4,233 research outputs found

    Various local global principles for abelian groups

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    We discuss local global principles for abelian groups by examining the adjoint functor pair obtained by (left adjoint) sending an abelian group AA to the local diagram \Cal L(A)=\{\Bbb Z_{(p)}\otimes A\rightarrow \Bbb Q\otimes A\} and (right adjoint) applying the inverse limit functor to such diagrams; pp runs through all integer primes. We show that the natural map A\rightarrow \varprojlim \Cal L(A) is an isomorphism if AA has torsion at only finitely many primes. If AA is fixed we answer the genus problem of identifying all those groups BB for which the local diagrams \Cal L(A) and \Cal L(B) are isomorphic. A similar analysis is carried out for the arithmetic systems \Cal S(A)=\{\Bbb Q\otimes A\rightarrow\Bbb Q\otimes A^{\wedge}\leftarrow A^{\wedge}\} and the local systems {QAQ(ΠZ(p)A)Π(Z(p)A)}\{\Bbb Q\otimes A\rightarrow \Bbb Q\otimes (\Pi\Bbb Z_{(p)}\otimes A)\leftarrow\Pi (\Bbb Z_{(p)}\otimes A)\}. The delicate relationship between the various adjoint functor pairs described above is explained

    Modelling the Influence of Layout On Overheating Risk of London Flats

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    An analysis of overheating levels corresponding to building morphology yielded the modelling uncertainty due to the geometry and layout of two-bedroom flats in London, England. A new method is introduced, which collates information on various flat layouts in the current London housing stock. To ensure an unbiased sample was selected, dwellings were chosen randomly, yielding twelve flats in and around inner London. Dynamic thermal simulations were performed using EnergyPlus to determine individual dwellings’ overheating risk. The results described the influence of geometry and layout configuration on overheating risk, which has rarely been analysed in previous studies. Irregular façades led to higher overheating levels in the set-back part of the building. Default configurations were used to model basecase archetypes, with further simulations performed to study the effects of orientation, ceiling heights and window glazing fractions. Compared with these factors, bigger differences between mean operative temperatures of flats were due to layout, with 3.5 °C in bedrooms, 1.5 °C in living rooms and 2.2 °C in kitchens

    A case study on the impact of fixed input parameter values in the modelling of indoor overheating

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    Global efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from buildings while also improving their environmental resilience have intensified. These efforts are often supported by building stock models which can inform policymakers on the impact of policies on energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions and the indoor environment. The input values of such models are commonly informed by reference tables, which can result in inaccurate specification and incomplete representation of the distribution of possible values. In this modelling case study of a semi-detached dwelling archetype, the influence of using a reference U-value (2.1 W/(m2K)) for solid walls in England on heat-related mortality rate is compared to a probabilistic specification based on empirical evidence (median = 1.7W/(m2K)). Using the theoretical reference U-value generally resulted in a lower indoor overheating risk compared to the use of the empirically derived U-values pre-retrofit, but a larger increase in heat-related mortality rate following internal wall insulation (1.20%) than the use of the empirical median (0.94%, 95 % Confidence Interval = 0.87–0.99 %). This highlights the potentially significant implications of using fixed reference values. Future work will employ this probabilistic framework on multiple influential parameters

    Late style and speaking out: J A Symonds's In the Key of Blue

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    This article examines In the Key of Blue (1893)—an essay collection by John Addington Symonds—as a case study in queer public utterance during the early 1890s. Viewed through the critical lens of late style, as theorised by Edward Said, the evolution of this project, from compilation through to reader reception, reveals Symonds's determination to “speak out” on the subject of homosexuality. Paradoxically, In the Key of Blue was thus a timely and untimely work: it belonged to a brief period of increased visibility and expressiveness when dealing with male same-sex desire, spearheaded by a younger generation of Decadent writers, but it also cut against the grain of nineteenth-century social taboo and legal repression. Symonds's essay collection brought together new and previously unpublished work with examples of his writing for the periodical press. These new combinations, appearing together for the first time, served to facilitate new readings and new inferences, bringing homosexual themes to the fore. This article traces the dialogic structure of In the Key of Blue , its strategies for articulating homosexual desire, and examines the response of reviewers, from the hostile to celebratory

    Plant bugs associated with callitroid conifers.

