550 research outputs found
Arctic charr from Ennerdale Water: a pilot study
There are three fish species in the north west of England, Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus, L.), schelly (Coreqonus lavaretus. L.), and vendace (C. albula, L.), which have been reported as rare and vulnerable and have been identified as requiring the preparation and
implementation of a conservation management plan.
The presence of Arctic charr in Ennerdale Water has
resulted in it being designated as a Site of Special
Scientific Interest. These fish and one race of the species in Lake Windermere are the only English populations of charr known to spawn in running water.
Associated with Ennerdale charr is the copepod parasite
Salmincola edwardsii which has not been recorded from any
other charr inhabited waters of the Lake District.
However, it has been recorded on charr from four Scottish
Lochs (Stack, Lee, Tay and Doon). The unique nature of
Ennerdale is further highlighted by the presence of two
crustaceans, Mysis relicta and Limnocalanus macrurus. The
former has been recorded in Ireland while the latter is
not known to exist anywhere else in the British Isles.
The aim of this pilot study was to obtain baseline data
on charr that spawn in Smithy Beck and the River Liza.
This would indicate the current status of the population
and help identify areas requiring further investigation.
A total of 161 fish (95 males and 66 females) was caught
and tagged over the 3 day period, 141 from Smithy Beck
and 20 from the Liza. The raw data of the findings is presented in two appendices
Noncommutativity from the string perspective: modification of gravity at a mm without mm sized extra dimensions
We explore how the IR pathologies of noncommutative field theory are resolved
when the theory is realized as open strings in background B-fields:
essentially, since the IR singularities are induced by UV/IR mixing, string
theory brings them under control in much the same way as it does the UV
singularities. We show that at intermediate scales (where the Seiberg-Witten
limit is a good approximation) the theory reproduces the noncommutative field
theory with all the (un)usual features such as UV/IR mixing, but that outside
this regime, in the deep infra-red, the theory flows continuously to the
commutative theory and normal Wilsonian behaviour is restored. The resulting
low energy physics resembles normal commutative physics, but with additional
suppressed Lorentz violating operators. We also show that the phenomenon of
UV/IR mixing occurs for the graviton as well, with the result that, in
configurations where Planck's constant receives a significant one-loop
correction (for example brane-induced gravity), the distance scale below which
gravity becomes non-Newtonian can be much greater than any compact dimensions.Comment: 30 pages. Slight revision: clarified some points and added a
referenc
Branes, Instantons, And Taub-NUT Spaces
ALE and Taub-NUT (or ALF) hyper-Kahler four-manifolds can be naturally
constructed as hyper-Kahler quotients. In the ALE case, this construction has
long been understood in terms of D-branes; here we give a D-brane derivation in
the Taub-NUT case. Likewise, instantons on ALE spaces and on Taub-NUT spaces
have ADHM-like constructions related to hyper-Kahler quotients. Here we refine
the analysis in the Taub-NUT case by making use of a D-brane probe, and give an
application to M-theory.Comment: 63 p
Dibaryons from Exceptional Collections
We discuss aspects of the dictionary between brane configurations in del
Pezzo geometries and dibaryons in the dual superconformal quiver gauge
theories. The basis of fractional branes defining the quiver theory at the
singularity has a K-theoretic dual exceptional collection of bundles which can
be used to read off the spectrum of dibaryons in the weakly curved dual
geometry. Our prescription identifies the R-charge R and all baryonic U(1)
charges Q_I with divisors in the del Pezzo surface without any Weyl group
ambiguity. As one application of the correspondence, we identify the cubic
anomaly tr R Q_I Q_J as an intersection product for dibaryon charges in large-N
superconformal gauge theories. Examples can be given for all del Pezzo surfaces
using three- and four-block exceptional collections. Markov-type equations
enforce consistency among anomaly equations for three-block collections.Comment: 47 pages, 11 figures, corrected ref
Holomorphic potentials for graded D-branes
We discuss gauge-fixing, propagators and effective potentials for topological
A-brane composites in Calabi-Yau compactifications. This allows for the
construction of a holomorphic potential describing the low-energy dynamics of
such systems, which generalizes the superpotentials known from the ungraded
case. Upon using results of homotopy algebra, we show that the string field and
low energy descriptions of the moduli space agree, and that the deformations of
such backgrounds are described by a certain extended version of `off-shell
Massey products' associated with flat graded superbundles. As examples, we
consider a class of graded D-brane pairs of unit relative grade. Upon computing
the holomorphic potential, we study their moduli space of composites. In
particular, we give a general proof that such pairs can form acyclic
condensates, and, for a particular case, show that another branch of their
moduli space describes condensation of a two-form.Comment: 47 pages, 7 figure
Moduli Spaces of Instantons on the Taub-NUT Space
We present ADHM-Nahm data for instantons on the Taub-NUT space and encode
these data in terms of Bow Diagrams. We study the moduli spaces of the
instantons and present these spaces as finite hyperkahler quotients. As an
example, we find an explicit expression for the metric on the moduli space of
one SU(2) instanton. We motivate our construction by identifying a
corresponding string theory brane configuration. By following string theory
dualities we are led to supersymmetric gauge theories with impurities.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure
Effect of renal center characteristics on mortality and technique failure on peritoneal dialysis
BACKGROUND: Recent studies report decreased mortality in patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) over time, suggesting that advances in PD have resulted in improved patient outcomes. Our investigation sought to assess the effect of renal center characteristics on mortality and technique failure (TF) rates.
