1,617 research outputs found

    Reunion and reconciliation, reviewed and reconsidered

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    At the close of the Civil War in 1865, many Americans began talking about “reunion” and “reunification,” even “healing” and “reconciliation,” although the precise meaning of those words would remain elusive. From 1865 down to the present day, these sentiments have reverberated in American culture and American politics, and they sounded at gatherings of Union and Confederate veterans and then of their descendants, in the pages of newspapers and magazines in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, in the speeches of presidents and politicians, and in countless films and theatrical productions that imagined northern and southern men joining hands in unity and fraternal love. Two years after the surrender at Appomattox, the former abolitionist Gerrit Smith told of his longing “for a heart-union between the North and the South.” Seventy-one years later, in a final gathering of ancient soldiers on the once-blood-soaked fields of Gettysburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated an Eternal Light Peace Memorial and honored the “joint and precious heritage” that Gettysburg had come to symbolize. Speaking in July 1938 to the “men who wore the blue and men who wore the gray,” fdr praised all the soldiers, “not asking under which flag they fought then—thankful that they stand together under one flag now.” Roosevelt’s tribute to a peace-loving and unified America, coming at this moment when the world was poised on the brink of an even more catastrophic war, may have offered its own small measure of comfort to anxious Americans.Accepted manuscrip

    Progressive systemic sclerosis (Diffuse scleroderma)

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    Super-lattice, rhombus, square, and hexagonal standing waves in magnetically driven ferrofluid surface

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    Standing wave patterns that arise on the surface of ferrofluids by (single frequency) parametric forcing with an ac magnetic field are investigated experimentally. Depending on the frequency and amplitude of the forcing, the system exhibits various patterns including a superlattice and subharmonic rhombuses as well as conventional harmonic hexagons and subharmonic squares. The superlattice arises in a bicritical situation where harmonic and subharmonic modes collide. The rhombic pattern arises due to the non-monotonic dispersion relation of a ferrofluid

    Bifurcations of periodic orbits with spatio-temporal symmetries

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    Motivated by recent analytical and numerical work on two- and three-dimensional convection with imposed spatial periodicity, we analyse three examples of bifurcations from a continuous group orbit of spatio-temporally symmetric periodic solutions of partial differential equations. Our approach is based on centre manifold reduction for maps, and is in the spirit of earlier work by Iooss (1986) on bifurcations of group orbits of spatially symmetric equilibria. Two examples, two-dimensional pulsating waves (PW) and three-dimensional alternating pulsating waves (APW), have discrete spatio-temporal symmetries characterized by the cyclic groups Z_n, n=2 (PW) and n=4 (APW). These symmetries force the Poincare' return map M to be the nth iterate of a map G: M=G^n. The group orbits of PW and APW are generated by translations in the horizontal directions and correspond to a circle and a two-torus, respectively. An instability of pulsating waves can lead to solutions that drift along the group orbit, while bifurcations with Floquet multiplier +1 of alternating pulsating waves do not lead to drifting solutions. The third example we consider, alternating rolls, has the spatio-temporal symmetry of alternating pulsating waves as well as being invariant under reflections in two vertical planes. This leads to the possibility of a doubling of the marginal Floquet multiplier and of bifurcation to two distinct types of drifting solutions. We conclude by proposing a systematic way of analysing steady-state bifurcations of periodic orbits with discrete spatio-temporal symmetries, based on applying the equivariant branching lemma to the irreducible representations of the spatio-temporal symmetry group of the periodic orbit, and on the normal form results of Lamb (1996). This general approach is relevant to other pattern formation problems, and contributes to our understanding of the transition from ordered to disordered behaviour in pattern-forming systems

    Biocompatible Solvents and Ionic Liquid-Based Surfactants as Sustainable Components to Formulate Environmentally Friendly Organized Systems

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    In this review, we deal with the formation and application of biocompatible water-in-oil microemulsions commonly known as reverse micelles (RMs). These RMs are extremely important to facilitate the dissolution of hydrophilic and hydrophobic compounds for biocompatibility in applications in drug delivery, food science, and nanomedicine. The combination of two wisely chosen types of compounds such as biocompatible non-polar solvents and ionic liquids (ILs) with amphiphilic character (surface-active ionic liquids, SAILs) can be used to generate organized systems that perfectly align with the Green Chemistry concepts. Thus, we describe the current state of SAILs (protic and aprotic) to prepare RMs using non-polar but safe solvents such as esters derived from fatty acids, among others. Moreover, the use of the biocompatible solvents as the external phase in RMs and microemulsions/nanoemulsions with the other commonly used biocompatible surfactants is detailed showing the diversity of preparations and important applications. As shown by multiple examples, the properties of the RMs can be modified by changes in the type of surfactant and/or external solvents but a key fact to note is that all these modifications generate novel systems with dissimilar properties. These interesting properties cannot be anticipated or extrapolated, and deep analysis is always required. Finally, the works presented provide valuable information about the use of biocompatible RMs, making them a green and promising alternative toward efficient and sustainable chemistryFinancial support was received from the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas (PIP CONICET 112-2015-0100283), Universidad Nacional de RĂ­o Cuarto (PPI-UNRC 2016–2019, 2020–2022), Agencia Nacional de PromociĂłn CientĂ­fica y TĂ©cnica (PICT 2015-0585, PICT 2018-0508), and Ministerio de Ciencia y TecnologĂ­a, Gobierno de la Provincia de CĂłrdoba (PID 2018) is gratefully acknowledged. R.D.F., N.M.C. and J.J.S. hold a research position at CONICET. N.D. and C.M.O.L. thank CONICET for a research fellowship. L.G.-R. thanks the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain (project CTQ2017-84354-P), Xunta de Galicia (GR 2007/085; IN607C 2016/03 and Centro singular de investigaciĂłn de Galicia accreditation 2016–2019, ED431G/09), and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) is gratefully acknowledgedS

