694 research outputs found
Legal Writing Scholarship: Point/Counterpoint
Perhaps because the field of legal writing has now matured enough so that we professors constitute a critical mass of experienced teachers and scholars, we find ourselves frequently embroiled in debates about legal writing scholarship. What is it? Can we do it? Should we do it? Should it be considered part and parcel of our responsibilities as members of the law school world? To help us better present our shared view that legal writing professors not only can but should produce scholarship, we sought first to take on the role of devil’s advocate, presenting all the rationales we have heard from our colleagues as to why they do not produce scholarship. We would then respond to them. Once listed, we found that the reasons given were frighteningly similar to statements made by many of our students when we, as writing professors, ask them to do research and write for our legal writing courses. We also found the statements were often echoed by doctrinal faculty members and deans who refuse to see legal writing professors as true members of the academy. In this article, we offer seven reasons typically used to justify why legal writing professors do not write, and our responses
Holographic Methods as Local Probes of the Atomic Order in Solids
In the last fifteen years several techniques based on the holographic
principle have been developed for the study of the 3D local order in solids.
These methods use various particles: electrons, hard x-ray photons, gamma
photons, or neutrons to image the atoms. Although the practical realisation of
the various imaging experiments is very different, there is a common thread;
the use of inside reference points for holographic imaging. In this paper we
outline the basics of atomic resolution holography using inside reference
points, especially concentrating to the hard x-ray case. Further, we outline
the experimental requirements and what has been practically realized in the
last decade. At last we give examples of applications and future perspectives.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Differential Photoelectron Holography: A New Approach for Three-Dimensional Atomic Imaging
We propose differential holography as a method to overcome the long-standing
forward-scattering problem in photoelectron holography and related techniques
for the three-dimensional imaging of atoms. Atomic images reconstructed from
experimental and theoretical Cu 3p holograms from Cu(001) demonstrate that this
method suppresses strong forward-scattering effects so as to yield more
accurate three-dimensional images of side- and back-scattering atoms.Comment: revtex, 4 pages, 2 figure
Iridium complexes of the conformationally rigid IBioxMe4Ligand : hydride complexes and dehydrogenation of cyclooctene
A method for accessing the formally 14 VE iridium(III) hydride fragment {Ir(IBioxMe4)2(H)2}+ (2), containing the conformationally rigid NHC ligand IBioxMe4, is reported. Hydrogenation of trans-[Ir(IBioxMe4)2(COE)Cl] (1) in the presence of excess Na[BArF4] leads to the formation of dimeric [{Ir(IBioxMe4)2(H)2}2Cl][BArF4] (3), which is structurally fluxional in solution and acts as a reservoir of monomeric 2 in the presence of excess halogen ion abstractor. Stable dihydride complexes trans-[Ir(IBioxMe4)2(2,2′-bipyridine)(H)2][BArF4] (4) and [Ir(IBioxMe4)3(H)2][BArF4] (5) were subsequently isolated through in situ trapping of 2 using 2,2′-bipyridine and IBioxMe4, respectively, and fully characterized. Using mixtures of 3 and Na[BArF4] as a latent source of 2, the reactive monomeric fragment’s reactivity was explored with excess ethylene and cyclooctene, and trans-[Ir(IBioxMe4)2(C2H4)2][BArF4] (6) and cis-[Ir(IBioxMe4)2(COD)][BArF4] (7) were isolated, respectively, through sacrificial hydrogenation of the alkenes. Complex 6 is notable for the adoption of a very unusual orthogonal arrangement of the trans-ethylene ligands in the solid state, which has been analyzed computationally using energy and charge decomposition (EDA-NOCV). The formation of 7 via transfer dehydrogenation of COE highlights the ability to partner IBioxMe4 with reactive metal centers capable of C–H bond activation, without intramolecular activation. Reaction of 7 with CO slowly formed trans-[Ir(IBioxMe4)2(CO)2][BArF4] (8), but the equivalent reaction with bis-ethylene 6 was an order of magnitude faster, quantifying the strong coordination of COD in 7
Quantum Rotor Engines
This chapter presents autonomous quantum engines that generate work in the
form of directed motion for a rotor. We first formulate a prototypical
clock-driven model in a time-dependent framework and demonstrate how it can be
translated into an autonomous engine with the introduction of a planar rotor
degree of freedom. The rotor plays both the roles of internal engine clock and
of work repository. Using the example of a single-qubit piston engine, the
thermodynamic performance is then reviewed. We evaluate the extractable work in
terms of ergotropy, the kinetic energy associated to net directed rotation, as
well as the intrinsic work based on the exerted torque under autonomous
operation; and we compare them with the actual energy output to an external
dissipative load. The chapter closes with a quantum-classical comparison of the
engine's dynamics. For the single-qubit piston example, we propose two
alternative representations of the qubit in an entirely classical framework:
(i) a coin flip model and (ii) a classical magnet moment, showing subtle
differences between the quantum and classical descriptions.Comment: Chapter of the upcoming book "Thermodynamics in the Quantum Regime -
Recent Progress and Outlook
