1,287 research outputs found
Beyond Open Hostilities and Collective Bargaining
Examines a variety of cooperative arrangements and the resulting problems and successes.https://research.upjohn.org/up_press/1136/thumbnail.jp
Labor-Management Cooperation: The American Experience
Examines a variety of cooperative arrangements and the resulting problems and successes.https://research.upjohn.org/up_press/1136/thumbnail.jp
Formation of primordial black holes from non-Gaussian perturbations produced in a waterfall transition
We consider the process of primordial black hole (PBH) formation originated
from primordial curvature perturbations produced during waterfall transition
(with tachyonic instability), at the end of hybrid inflation. It is known that
in such inflation models, rather large values of curvature perturbation
amplitudes can be reached, which can potentially cause a significant PBH
production in the early Universe. The probability distributions of density
perturbation amplitudes in this case can be strongly non-Gaussian, which
requires a special treatment. We calculated PBH abundances and PBH mass spectra
for the model, and analyzed their dependence on model parameters. We obtained
the constraints on the parameters of the inflationary potential, using the
available limits on .Comment: v2: 11 pages, 4 figures. Several comments and references added.
Version accepted by Phys. Rev.
Extended General Relativity: large-scale antigravity and short-scale gravity with \omega=-1 from five dimensional vacuum
Considering a five-dimensional (5D) Riemannian spacetime with a particular
stationary Ricci-flat metric, we obtain in the framework of the induced matter
theory an effective 4D static and spherically symmetric metric which give us
ordinary gravitatory solutions on small (planetary and astrophysical) scales,
but repulsive (antigravity) forces on very large (cosmological) scales with
\omega = -1. Our approach is an unified manner to describe dark energy, dark
matter and ordinary matter. We illustrate the theory with two examples, the
solar system and the great attractor. From the geometrical point of view, these
results follow from the assumption that exists a confining force that make
possible that test particles move on a given 4D hypersurface.Comment: Final version. To be published in Phys. Lett.
Inducing the cosmological constant from five-dimensional Weyl space
We investigate the possibility of inducing the cosmological constant from
extra dimensions by embedding our four-dimensional Riemannian space-time into a
five-dimensional Weyl integrable space. Following approach of the induced
matter theory we show that when we go down from five to four dimensions, the
Weyl field may contribute both to the induced energy-tensor as well as to the
cosmological constant, or more generally, it may generate a time-dependent
cosmological parameter. As an application, we construct a simple cosmological
model which has some interesting properties.Comment: 7 page
BDSM Disclosure and Stigma Management: Identifying Opportunities for Sex Education
While participation in the activities like bondage, domination, submission/sadism, masochism that fall under the umbrella term BDSM is widespread, stigma surrounding BDSM poses risks to practitioners who wish to disclose their interest. We examined risk factors involved with disclosure to posit how sex education might diffuse stigma and warn of risks. Semi-structured interviews asked 20 adults reporting an interest in BDSM about their disclosure experiences. Most respondents reported their BDSM interests starting before age 15, sometimes creating a phase of anxiety and shame in the absence of reassuring information. As adults, respondents often considered BDSM central to their sexuality, thus disclosure was integral to dating. Disclosure decisions in nondating situations were often complex considerations balancing desire for appropriateness with a desire for connection and honesty. Some respondents wondered whether their interests being found out would jeopardize their jobs. Experiences with stigma varied widely
Genome and Transcriptome Analysis of the Food-Yeast Candida utilis
The industrially important food-yeast Candida utilis is a Crabtree effect-negative yeast used to produce valuable chemicals and recombinant proteins. In the present study, we conducted whole genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of C. utilis, which showed that this yeast diverged long before the formation of the CUG and Saccharomyces/Kluyveromyces clades. In addition, we performed comparative genome and transcriptome analyses using next-generation sequencing, which resulted in the identification of genes important for characteristic phenotypes of C. utilis such as those involved in nitrate assimilation, in addition to the gene encoding the functional hexose transporter. We also found that an antisense transcript of the alcohol dehydrogenase gene, which in silico analysis did not predict to be a functional gene, was transcribed in the stationary-phase, suggesting a novel system of repression of ethanol production. These findings should facilitate the development of more sophisticated systems for the production of useful reagents using C. utilis
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