353 research outputs found

    Grosse Ile and the Irish Memorial National Historic Site, Parks Canada: A Case Study

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    Focuses on values and their protection by examining the place of values in management. Grosse Ile's management is still evolving, and the eventful first phases of planning are still fresh in the minds of staff

    Chaco Culture National Historical Park: A Case Study

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    Looks at the management of CCNHP by the National Park Service. The long history of CCNHP as a heritage site provides an excellent illustration of how values emerge and evolve with new knowledge

    The 2011 Eruption of the Recurrent Nova T Pyxidis; the Discovery, the Pre-eruption Rise, the Pre-eruption Orbital Period, and the Reason for the Long Delay

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    We report the discovery by M. Linnolt on JD 2455665.7931 (UT 2011 April 14.29) of the sixth eruption of the recurrent nova T Pyxidis. This discovery was made just as the initial fast rise was starting, so with fast notification and response by observers worldwide, the entire initial rise was covered (the first for any nova), and with high time resolution in three filters. The speed of the rise peaked at 9 mag/day, while the light curve is well fit over only the first two days by a model with a uniformly expanding sphere. We also report the discovery by R. Stubbings of a pre-eruption rise starting 18 days before the eruption, peaking 1.1 mag brighter than its long-time average, and then fading back towards quiescence 4 days before the eruption. This unique and mysterious behavior is only the fourth known anticipatory rise closely spaced before a nova eruption. We present 19 timings of photometric minima from 1986 to February 2011, where the orbital period is fast increasing with P/dot{P}=313,000 yrs. From 2008-2011, T Pyx had a small change in this rate of increase, so that the orbital period at the time of eruption was 0.07622950+-0.00000008 days. This strong and steady increase of the orbital period can only come from mass transfer, for which we calculate a rate of 1.7-3.5x10^-7 Mo/yr. We report 6116 magnitudes between 1890 and 2011, for an average B=15.59+-0.01 from 1967-2011, which allows for an eruption in 2011 if the blue flux is nearly proportional to the accretion rate. The ultraviolet-optical-infrared spectral energy distribution is well fit by a power law with flux proportional to nu^1.0, although the narrow ultraviolet region has a tilt with a fit of \nu^{1/3}. We prove that most of the T Pyx light is not coming from a disk, or any superposition of blackbodies, but rather is coming from some nonthermal source.Comment: ApJ submitted, 62 pages, 8 figures; much added data, updated analysi

    A Leptin-regulated Circuit Controls Glucose Mobilization During Noxious Stimuli

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    Adipocytes secrete the hormone leptin to signal the sufficiency of energy stores. Reductions in circulating leptin concentrations reflect a negative energy balance, which augments sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activation in response to metabolically demanding emergencies. This process ensures adequate glucose mobilization despite low energy stores. We report that leptin receptor–expressing neurons (LepRb neurons) in the periaqueductal gray (PAG), the largest population of LepRb neurons in the brain stem, mediate this process. Application of noxious stimuli, which often signal the need to mobilize glucose to support an appropriate response, activated PAG LepRb neurons, which project to and activate parabrachial nucleus (PBN) neurons that control SNS activation and glucose mobilization. Furthermore, activating PAG LepRb neurons increased SNS activity and blood glucose concentrations, while ablating LepRb in PAG neurons augmented glucose mobilization in response to noxious stimuli. Thus, decreased leptin action on PAG LepRb neurons augments the autonomic response to noxious stimuli, ensuring sufficient glucose mobilization during periods of acute demand in the face of diminished energy stores

    Specific Subpopulations of Hypothalamic Leptin Receptor-Expressing Neurons Mediate the Effects of Early Developmental Leptin Receptor Deletion on Energy Balance

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    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank MedImmune, Inc. and James Trevaskis, PhD and Christopher Rhodes, PhD for the gift of leptin. We thank members of the Myers and Olson labs for helpful discussions. Research support was provided by the Michigan Diabetes Research Center (NIH P3 0 DK020572, including the Molecular Genetics, Animal Phenotyping, and Clinical Cores), the American Diabetes Association (MGM), the Marilyn H. Vincent Foundation (MGM), the NIH (MGM: D K05673 1; ACR:DK071212; MBA: DK097861), the BBSRC (LKH: BB/NO17838/1) and WellcomeTrust (LKH: 098012).Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, November 1961

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    The president\u27s wife writes • Mater Ursini • The Ursinus College European tour • Admiral Moreell looks at a philosopher • Zucker looks at Moreell • A woman\u27s approach to peace • Founders\u27 Day • 1962 Forum programs • Cutting campus • From Alaska to Greenland • Faith and freedom in Taiwan • Reginald Helfferich honored • Poet King • Henry P. Laughlin, \u2738 • Robert Pease, \u2733 • Ursinus student at White House conference • Harleston R. Wood • Football • Soccer • Hockey • Basketball • Wrestling • 53.5% contribute to Loyalty Fund in 1961 • Progress report 1962 campaign • 1961 campaign results • The Century Club • Loyalty Fund all-stars • Loyalty Fund kick-off dinner • Matching gifts • Results of the 1961 Loyalty Fund campaign • Contributors to the 1961 Loyalty Fund campaign • Class notes • Weddings • Births • Necrology • Sing along with us • New faculty membershttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1072/thumbnail.jp
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