1,622 research outputs found

    Arbetserfarenhetens och utbildningens påverkan på löner och intäkter i ett medelstort tjänsteföretag

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    Arbetet görs för uppdragsgivaren Beauty Hair Sirpa Mansner Oy, som är ett medelstort tjänsteföretag i skönhetsbranschen. Syftet med arbetet är att bekanta sig med tjänsteföretag och skönhetsbranschen i allmänhet, samt personalbokslut i dessa. Därefter studeras hur och om arbetserfarenhet och utbildning påverkar lön och intäkter. För att kunna studera hur intäkten och lönen påverkas, berättas det kort om olika utbildningar inom skönhetsbranschen. Interna personalbokslutet från uppdragsgivaren och studentlitteratur används som primära källor. Även intervjuer med företagsledningen görs för att stöda arbetets resultat. Arbetet begränsas genom att dela in arbetserfarenheten i arbetsår och utbildningen enligt lärokällan. I analysdelen begränsas resultaten vidare i medeltal, median, maximum och minimum. Arbetets slutsats är att utbildningen i sig inte påverkar resultatet, utan frisörens personliga aktivitet i kombination med erfarenhet har en större påverkan.This study is conducted to Beauty Hair Sirpa Mansner Oy, which is a medium-sized ser-vice company in the beauty industry. The purpose of the study is to familiarize with the service - and beauty industry in general and human resources accounting in them. Then a consideration is made whether and how the work experience and education affects wages and earnings. In order to study how the earnings and wages are affected, a short summary about various programs within the beauty industry is included. Internal personnel ac-counts from the company and student literature are used as primary sources. Interviews with senior management are committed to support findings. A dividing of work experi-ence into working years and education, by program, is made. In the analysis section the results are divided further into average, median, maximum and minimum. The conclusion is that the education itself does not affect the results, but personal activity combined with experience has a greater impact

    Validation of a Computer Code for Use in the Mechanical Design of Spallation Neutron Targets

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    The present work concentrates on comparing a numerical code and a closed-form analytic solution for determining transient stress waves generated by an impinging, high-intensity proton pulse onto a perfectly elastic solid cylindrical target. The comparison of the two methods serves both to benchmark the physics and numerical methods of the codes, and to verify them against analytic expressions that can be established for calculating the response of the target for simple cases of loading and geometry. Additionally, the comparison elucidated the effects of approximations used in the computation of the analytic results. Two load cases have been investigated: (1) an instantaneously uniform thermal loading along the central core, and (2) a ramped and uniform thermal load applied along the central core. In addition, the influence of the approximations applied to the accurate analytic forms has been elucidated. By validating these analytical results, the closed-form solution may be confidently used to "bound" the solution prior to initiating more detailed and comprehensive numerical studies

    Visualization of Endothelial Actin Cytoskeleton in the Mouse Retina

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    Angiogenesis requires coordinated changes in cell shape of endothelial cells (ECs), orchestrated by the actin cytoskeleton. The mechanisms that regulate this rearrangement in vivo are poorly understood - largely because of the difficulty to visualize filamentous actin (F-actin) structures with sufficient resolution. Here, we use transgenic mice expressing Lifeact-EGFP to visualize F-actin in ECs. We show that in the retina, Lifeact-EGFP expression is largely restricted to ECs allowing detailed visualization of F-actin in ECs in situ. Lifeact-EGFP labels actin associated with cell-cell junctions, apical and basal membranes and highlights actin-based structures such as filopodia and stress fiber-like cytoplasmic bundles. We also show that in the skin and the skeletal muscle, Lifeact-EGFP is highly expressed in vascular mural cells (vMCs), enabling vMC imaging. In summary, our results indicate that the Lifeact-EGFP transgenic mouse in combination with the postnatal retinal angiogenic model constitutes an excellent system for vascular cell biology research. Our approach is ideally suited to address structural and mechanistic details of angiogenic processes, such as endothelial tip cell migration and fusion, EC polarization or lumen formation

