2,761 research outputs found
The Canadian Harp Seal Hunt: A Moral Assessment
Sumner is a philosopher who attempts to unpick the various issues in the debate over the Harp Seal hunt in Canada. An objective treatment of the issues underlying the harp seal hunt is complex because of the high level of emotion on both sides, but it is also necessary to attempt it if uncommitted and reasonable persons are to be provided with some guidance about what to think concerning the morality of the hunt
The Impact of Nuclear Reaction Rate Uncertainties on Evolutionary Studies of the Nova Outburst
The observable consequences of a nova outburst depend sensitively on the
details of the thermonuclear runaway which initiates the outburst. One of the
more important sources of uncertainty is the nuclear reaction data used as
input for the evolutionary calculations. A recent paper by Starrfield, Truran,
Wiescher, & Sparks (1998) has demonstrated that changes in the reaction rate
library used within a nova simulation have significant effects, not just on the
production of individual isotopes (which can change by an order of magnitude),
but on global observables such as the peak luminosity and the amount of mass
ejected. We present preliminary results of systematic analyses of the impact of
reaction rate uncertainties on nova nucleosynthesis.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. to appear in "Cosmic Explosions", proceeding of
the 10th Annual October Astrophysics Conference in Maryland (ed. S.S. Holt
and W. W. Zhang
University Governance and Campus Speech
Hate speech, understood broadly, is any form of expression intended to arouse hatred or contempt toward members of a particular social group. When university administrators have reason to believe that a planned speaking event on campus may feature hate speech (at least in the eyes of some), how should they respond? In this paper I address this question as it arises for Canadian universities. I argue that, where the regulation of campus speech is concerned, the right course of action for university administrators is nearly always to do absolutely nothing. They will have reason to become actively involved only in order to ensure that a speaking event proceeds safely, or when it threatens to disrupt the functioning of the university, or when it is itself threatened with disruption by protesting groups. In those instances the justification for intervention will be to protect and facilitate speech, not to shut it down
Advance Requests for Medically-Assisted Dying
When medical assistance in dying (MAiD) was legalized in Canada in June 2016, the question of allowing decisionally capable persons to make advance requests in anticipation of later incapacity was reserved for further consideration during the mandatory parliamentary review originally scheduled to begin in June 2020 (but since delayed by COVID-19). In its current form the legislation does not permit such requests, since it stipulates that at the time at which the procedure is to be administered the patient must give âexpress consentâ to receiving it. Since express consent presupposes decisional capacity, this requirement rules out administering MAiD to a patient who has lost capacity. Amendments to the legislation passed by Parliament in March 2021 open the door slightly by allowing advance requests by patients after they have been approved for MAiD, if they fear losing capacity before the procedure can be administered. But this provision would apply only to patients whose natural death was deemed to be âreasonably foreseeableâ, and would continue to exclude (a) requests made after diagnosis of a âgrievous and irremediable medical conditionâ but in advance of approval for MAiD, and (b) requests made before such a diagnosis. My aim in this paper is twofold: to explore the ethical and legal issues concerning advance requests for MAiD, and to argue for expanding provision for such requests to include both of these further scenarios
LAP3, a novel plant protein required for pollen development, is essential for proper exine formation
We isolated lap3-1 and lap3-2 mutants in ascreen for pollen that displays abnormal stigma binding.Unlike wild-type pollen, lap3-1 and lap3-2 pollen exine isthinner, weaker, and is missing some connections betweentheir roof-like tectum structures. We describe the mappingand identification of LAP3 as a novel gene that contains arepetitive motif found in b-propeller enzymes. Insertionmutations in LAP3 lead to male sterility. To investigatepossible roles for LAP3 in pollen development, we assayedthe metabolite profile of anther tissues containing developingpollen grains and found that the lap3-2 defect leadsto a broad range of metabolic changes. The largest changeswere seen in levels of a straight-chain hydrocarbon nonacosaneand in naringenin chalcone, an obligate compoundin the flavonoid biosynthesis pathway
Vaccinia virus immune evasion: mechanisms, virulence and immunogenicity
Virus infection of mammalian cells is sensed by pattern recognition receptors and leads to an innate immune response that restricts virus replication and induces adaptive immunity. In response, viruses have evolved many countermeasures that enable them to replicate and be transmitted to new hosts, despite the host innate immune response. Poxviruses, such as vaccinia virus (VACV), have large DNA genomes and encode many proteins that are dedicated to host immune evasion. Some of these proteins are secreted from the infected cell, where they bind and neutralize complement factors, interferons, cytokines and chemokines. Other VACV proteins function inside cells to inhibit apoptosis or signalling pathways that lead to the production of interferons and pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. In this review, these VACV immunomodulatory proteins are described and the potential to create more immunogenic VACV strains by manipulation of the gene encoding these proteins is discussed
Characterization of disturbance sources for LISA: torsion pendulum results
A torsion pendulum allows ground-based investigation of the purity of
free-fall for the LISA test masses inside their capacitive position sensor.
This paper presents recent improvements in our torsion pendulum facility that
have both increased the pendulum sensitivity and allowed detailed
characterization of several important sources of acceleration noise for the
LISA test masses. We discuss here an improved upper limit on random force noise
originating in the sensor. Additionally, we present new measurement techniques
and preliminary results for characterizing the forces caused by the sensor's
residual electrostatic fields, dielectric losses, residual spring-like
coupling, and temperature gradients.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Measuring random force noise for LISA aboard the LISA Pathfinder mission
The LTP (LISA Testflight Package), to be flown aboard the ESA / NASA LISA
Pathfinder mission, aims to demonstrate drag-free control for LISA test masses
with acceleration noise below 30 fm/s^2/Hz^1/2 from 1-30 mHz. This paper
describes the LTP measurement of random, position independent forces acting on
the test masses. In addition to putting an overall upper limit for all source
of random force noise, LTP will measure the conversion of several key
disturbances into acceleration noise and thus allow a more detailed
characterization of the drag-free performance to be expected for LISA.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. To be published in Classical and Quantum Gravity
with the proceedings of the 2003 Amaldi Meetin
Fractal Holography: a geometric re-interpretation of cosmological large scale structure
The fractal dimension of large-scale galaxy clustering has been demonstrated
to be roughly from a wide range of redshift surveys. If correct,
this statistic is of interest for two main reasons: fractal scaling is an
implicit representation of information content, and also the value itself is a
geometric signature of area. It is proposed that the fractal distribution of
galaxies may thus be interpreted as a signature of holography (``fractal
holography''), providing more support for current theories of holographic
cosmologies. Implications for entropy bounds are addressed. In particular,
because of spatial scale invariance in the matter distribution, it is shown
that violations of the spherical entropy bound can be removed. This holographic
condition instead becomes a rigid constraint on the nature of the matter
density and distribution in the Universe. Inclusion of a dark matter
distribution is also discussed, based on theoretical considerations of possible
universal CDM density profiles.Comment: 13 pp, LaTeX. Revised version; to appear in JCA
- âŠ