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    226 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 26 cm.Orthotyline plant bugs inhabiting the southern conifer genus Callitris in Australia are investigated and classified systemically for the first time, with the description of 5 new genera and 32 new species from Australia. The five new callitroid-inhabiting Orthotylini genera proposed are Avititerra, Blattakeraia, Callitricola, Erysivena, and Ngullamiris. The 32 new species accommodated by these genera are: Avititerra lepidothrix, A. xerophila, Blattakeraia actinostrobi, B. hochuli, Callitricola ballina, C. boorabbin, C. cordylina, C. finke, C. finlayae, C. gammonensis, C. graciliphila, C. parawirra, C. pullabooka, C. silveirae, C. tatarnici, C. wiradjuri, C. wollemi, Erysivena apta, E. bundjalung, E. drepanomorpha, E. emeraldensis, E. endlicheriphila, E. kalbarri, E. majori, E. mareeba, E. molloy, E. notodytika, E. paluma, E. schuhi, E. schwartzi, E. sydneyensis, and Ngullamiris whadjuk. A key to the newly described Australian taxa, habitus photographs of all species, illustrations of male and female genitalia, and scanning electron micrographs of representative species are given. A phylogenetic analysis of these callitroid-inhabiting Orthotylini was undertaken, incorporating described Orthotylus Fieber species extralimital to Australia and other recently described Australian Orthotylini. Callitris host plants are mapped to the implied-weights phylogenetic analysis, and their associations are discussed. Associations between related species of Orthotylini and related species of Callitris were detected, as were three independent colonisations by a paraphyletic assemblage of callitroid-inhabiting Orthotylini. Generic concepts within Orthotylini are discussed, with reference to Orthotylus species extralimital to Australia and includes a comparison of key character systems. It is demonstrated that the endosomal spicule characters are primary determinants of generic limits in the Orthotylini, which are supported by other characters of the male and female genitalia and external characters

    IRF1 (interferon regulatory factor 1)

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    Review on IRF1 (interferon regulatory factor 1), with data on DNA, on the protein encoded, and where the gene is implicated

    Use of a saliva-based diagnostic test to identify tapeworm infection in horses in the UK

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    Background: Anthelmintic resistance combined with limited chemotherapeutic options has prompted a change in approaches to control of equine helminth infections. Targeted selective treatment strategies use diagnostics to reduce anthelmintic use by treating individuals with worm burdens or egg shedding levels above a set threshold. While faecal egg count analysis has limitations for informing tapeworm treatment, a commercially available saliva-based diagnostic test accurately diagnoses horses with tapeworm infection. Objectives: Evaluation of a saliva-based diagnostic test to identify horses naturally infected with tapeworm and assess the impact of using the test to inform anthelmintic administration. Study design: Retrospective longitudinal study. Methods: Saliva was collected from horses (n = 237) at a UK welfare charity from autumn 2015 to autumn 2016. Horses diagnosed as positive for tapeworm infection using the EquiSal® Tapeworm test were anthelmintic treated according to weight. The number of horses that received anthelmintic treatment based on the test result was compared with an all-group treatment approach and the reduction in anthelmintic usage calculated. Incoming horses were also tested (n = 143) and the information was used to inform quarantine treatments. Results: In autumn 2015, 85% of 237 horses tested received no anthelmintic and the majority (71%) of these remained below the treatment threshold throughout the study. Of the 69 horses that received treatment, seven required treatment following three subsequent tests, while >50% of horses administered with anthelmintic fell below the treatment threshold at the following test. No increase in tapeworm prevalence within the 237 horses was observed during the study despite a substantial reduction in the application of antitapeworm treatments. A total of 41% of incoming horses required anticestode treatment. Main limitations: Other management practices were not included in the analysis. Conclusions: Compared with an all-group treatment strategy, the diagnostic-led approach used here considerably reduced application of anticestode anthelmintics. This could reduce selection pressure for anthelmintic resistance

    Exploring assumptions for air infiltration rate estimates using indoor radon in UK homes

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    Radon, a known carcinogen, is one of the most commonly monitored indoor contaminants. This paper utilises findings from a previous study on indoor radon measurements in United Kingdom (UK) homes to explore the UK Government's Standard Assessment Procedure (SAP) assumptions for air infiltration rates. These assumptions are important as they are used to assess the energy performance of dwellings and compliance with building regulations. Indoor radon data is aggregated by 16 combinations of home energy efficiency measures (loft and wall insulation, glazing upgrades and draught proofing) and fitted using a simple analytic radon model. We find indoor radon to be inversely proportional to air change rate and proportional to a fit coefficient, k, of 42.2 ± 3.1 (95% Confidence Interval (CI)). We also show that the assumptions within SAP used to estimate home infiltration rates can be modified to include the impact of home energy efficiency which improves the fit (R2 from 0.38 to 0.51) to the radon data. This work provides evidence to help improve assumptions regarding the effects of home energy efficiency on infiltration rates

    Polyamine metabolism in liver of young rats

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