8,185 research outputs found
Interpreting Rural Students’ Stories of Access to a Flagship University
Employing concepts of place and space, we consider the implementation of Early College initiatives in two small school districts in Ohio, situated in very different regions of the state. One is a rural district near the foothills of Appalachia, and the other is a small town district on the shores of Lake Erie. The paper examines data collected through a state-wide evaluation project. Our analysis suggests that where a school is located matters to the kinds of resources, opportunities and constrains it has for implementing state programs. Resources like transportation, access to college partners, and even proximity to other school districts made important differences to how these school districts implemented the Early College program. Given the variable conditions of school districts in Ohio and other states with a large number of rural and small city school districts, state policy makers should consider flexible implementation plans and variable levels of support
Public contracts as accountability mechanisms: assuring quality in public healthcare in England and Wales
Contracting in the public sector is designed to enhance the accountability of service providers to their funders. The idea is that quality is improved by the use of service specifications, monitoring of performance and imposition of contractual sanctions. Socio-legal and economic theories of contract indicate that it will be difficult to make and enforce contracts to achieve this. The results of a study of National Health Services contracting in England and Wales are reported. We conclude that contracts alone are not sufficient to improve accountability – collibration of various regulatory measures (including more hierarchical mechanisms such as performance targets) is required
Analysis of leaf surfaces using scanning ion conductance microscopy
Leaf surfaces are highly complex functional systems with well defined chemistry and structure dictating the barrier and transport properties of the leaf cuticle. It is a significant imaging challenge to analyse the very thin and often complex wax-like leaf cuticle morphology in their natural state. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and to a lesser extent Atomic force microscopy are techniques that have been used to study the leaf surface but their remains information that is difficult to obtain via these approaches. SEM is able to produce highly detailed and high-resolution images needed to study leaf structures at the submicron level. It typically operates in a vacuum or low pressure environment and as a consequence is generally unable to deal with the in situ analysis of dynamic surface events at submicron scales. Atomic force microscopy also possess the high-resolution imaging required and can follow dynamic events in ambient and liquid environments, but can over exaggerate small features and cannot image most leaf surfaces due to their inherent roughness at the micron scale. Scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM), which operates in a liquid environment, provides a potential complementary analytical approach able to address these issues and which is yet to be explored for studying leaf surfaces. Here we illustrate the potential of SICM on various leaf surfaces and compare the data to SEM and atomic force microscopy images on the same samples. In achieving successful imaging we also show that SICM can be used to study the wetting of hydrophobic surfaces in situ. This has potentially wider implications than the study of leaves alone as surface wetting phenomena are important in a range of fundamental and applied studies
The Probable Detection of SN 1923A: The Oldest Radio Supernova?
Based upon the results of VLA observations, we report the detection of two
unresolved radio sources that are coincident with the reported optical position
of SN 1923A in M83. For the source closest to the SN position, the flux density
was determined to be 0.30 +/- 0.05 mJy at 20 cm and 0.093 +/- 0.028 mJy at 6
cm. The flux density of the second nearby source was determined to be 0.29 +/-
0.05 at 20 cm and 0.13 +/- 0.028 at 6 cm. Both sources are non-thermal with
spectral indices of alpha = -1.0 +/- 0.30 and -0.69 +/- 0.24, respectively. SN
1923A has been designated as a Type II-P. No Type II-P (other than SN 1987A)
has been detected previously in the radio. The radio emission from both sources
appears to be fading with time. At an age of approximately 68 years when we
observed it, this would be the oldest radio supernova (of known age) yet
detected
Folding-competent and folding-defective forms of Ricin A chain have different fates following retrotranslocation from the endoplasmic reticulum
We report that a toxic polypeptide retaining the potential to refold upon dislocation from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
to the cytosol (ricin A chain; RTA) and a misfolded version that cannot (termed RTAΔ), follow ER-associated degradation
(ERAD) pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that substantially diverge in the cytosol. Both polypeptides are dislocated
in a step mediated by the transmembrane Hrd1p ubiquitin ligase complex and subsequently degraded. Canonical
polyubiquitylation is not a prerequisite for this interaction because a catalytically inactive Hrd1p E3 ubiquitin ligase
retains the ability to retrotranslocate RTA, and variants lacking one or both endogenous lysyl residues also require the
Hrd1p complex. In the case of native RTA, we established that dislocation also depends on other components of the
classical ERAD-L pathway as well as an ongoing ER–Golgi transport. However, the dislocation pathways deviate
strikingly upon entry into the cytosol. Here, the CDC48 complex is required only for RTAΔ, although the involvement of
individual ATPases (Rpt proteins) in the 19S regulatory particle (RP) of the proteasome, and the 20S catalytic chamber
itself, is very different for the two RTA variants. We conclude that cytosolic ERAD components, particularly the
proteasome RP, can discriminate between structural features of the same substrate
Study of NAP adsorption and assembly on the surface of HOPG
NAP is an octapeptide that has demonstrated a neuroprotective/therapeutic efficacy at very low concentrations in preclinical studies and in a number of clinical trials. Yet little is known about its structural organization at low concentrations. Here, we have employed atomic force microscopy to investigate NAP peptide assembly on graphite in aqueous media at nanomolar concentration. High spatial resolution scans of NAP assemblies reveal their fine structure with clearly resolved single NAP units. This observation leads us to conclude that NAP molecules do not form complex self-assembled structures at nanomolar concentration when adsorbed on graphite surface
The analytic structure of heavy quark propagators
The renormalised quark Dyson-Schwinger equation is studied in the limit of
the renormalised current heavy quark mass m_R --> infinity. We are particularly
interested in the analytic pole structure of the heavy quark propagator in the
complex momentum plane. Approximations in which the quark-gluon vertex is
modelled by either the bare vertex or the Ball-Chiu Ansatz, and the Landau
gauge gluon propagator takes either a gaussian form or a gaussian form with an
ultraviolet asymptotic tail are used.Comment: 21 pages Latex and 5 postscript figures. The original version of this
paper has been considerably extended to include a formalism dealing with the
renormalised heavy quark Dyson-Schwinger equation and uses a more realistic
Ansatz for the gluon propagator
Frictional cooling of positively charged particles
One of the focuses of research and development towards the construction of a
muon collider is muon beam preparation. Simulation of frictional cooling shows
that it can achieve the desired emittance reduction to produce high-luminosity
muon beams. We show that for positively charged particles, charge exchange
interactions necessitate significant changes to schemes previously developed
for negatively charged particles. We also demonstrate that foil-based schemes
are not viable for positive particles.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
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