17,595 research outputs found
War and Economics: Spanish Civil War Finances Revisited
This paper reviews how the Spanish civil war was financed. We present new evidence to show that the two combatant parties, the Republican government and the Franco administration followed similar financial strategies. In both cases money creation, rather than new taxes or the issue of debt, was the main mechanism used to cover the expenses of the war. We argue, contrary to the established knowledge, that both sides consumed a similar amount of domestic and foreign resources. We also argue that the Spanish Republic did not lose the war because of a lack of means. International factors, such as the Non-Intervention agreement promoted by France and Great Britain, and the military setbacks of the Republican army during the first year of the war, were decisive for Franco’s victory in 1939.Spain, civil war, financial resources
Optical absorption of divalent metal tungstates: Correlation between the band-gap energy and the cation ionic radius
We have carried out optical-absorption and reflectance measurements at room
temperature in single crystals of AWO4 tungstates (A = Ba, Ca, Cd, Cu, Pb, Sr,
and Zn). From the experimental results their band-gap energy has been
determined to be 5.26 eV (BaWO4), 5.08 eV (SrWO4), 4.94 eV (CaWO4), 4.15 eV
(CdWO4), 3.9-4.4 eV (ZnWO4), 3.8-4.2 eV (PbWO4), and 2.3 eV (CuWO4). The
results are discussed in terms of the electronic structure of the studied
tungstates. It has been found that those compounds where only the s electron
states of the A2+ cation hybridize with the O 2p and W 5d states (e.g BaWO4)
have larger band-gap energies than those where also p, d, and f states of the
A2+ cation contribute to the top of the valence band and the bottom of the
conduction band (e.g. PbWO4). The results are of importance in view of the
large discrepancies existent in prevoiusly published data.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Estimation procedure of the descriptor LAeq,T from the stabilization time of the sound pressure level value
Temporal structure of sound pressure level is
a key aspect at the time of characterizing
urban sound environments. In urban
agglomerations, environmental noise levels
fluctuate over a large range as a result of
the great complexity of these settings, with
considerable temporal and spatial
heterogeneity. Furthermore, the domain in
urban environments of noise sources, such
as road traffic, commercial or leisure
activities, construction works, etc., together
with the occurrence of sudden sound-level
maxima events (bells, sirens, vehicles at high
traffic speed, honking horns...), which are
quite frequent in urban agglomerations,
generate the appearance of very high values
of the impulsiveness of sound pressure level.
This aspect causes a great influence on the
time necessary for environmental noise
levels to become stabilized, which is a key
aspect for the accurate measurement,
interpretation and guarantee of a
statistically representative sample of a
given urban sound environment. Therefore,
the goal pursued in this work is to put forth a
procedure for the calculation of a value of
LAeq,T, representative of a certain urban
location in a short-term time period, from the
utilization of the value of the stabilization
time of the sound pressure level
Electromagnetic dipole moments of charged baryons with bent crystals at the LHC
We propose a unique program of measurements of electric and magnetic dipole
moments of charm, beauty and strange charged baryons at the LHC, based on the
phenomenon of spin precession of channeled particles in bent crystals. Studies
of crystal channeling and spin precession of positively- and negatively-charged
particles are presented, along with feasibility studies and expected
sensitivities for the proposed experiment using a layout based on the LHCb
detector.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figure
Compact groups from semi-analytical models of galaxy formation -- V: their assembly channels as a function of the environment
We delved into the assembly pathways and environments of compact groups (CGs)
of galaxies using mock catalogues generated from semi-analytical models (SAMs)
on the Millennium simulation. We investigate the ability of SAMs to replicate
the observed CG environments and whether CGs with different assembly histories
tend to inhabit specific cosmic environments. We also analyse whether the
environment or the assembly history is more important in tailoring CG
properties. We find that about half of the CGs in SAMs are non-embedded
systems, 40% are inhabiting loose groups or nodes of filaments, while the rest
distribute evenly in filaments and voids, in agreement with observations. We
observe that early-assembled CGs preferentially inhabit large galaxy systems (~
60%), while around 30% remain non-embedded. Conversely, lately-formed CGs
exhibit the opposite trend. We also obtain that lately-formed CGs have lower
velocity dispersions and larger crossing times than early-formed CGs, but
mainly because they are preferentially non-embedded. Those lately-formed CGs
that inhabit large systems do not show the same features. Therefore, the
environment plays a strong role in these properties for lately-formed CGs.