Cumulative mutagenesis of the basic residues in the 201-218 region of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-binding protein-5 results in progressive loss of both IGF-I binding and inhibition of IGF-I biological action
We have reported previously that mutation of two conserved nonbasic amino acids (G203 and Q209) within the highly basic 201–218 region in the C-terminal domain of IGF-binding protein-5 (IGFBP-5) decreases binding to IGFs. This study reveals that cumulative mutagenesis of the 10 basic residues in this region, to create the C-Term series of mutants, ultimately results in a 15-fold decrease in the affinity for IGF-I and a major loss in heparin binding. We examined the ability of mutants to inhibit IGF-mediated survival of MCF-7 cells and were able to demonstrate that this depended not only upon the affinity for IGF-I, but also the kinetics of this interaction, because IGFBP-5 mutants with similar affinity constants (KD) values, but with different association (Ka) and dissociation (Kd) rate values, had markedly different inhibitory properties. In contrast, the affinity for IGF-I provided no predictive value in terms of the ability of these mutants to enhance IGF action when bound to the substratum. Instead, these C-Term mutants appeared to enhance the actions of IGF-I by a combination of increased dissociation of IGF-IGFBP complexes from the substratum, together with dissociation of IGF-I from IGFBP-5 bound to the substratum. These effects of the IGFBPs were dependent upon binding to IGF-I, because a non-IGF binding mutant (N-Term) was unable to inhibit or enhance the actions of IGF-I. These results emphasize the importance of the kinetics of association/dissociation in determining the enhancing or inhibiting effects of IGFBP-5 and demonstrate the ability to generate an IGFBP-5 mutant with exclusively IGF-enhancing activity
Feasibility tests of transmission x-ray photoelectron emission microscopy of wet samples
We performed feasibility tests of photoelectron emission spectromicroscopy of wet samples in the water window (285-532 eV) soft x-ray spectral region. Water was successfully confined in an ultrahigh vacuum compatible compartment with x-ray transparent sides. This water cell was placed in the MEPHISTO spectromicroscope in a transmission geometry, and complete x-ray absorption spectra of the water window region were acquired. We also show micrographs of test samples, mounted outside of the compartment, and imaged through the water. This technique can be used to study liquid chemistry and, at least to the micron level, the microstructure of wet samples. Possibilities include cells in water or buffer, proteins in solution, oils of tribological interest, liquid crystals, and other samples not presently accessible to the powerful x-ray photoelectron emission spectromicroscopy technique
Synergistic Impacts of Organic Acids and pH on Growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa: A Comparison of Parametric and Bayesian Non-parametric Methods to Model Growth
Different weak organic acids have significant potential as topical treatments for wounds infected by opportunistic pathogens that are recalcitrant to standard treatments. These acids have long been used as bacteriostatic compounds in the food industry, and in some cases are already being used in the clinic. The effects of different organic acids vary with pH, concentration, and the specific organic acid used, but no studies to date on any opportunistic pathogens have examined the detailed interactions between these key variables in a controlled and systematic way. We have therefore comprehensively evaluated the effects of several different weak organic acids on growth of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We used a semi-automated plate reader to generate growth profiles for two different strains (model laboratory strain PAO1 and clinical isolate PA1054 from a hospital burns unit) in a range of organic acids at different concentrations and pH, with a high level of replication for a total of 162,960 data points. We then compared two different modeling approaches for the interpretation of this time-resolved dataset: parametric logistic regression (with or without a component to include lag phase) vs. non-parametric Gaussian process (GP) regression. Because GP makes no prior assumptions about the nature of the growth, this method proved to be superior in cases where growth did not follow a standard sigmoid functional form, as is common when bacteria grow under stress. Acetic, propionic and butyric acids were all more detrimental to growth than the other acids tested, and although PA1054 grew better than PAO1 under non-stress conditions, this difference largely disappeared as the levels of stress increased. As expected from knowledge of how organic acids behave, their effect was significantly enhanced in combination with low pH, with this interaction being greatest in the case of propionic acid. Our approach lends itself to the characterization of combinatorial interactions between stressors, especially in cases where their impacts on growth render logistic growth models unsuitable
Sociodemographic, Disease, Health System, and Contextual Factors Affecting the Initiation of Biologic Agents in Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Longitudinal Study: Factors Influencing Initiation of Biologic Agents in RA
To analyze the effect of sociodemographic, disease, and health system characteristics and contextual features about the community of residence on the subsequent initiation of treatment with biologic agents for rheumatoid arthritis (RA)
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