    "It All Ended in an Unsporting Way": Serbian Football and the Disintegration of Yugoslavia, 1989-2006

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    Part of a wider examination into football during the collapse of Eastern European Communism between 1989 and 1991, this article studies the interplay between Serbian football and politics during the period of Yugoslavia's demise. Research utilizing interviews with individuals directly involved in the Serbian game, in conjunction with contemporary Yugoslav media sources, indicates that football played an important proactive role in the revival of Serbian nationalism. At the same time the Yugoslav conflict, twinned with a complex transition to a market economy, had disastrous consequences for football throughout the territories of the former Yugoslavia. In the years following the hostilities the Serbian game has suffered decline, major financial hardship and continuing terrace violence, resulting in widespread nostalgia for the pre-conflict era

    Autler-Townes splitting in two-color photoassociation of 6Li

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    We report on high-resolution two-color photoassociation spectroscopy in the triplet system of magneto-optically trapped 6Li. The absolute transition frequencies have been measured. Strong optical coupling of the bound molecular states has been observed as Autler-Townes splitting in the photoassociation signal. The spontaneous bound-bound transition rate is determined and the molecule formation rate is estimated. The observed lineshapes are in good agreement with the theoretical model.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. A (Rapid Communication

    Books

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    Current Ocular Therapy. Ed. by F. T. Fraunfelder, F. Hampton Roy and S. Martha Meyer. Pp. xiii + 792. Illustrated. ÂŁ55. Nonhmead: WB Saunders. 1989.Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding and Menorrhagia. Bailliere's Clinical Obstetrics and Gynaecolcgy: International Practice and Research, June 1989. Ed. by J. O. Drife. Pp. 217 + 428. Illustrated. ÂŁ18,50. Northmead: WE Saunders.1989.Treatment of Cancer. 2nd ed. Ed. by Karol Sikora and Keith E. Halnan. Pp. ix + 916. Illustrated. Price ÂŁ99,50. London: Chapman and Hall Medical. 1990.Ocular Syndromes and Systemic Diseases. 2nd edition. Ed. by F. Hampton Roy. Pp. xlvii + 470. ÂŁ40. Northmead: WE Saunders. 1989.Non-invasive Cardiac Imaging. British Medical Bulletin. Vol. 45, No. 4. Ed. by D. G. Gibson. Pp. 830 + 1109. Illustrated. ÂŁ25 (UK) or ÂŁ31,50 (overseas). New York: Churchill Livingstone. 1989.Laparoscopic Surgery. Bailliere's Clinical Obstetrics and Gynaecology: International Practice and Research, September 1989. Ed. by C. J. G. Sunon. Pp. 429 + 686. Illustrated. ÂŁ18,50. Northmead: WB Saunders. 1989.Management ofMinor Head Injuries. Ed. by I. J. Swann and D. W. Yates. Pp. x + 102. Illustrated: ÂŁ14,95. Hampshire: Chapman & Hall Medical. 1989.ABC of Child Abuse. Ed. by Roy Meadow. Pp. 59. Illustrated. London: BMJ. 1989.The Facts of Life. Ed. by Marina Petropulos. Pp. 1 + 222. Illustrated. R19,95 exc!. GST. Cape Town: Tafelberg. 1990.Physical Examination of the Heart and Circulation. 2nd ed. Ed. by Joseph K. Perloff. Pp. viii + 292. Illustrated. ÂŁ17,95. Northmead: WB Saunders. 1989.Growth Regulation of Thyroid Gland and Thyroid Tumours: Frontiers ofHormone Research. Vo!. 18. Ed. by P. E. Goretzki, and H. D. Roher. Pp. viii + 163. Illustrated. ÂŁ68,80. Basel: S. Karger. 1989.Topical Diagnosis in Neurology: Anatomy, Physiology, Signs, Symptoms. 2nd revised ed. Ed. by P. Duus. Pp. x + 337. Illustrated. DM 370. Stungart: Georg Thieme Verlag. 1989

    Association of British Neurologists: revised (2015) guidelines for prescribing disease-modifying treatments in multiple sclerosis.

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    In June 1999, the Association of British Neurologists (ABN) first published guidelines for the use of the licensed multiple sclerosis (MS) disease-modifying treatments (at that time ÎČ-interferon and glatiramer acetate). The guidelines were revised in 2001 and have been periodically updated since then. In 2002, following the negative assessment of these treatments by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the MS risk-sharing scheme started, in which patients eligible according to the 2001 ABN guidelines were provided with treatment funded through the UK National Health Service (NHS), and monitored annually for up to 10 years.1 Recruitment to the risk-sharing scheme cohort is complete. Pending a future final evaluation, the UK Department of Health's instruction to NHS funders remains in place: that patients who fulfil the ABN criteria should continue to receive treatment funded through the NHS. The British neurological community has fully accepted the risk-sharing scheme for prescribing ÎČ-interferon and glatiramer acetate. Approximately 70 ‘treating centres’ have recruited >5000 patients between 2002 and 2005, and these have been monitored annually for 10 years; many more patients have received these treatments since 2005. The ABN published revised guidelines in 2007, and then again in 2009, following the licensing of natalizumab and mitoxantrone. This 2015 revised guideline replaces former versions. It includes all newly approved or licensed treatments for MS and represents a consensus concerning their use. These guidelines will require future revision as other treatments receive approval (eg, daclizumab and ocrelizumab): we suggest they are reviewed after an interval of no longer than 12 months. The guideline is not intended to provide a complete description of the possible complications and monitoring of disease-modifying treatments in MS; we refer prescribing neurologists to the relevant summaries of product characteristics.PostprintPeer reviewe
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