Early-formed CGs are more evolved, displaying larger velocity dispersions,
shorter crossing times, and more dominant first-ranked galaxies, regardless of
the environment. Finally, the difference in brightness between the two
brightest members of CGs is dependent only on the assembly history and not on
the environment. CGs residing in diverse environments have undergone varied
assembly processes, making them suitable for studying their evolution and the
interplay of nature and nurture on their traits.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Splitting of the middle layer of LPW SAFNWC/MSG satellite product in order to improve the monitoring of pre-convective environments
International audienceSeven of the infrared channels from the Spinning Enhanced Visible and Infrared Imagery (SEVIRI) instrument, on board the Meteosat Second Generation (MSG), are used to retrieve Layer Precipitable Water (LPW) and Stability Analysis Imagery (SAI) in the SAFNWC framework. Both products are retrieved using a statistical retrieval based on neural networks; they are routinely generated every fifteen minutes at a satellite horizontal resolution of 3 km in NADIR only in cloud-free areas. Many factors are involved in the development of severe weather and these parameters are only some of the indicators. However, due to the high resolution of these products, the use of them in conjunction with satellite and radar images can help to identify mesoscale features related to convection. The MSG moisture and parcel instability time trend fields are especially useful during the period previous to convection. Once the outbreak of convection occurs, the products calculated in the clear air pixels surrounding the convective system can give us hints to anticipate its evolution. SAFNWC LPW and SAI were analyzed for a severe weather event during August 2004. A thunderstorm over Teruel (Spain) produced intense precipitation and hail; a tornado developed while this thunderstorm was moving towards SE. The pre-convective parcel potential buoyancy and moisture SAFNWC products changed in a way that was consistent with the observed intense convective activity. In previous studies, the atmospheric moisture in medium levels, which has been proven to be relevant in some cases, was represented by only one level parameter (ML: middle layer LPW). However, it was observed that this layer is too thick to do an adequate analysis of moisture available for convection. Hence, an improvement on the LPW algorithm has been carried out by splitting the middle layer into two new sub-layers (approximately separated at 700 hPa) and training two new neural networks. The impact of monitoring moisture in the new sub-layers separately in this severe weather event has been tested, and the improvements achieved have been evaluated
Analysis of CMB maps with 2D wavelets
We consider the 2D wavelet transform with two scales to study sky maps of
temperature anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB). We
apply this technique to simulated maps of small sky patches of size 12.8 \times
12.8 square degrees and 1.5' \times 1.5' pixels. The relation to the standard
approach, based on the cl's is established through the introduction of the
scalogram. We consider temperature fluctuations derived from standard, open and
flat-Lambda CDM models. We analyze CMB anisotropies maps plus uncorrelated
Gaussian noise (uniform and non-uniform) at idfferent S/N levels. We explore in
detail the denoising of such maps and compare the results with other techniques
already proposed in the literature. Wavelet methods provide a good
reconstruction of the image and power spectrum. Moreover, they are faster than
previously proposed methods.Comment: latex file 7 pages + 5 postscript files + 1 gif file; accepted for
publication in A&A
Myristic acid potentiates palmitic acid-induced lipotoxicity and steatohepatitis associated with lipodystrophy by sustaning de novo ceramide synthesis.
Palmitic acid (PA) induces hepatocyte apoptosis and fuels de novo ceramide synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Myristic acid (MA), a free fatty acid highly abundant in copra/palmist oils, is a predictor of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and stimulates ceramide synthesis. Here we investigated the synergism between MA and PA in ceramide synthesis, ER stress, lipotoxicity and NASH. Unlike PA, MA is not lipotoxic but potentiated PA-mediated lipoapoptosis, ER stress, caspase-3 activation and cytochrome c release in primary mouse hepatocytes (PMH). Moreover, MA kinetically sustained PA-induced total ceramide content by stimulating dehydroceramide desaturase and switched the ceramide profile from decreased to increased ceramide 14:0/ceramide16:0, without changing medium and long-chain ceramide species. PMH were more sensitive to equimolar ceramide14:0/ceramide16:0 exposure, which mimics the outcome of PA plus MA treatment on ceramide homeostasis, than to either ceramide alone. Treatment with myriocin to inhibit ceramide synthesis and tauroursodeoxycholic acid to prevent ER stress ameliorated PA plus MA induced apoptosis, similar to the protection afforded by the antioxidant BHA, the pan-caspase inhibitor z-VAD-Fmk and JNK inhibition. Moreover, ruthenium red protected PMH against PA and MA-induced cell death. Recapitulating in vitro findings, mice fed a diet enriched in PA plus MA exhibited lipodystrophy, hepatosplenomegaly, increased liver ceramide content and cholesterol levels, ER stress, liver damage, inflammation and fibrosis compared to mice fed diets enriched in PA or MA alone. The deleterious effects of PA plus MA-enriched diet were largely prevented by in vivo myriocin treatment. These findings indicate a causal link between ceramide synthesis and ER stress in lipotoxicity, and imply that the consumption of diets enriched in MA and PA can cause NASH associated with lipodystrophy
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