    High-Reliability Waveguide Vacuum/Pressure Window

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    The NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) uses commercial waveguide windows on the output waveguide of Ka-band (32 GHz) low-noise amplifiers. Mechanical failure of these windows resulted in an unacceptable loss in tracking time. To address this issue, a new Ka-band WR-28 waveguide window has been designed, fabricated, and tested. The window uses a slab of low-loss, low-dielectric constant foam that is bonded into a 1/2-wave-thick waveguide/flange. The foam is a commercially available, rigid, closed-cell polymethacrylimide. It has excellent electrical properties with a dielectric constant of 1.04, and a loss tangent of 0.01. It is relatively strong with a tensile strength of 1 MPa. The material is virtually impermeable to helium. The finished window exhibits a leak rate of less than 3x10(exp -3)cu cm/s with helium. The material is also chemically resistant and can be cleaned with acetone. The window is constructed by fabricating a window body by brazing a short length of WR-28 copper waveguide into a standard rectangular flange, and machining the resulting part to a thickness of 4.6 mm. The foam is machined to a rectangular shape with a dimension of 7.06x3.53 mm. The foam is bonded into the body with a two-part epoxy. After curing, the excess glue and foam are knife-trimmed by hand. The finished window has a loss of less than 0.08 dB (2%) and a return loss of greater than 25 dB at 32 GHz. This meets the requirements for the DSN application. The window is usable for most applications over the entire 26-to-40-GHz waveguide band. The window return loss can be tuned to a required frequency by var y in g the thickness of the window slightly. Most standard waveguide windows use a thin membrane of material bonded into a recess in a waveguide flange, or sandwiched between two flanges with a polymer seal. Designs using the recessed window are prone to mechanical failure over time due to constraints on the dimensions of the recess that allow the bond to fail. Designs using the sandwich method are often permeable to helium, which prohibits the use of helium leak detection. At the time of this reporting, 40 windows have been produced. Twelve are in operation with a combined operating time of over 30,000 hours without a failure

    Highly specific PCR-RFLP assays for karyotyping the widespread 2Rb inversion in malaria vectors of the Anopheles gambiae complex

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    Background: Chromosomal inversion polymorphisms play a role in adaptation to heterogeneous environments. Inversion polymorphisms are implicated in the very high ecological flexibility of the three main malaria vector species of the Afrotropical Anopheles gambiae complex, facilitating the exploitation of anthropogenic environmental modifications and promoting a strong association with humans. In addition to extending the species' spatial and temporal distribution, inversions are associated with epidemiologically relevant mosquito behavior and physiology, underscoring their medical importance. We here present novel PCR-RFLP based assays strongly predictive of genotype for the cosmopolitan 2Rb inversion in An. coluzzii and An. gambiae, a development which overcomes the numerous constraints inherent to traditional cytological karyotyping. Methods: We designed PCR-RFLP genotyping assays based on tag SNPs previously computationally identified as strongly predictive (> 95%) of 2Rb genotype. We targeted those tags whose alternative allelic states destroyed or created the recognition site of a commercially available restriction enzyme, and designed assays with distinctive cleavage profiles for each inversion genotype. The assays were validated on 251 An. coluzzii and 451 An. gambiae cytologically karyotyped specimens from nine countries across Africa and one An. coluzzii laboratory colony. Results: For three tag SNPs, PCR-RFLP assays (denoted DraIII, MspAI, and TatI) reliably produced robust amplicons and clearly distinguishable electrophoretic profiles for all three inversion genotypes. Results obtained with the DraIII assay are ≥ 95% concordant with cytogenetic assignments in both species, while MspAI and TatI assays produce patterns highly concordant with cytogenetic assignments only in An. coluzzii or An. gambiae, respectively. Joint application of species-appropriate pairs of assays increased the concordance levels to > 99% in An. coluzzii and 98% in An. gambiae. Potential sources of discordance (e.g. imperfect association between tag and inversion, allelic dropout, additional polymorphisms in the restriction target site, incomplete or failed restriction digestion) are discussed. Conclusions: The availability of highly specific, cost effective and accessible molecular assays for genotyping 2Rb in An. gambiae and An. coluzzii allows karyotyping of both sexes and all developmental stages. These novel tools will accelerate deeper investigations into the role of this ecologically and epidemiologically important chromosomal inversion in vector biology.[Figure not available: see fulltext.
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