8,028 research outputs found
Legitimating inaction : differing identity constructions of the Scots language.
The Scots language plays a key role in the political and cultural landscape of contemporary Scotland. From a discourse-historical perspective, this article explores how language ideologies about the Scots language are realized linguistically in a so-called ‘languages strategy’ drafted by the Scottish Executive, and in focus groups consisting of Scottish people. This article shows that although the decline of Scots is said to be a ‘tragedy’, focus group participants seem to reject the notion of Scots as a viable, contemporary language that can be used across a wide range of registers. The policy document also seems to construct Scots in very positive terms, but is shown to be unhelpful or potentially even damaging in the process of changing public attitudes to Scots
A study to develop a low temperature battery suitable for space probe applications final report
Low temperature batteries for deep space probes and extending battery usefulness by heatin
Molecular dynamics of folding of secondary structures in Go-type models of proteins
We consider six different secondary structures of proteins and construct two
types of Go-type off-lattice models: with the steric constraints and without.
The basic aminoacid-aminoacid potential is Lennard Jones for the native
contacts and a soft repulsion for the non-native contacts. The interactions are
chosen to make the target secondary structure be the native state of the
system. We provide a thorough equilibrium and kinetic characterization of the
sequences through the molecular dynamics simulations with the Langevin noise.
Models with the steric constraints are found to be better folders and to be
more stable, especially in the case of the -structures. Phononic spectra
for vibrations around the native states have low frequency gaps that correlate
with the thermodynamic stability. Folding of the secondary structures proceeds
through a well defined sequence of events. For instance, -helices fold
from the ends first. The closer to the native state, the faster establishment
of the contacts. Increasing the system size deteriorates the folding
characteristics. We study the folding times as a function of viscous friction
and find a regime of moderate friction with the linear dependence. We also
consider folding when one end of a structure is pinned which imitates
instantaneous conditions when a protein is being synthesized. We find that,
under such circumstances, folding of helices is faster and of the
-sequences slower.Comment: REVTeX, 14 pages, EPS figures included, JCP in pres
Constraining the origin of UHECRs and astrophysical neutrinos
We explore the possibility of a common origin of ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) and astrophysical neutrinos and further constrain sources which are consistent with this possibility. We show that the common origin hypothesis can be satisfied for the Sibyll2.3c hadronic interaction model but is difficult to accommodate for EPOS-LHC, showing that multimessenger analyses have the power to also constrain hadronic physics beyond LHC energies. We constrain properties of UHECR source environments (and potentially astrophysical neutrino sources), including their photon temperature, gas density, size, magnetic field strength and coherence length, using UHECR and neutrino spectra and composition. Our analysis represents a new type of information on UHECR sources, independent of the mechanism responsible for the UHECR acceleration
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