using the polar Kerr
effect. The sample is rotated with respect to the static and pulsed field
directions, providing a complete mapping of the free energy surface and
characteristic relaxation times. The magnetic response can be simulated with a
simple coherent rotation model except in the immediate vicinity of switching
fields. Bulk and surface anisotropies are identified, and unusual dynamics
associated with the coexistence of cubic and uniaxial anisotropies are
observed.Comment: PDF - 4 figure
A phylum-wide survey reveals multiple independent gains of head regeneration in nemertea
Animals vary widely in their ability to regenerate, suggesting that regenerative ability has a rich evolutionary history. However, our understanding of this history remains limited because regenerative ability has only been evaluated in a tiny fraction of species. Available comparative regeneration studies have identified losses of regenerative ability, yet clear documentation of gains is lacking. We assessed ability to regenerate heads and tails either through our own experiments or from literature reports for 35 species of Nemertea spanning the diversity of the phylum, including representatives of 10 families and all three orders. We generated a phylogenetic framework using sequence data to reconstruct the evolutionary history of head and tail regenerative ability across the phylum and found that all evaluated species can remake a posterior end but surprisingly few could regenerate a complete head. Our analysis reconstructs a nemertean ancestor unable to regenerate a head and indicates independent gains of head regenerative ability in at least four separate lineages, with one of these gains taking place as recently as the last 10-15 Myr. Our study highlights nemerteans as a valuable group for studying evolution of regeneration and identifying mechanisms associated with repeated gains of regenerative ability.Fil: Zattara, Eduardo Enrique. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Centro Regional Universidad Bariloche. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente; Argentina. National Museum of Natural History; Estados Unidos. University of Maryland; Estados UnidosFil: Fernández Álvarez, Fernando Ángel. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. Instituto de Ciencias del Mar; EspañaFil: Hiebert, Terra. University of Oregon; Estados UnidosFil: Bely, Alexandra. University of Maryland; Estados UnidosFil: Norenburg, Jon L.. National Museum of Natural History; Estados Unido
Observation of Magnetic Supercooling of the Transition to the Vortex State
We demonstrate that the transition from the high-field state to the vortex
state in a nanomagnetic disk shows the magnetic equivalent of supercooling.
This is evidence that this magnetic transition can be described in terms of a
modified Landau first-order phase transition. To accomplish this we have
measured the bulk magnetization of single magnetic disks using nanomechanical
torsional resonator torque magnetometry. This allows observation of single
vortex creation events without averaging over an array of disks or over
multiple runs.Comment: 11 pages preprint, 4 figures, accepted to New Journal of Physic
Analyzing Power for He-4(n-],N)he-4 Elastic-Scattering at 50.4 Mev
Journals published by the American Physical Society can be found at http://publish.aps.org
Magnetic Cellular Nonlinear Network with Spin Wave Bus for Image Processing
We describe and analyze a cellular nonlinear network based on magnetic
nanostructures for image processing. The network consists of magneto-electric
cells integrated onto a common ferromagnetic film - spin wave bus. The
magneto-electric cell is an artificial two-phase multiferroic structure
comprising piezoelectric and ferromagnetic materials. A bit of information is
assigned to the cell's magnetic polarization, which can be controlled by the
applied voltage. The information exchange among the cells is via the spin waves
propagating in the spin wave bus. Each cell changes its state as a combined
effect of two: the magneto-electric coupling and the interaction with the spin
waves. The distinct feature of the network with spin wave bus is the ability to
control the inter-cell communication by an external global parameter - magnetic
field. The latter makes possible to realize different image processing
functions on the same template without rewiring or reconfiguration. We present
the results of numerical simulations illustrating image filtering, erosion,
dilation, horizontal and vertical line detection, inversion and edge detection
accomplished on one template by the proper choice of the strength and direction
of the external magnetic field. We also present numerical assets on the major
network parameters such as cell density, power dissipation and functional
throughput, and compare them with the parameters projected for other
nano-architectures such as CMOL-CrossNet, Quantum Dot Cellular Automata, and
Quantum Dot Image Processor. Potentially, the utilization of spin waves
phenomena at the nanometer scale may provide a route to low-power consuming and
functional logic circuits for special task data processing
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