5,438 research outputs found
Role of habitat in the distribution and abundance of marsh birds
The recent drouth of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s produced some dramatic effects on the quality and quantity of emergent vegetation in glacial marshes of the central United States and Canada. These vegetative changes have had great impact on the distribution and size of marsh bird populations. Similar plant responses must have resulted from the dry years of the late 1800’s and the 1930’s, and intervening wet years produced opposite extremes on many marshes. Such habitat changes undoubtedly have occurred throughout the racial history of many marsh animals, and the maintenance of a species depended upon its adaptability.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/specialreports/1041/thumbnail.jp
Planning research in the area of launch vehicle and propulsion programs Progress report, 1-31 Mar. 1968
Program and report reviews on launch vehicle upper stages and propulsion of advanced reentry spacecraf
Regulating Clothing Outwork: A Sceptic's View
By applying the strategies of international anti-sweatshop campaigns to the Australian context, recent regulations governing home-based clothing production hold retailers
responsible for policing the wages and employment conditions of clothing outworkers who manufacture clothing on their behalf. This paper argues that the new approach
oversimplifies the regulatory challenge by assuming (1) that Australian clothing production is organised in a hierarchical ‘buyer-led’ linear structure in which core
retail firms have the capacity to control their suppliers’ behaviour; (2) that firms act as unitary moral agents; and (3) that interventions imported from other times and places
are applicable to the contemporary Australian context. After considering some alternative regulatory approaches, the paper concludes that the new regulatory strategy effectively privatises responsibility for labour market conditions – a development that cries out for further debate
Separate Universes Do Not Constrain Primordial Black Hole Formation
Carr and Hawking showed that the proper size of a spherical overdense region
surrounded by a flat FRW universe cannot be arbitrarily large as otherwise the
region would close up on itself and become a separate universe. From this
result they derived a condition connecting size and density of the overdense
region ensuring that it is part of our universe. Carr used this condition to
obtain an upper bound for the density fluctuation amplitude with the property
that for smaller amplitudes the formation of a primordial black hole is
possible, while larger ones indicate a separate universe. In contrast, we find
that the appearance of a maximum is not a consequence of avoiding separate
universes but arises naturally from the geometry of the chosen slicing. Using
instead of density a volume fluctuation variable reveals that a fluctuation is
a separate universe iff this variable diverges on superhorizon scales. Hence
Carr's and Hawking's condition does not pose a physical constraint on density
fluctuations. The dynamics of primordial black hole formation with an initial
curvature fluctuation amplitude larger than the one corresponding to the
maximum density fluctuation amplitude was previously not considered in detail
and so we compare it to the well-known case where the amplitude is smaller by
presenting embedding and conformal diagrams of both types in dust spacetimes.Comment: Updated version corresponds to the published version
10.1103/PhysRevD.83.124025, 22 pages, 22 figure
Structure of plastically compacting granular packings
The developing structure in systems of compacting ductile grains were studied
experimentally in two and three dimensions. In both dimensions, the peaks of
the radial distribution function were reduced, broadened, and shifted compared
with those observed in hard disk- and sphere systems. The geometrical
three--grain configurations contributing to the second peak in the radial
distribution function showed few but interesting differences between the
initial and final stages of the two dimensional compaction. The evolution of
the average coordination number as function of packing fraction is compared
with other experimental and numerical results from the literature. We conclude
that compaction history is important for the evolution of the structure of
compacting granular systems.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
Are Labour Markets Necessarily Local? Spatiality, Segmentation and Scale
This paper draws on recent debates about scale to approach the geography of labour markets from a dynamic perspective sensitive to the spatiality and scale of labour market
restructuring. Its exploration of labour market reconfigurations after the collapse of a major firm (Ansett Airlines) raises questions about geography’s faith in the inherently ‘local’ constitution of labour markets. Through an examination of the job reallocation process after redundancy, the paper suggests that multiple labour markets use and articulate scale in different ways. It argues that labour market rescaling processes are enacted at the critical moment of recruitment, where social networks, personal aspirations and employer preferences combine to shape workers’ destinations
Exploring Level Statistics from Quantum Chaos to Localization with the Autocorrelation Function of Spectral Determinants
The autocorrelation function of spectral determinants (ASD) is used to
characterize the discrete spectrum of a phase coherent quasi- 1- dimensional,
disordered wire as a function of its length L in a finite, weak magnetic field.
An analytical function is obtained depending only on the dimensionless
conductance g= xi/L where xi is the localization length, the scaled frequency
x= omega/Delta, where Delta is the average level spacing of the wire, and the
global symmetry of the system. A metal- insulator crossover is observed,
showing that information on localization is contained in the disorder averaged
ASD.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Parity assignments in 172,174Yb using polarized photons and the K quantum number in rare earth nuclei
The 100 % polarized photon beam at the High Intensity gamma-ray Source (HIgS)
at Duke University has been used to determine the parity of six dipole
excitations between 2.9 and 3.6 MeV in the deformed nuclei 172,174 Yb in photon
scattering (g,g') experiments. The measured parities are compared with previous
assignments based on the K quantum number that had been assigned in Nuclear
Resonance Fluorescence (NRF) experiments by using the Alaga rules. A systematic
survey of the relation between gamma-decay branching ratios and parity quantum
numbers is given for the rare earth nuclei.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
APO010, a synthetic hexameric CD95 ligand, induces human glioma cell death in vitro and in vivo
Death receptor targeting has emerged as one of the promising novel approaches of cancer therapy. The activation of one such prototypic death receptor, CD95 (Fas/APO-1), has remained controversial because CD95 agonistic molecules have exhibited either too strong toxicity or too little activity. The natural CD95 ligand (CD95L) is a cytokine, which needs to trimerize to mediate a cell death signal. Mega-Fas-Ligand, now referred to as APO010, is a synthetic hexameric CD95 agonist that exhibits strong antitumor activity in various tumor models. Here, we studied the effects of APO010 in human glioma models in vitro and in vivo. Compared with a cross-linked soluble CD95L or a CD95-agonistic antibody, APO010 exhibited superior activity in glioma cell lines expressing CD95 and triggered caspase-dependent cell death. APO010 reduced glioma cell viability in synergy when combined with temozolomide. The locoregional administration of APO010 induced glioma cell death in vivo and prolonged the survival of tumor-bearing mice. A further exploration of APO010 as a novel antiglioma agent is warranted
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