METHODS: Covariates of interest included center-specific cumulative number of PD patients treated, percentage of patients who initiated dialysis on PD, and academic status. Using data obtained from the Canadian Organ Replacement Register, the 17,900 patients who received PD during the 1981 to 1997 period were studied. Mortality and TF rate ratios (RR) were estimated using Poisson regression, adjusting for age, gender, race, primary renal diagnosis, province, follow-up time, and type of PD.
RESULTS: As the cumulative number of PD patients treated increased, covariate-adjusted mortality significantly decreased (P < 0.05); a weaker yet significant association was observed between number of PD patients treated and TF. As the percentage of patients initiating dialysis on PD increased, TF rates decreased significantly. No association was observed between center academic status and PD mortality or TF rates.
CONCLUSIONS: These results imply that a center's experience with and degree of specialization toward PD impact strongly on PD outcomes. One hypothesis is that a center's propensity to exploit technical and non-technical advances in PD increases directly with these variables. It is also possible that, through experience, centers become more adept at identifying appropriate patients to receive PD. More detailed research is required to evaluate these hypotheses
Effect of renal center characteristics on mortality and technique failure on peritoneal dialysis
BACKGROUND: Recent studies report decreased mortality in patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) over time, suggesting that advances in PD have resulted in improved patient outcomes. Our investigation sought to assess the effect of renal center characteristics on mortality and technique failure (TF) rates.
METHODS: Covariates of interest included center-specific cumulative number of PD patients treated, percentage of patients who initiated dialysis on PD, and academic status. Using data obtained from the Canadian Organ Replacement Register, the 17,900 patients who received PD during the 1981 to 1997 period were studied. Mortality and TF rate ratios (RR) were estimated using Poisson regression, adjusting for age, gender, race, primary renal diagnosis, province, follow-up time, and type of PD.
RESULTS: As the cumulative number of PD patients treated increased, covariate-adjusted mortality significantly decreased (P < 0.05); a weaker yet significant association was observed between number of PD patients treated and TF. As the percentage of patients initiating dialysis on PD increased, TF rates decreased significantly. No association was observed between center academic status and PD mortality or TF rates.
CONCLUSIONS: These results imply that a center's experience with and degree of specialization toward PD impact strongly on PD outcomes. One hypothesis is that a center's propensity to exploit technical and non-technical advances in PD increases directly with these variables. It is also possible that, through experience, centers become more adept at identifying appropriate patients to receive PD. More detailed research is required to evaluate these hypotheses
The Bethe Ansatz for Z_S Orbifolds of N=4 Super Yang-Mills Theory
Worldsheet techniques can be used to argue for the integrability of string
theory on AdS_5xS^5/Z_S, which is dual to the strongly coupled Z_S-orbifold of
N=4 SYM. We analyze the integrability of these field theories in the
perturbative regime and construct the relevant Bethe equations.Comment: 16 page
Characterisation of tack for uni-directional prepreg tape employing a continuous application-and-peel test method
Employing a test method with coupled application and peel phases, tack was characterised for a UD prepreg tape. Different aspects of tack were explored by varying test parameters and material condition. In addition, different surface combinations were studied. In general, the test parameters, feed rate and temperature, affect the balance between cohesion within the resin and adhesion between resin and substrate. Exploring a range of parameters is required to understand the effect of viscoelastic resin properties on tack. The application pressure determines the true contact area between prepreg and substrate and hence affects tack. Changes in molecular mobility in the resin related to specimen conditioning, i.e. ageing or moisture uptake, result in maximum tack to occur at lower or higher feed rates, respectively. Differences in tack for different material combinations can be attributed to different molecular interactions at the contact interfaces and different resin distributions on the prepreg surfaces
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