3,206 research outputs found
REVIEW: The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms
Review of the non-fiction book The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms, by David C. Tucker
REVIEW: Flannery: A Life of Flannery O\u27Connor
Review of the book Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor, by Brad Gooch
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Rate of photosynthetic induction in fluctuating light varies widely among genotypes of wheat.
Crop photosynthesis and yield are limited by slow photosynthetic induction in sunflecks. We quantified variation in induction kinetics across diverse genotypes of wheat for the first time. Following a preliminary study that hinted at wide variation in induction kinetics across 58 genotypes, we grew 10 genotypes with contrasting responses in a controlled environment and quantified induction kinetics of carboxylation capacity (Vcmax) from dynamic A versus ci curves after a shift from low to high light (from 50 µmol m-2 s-1 to 1500 µmol m-2 s-1), in five flag leaves per genotype. Within-genotype median time for 95% induction (t95) of Vcmax varied 1.8-fold, from 5.2 min to 9.5 min. Our simulations suggest that non-instantaneous induction reduces daily net carbon gain by up to 15%, and that breeding to speed up Vcmax induction in the slowest of our 10 genotypes to match that in the fastest genotype could increase daily net carbon gain by up to 3.4%, particularly for leaves in mid-canopy positions (cumulative leaf area index ≤1.5 m2 m-2), those that experience predominantly short-duration sunflecks, and those with high photosynthetic capacities
Prosecutors\u27 Peremptory Challenges - A Response and Reply
Three federal trial attorneys disagree with Professor Richard Friedman\u27s proposal to eliminate the prosecution\u27s peremptories, while Friedman defends his view
Elucidating the Structure of the Magnesium Aluminum Chloride Complex electrolyte for Magnesium-ion batteries
We present a rigorous analysis of the Magnesium Aluminum Chloro Complex
(MACC) in tetrahydrofuran (THF), one of the few electrolytes that can
reversibly plate and strip Mg. We use \emph{ab initio} calculations and
classical molecular dynamics simulations to interrogate the MACC electrolyte
composition with the goal of addressing two urgent questions that have puzzled
battery researchers: \emph{i}) the functional species of the electrolyte, and
\emph{ii}) the complex equilibria regulating the MACC speciation after
prolonged electrochemical cycling, a process termed as conditioning, and after
prolonged inactivity, a process called aging. A general computational strategy
to untangle the complex structure of electrolytes, ionic liquids and other
liquid media is presented. The analysis of formation energies and
grand-potential phase diagrams of Mg-Al-Cl-THF suggests that the MACC
electrolyte bears a simple chemical structure with few simple constituents,
namely the electro-active species MgCl and AlCl in equilibrium with
MgCl and AlCl. Knowledge of the stable species of the MACC electrolyte
allows us to determine the most important equilibria occurring during
electrochemical cycling. We observe that Al deposition is always preferred to
Mg deposition, explaining why freshly synthesized MACC cannot operate and needs
to undergo preparatory conditioning. Similarly, we suggest that aluminum
displacement and depletion from the solution upon electrolyte resting (along
with continuous MgCl regeneration) represents one of the causes of
electrolyte aging. Finally, we compute the NMR shifts from shielding tensors of
selected molecules and ions providing fingerprints to guide future experimental
investigations
Grazers and diggers: exploitation competition and coexistence among foragers with different feeding strategies on a single resource
A mathematical model is presented that describes a system where two consumer species compete exploitatively for a single renewable resource. The resource is distributed in a patchy but homogeneous environment; that is, all patches are intrinsically identical. The two consumer species are referred to as diggers and grazers, where diggers deplete the resource within a patch to lower densities than grazers. We show that the two distinct feeding strategies can produce a heterogeneous resource distribution that enables their coexistence. Coexistence requires that grazers must either move faster than diggers between patches or convert the resources to population growth much more efficiently than diggers. The model shows that the functional form of resource renewal within a patch is also important for coexistence. These results contrast with theory that considers exploitation competition for a single resource when the resource is assumed to be well mixed throughout the system.Shane A. Richards, Roger M. Nisbet, William G. Wilson, and Hugh P. Possingha
Research in the Restricted Problems of Three and Four Bodies Final Scientific Report
Seven studies have been conducted on research in the existence and nature of solutions of the restricted problems of three and four bodies. The details and results of five of these research investigations have already been published, and the latest two studies will be published shortly. A complete bibliography of publications is included in this report. This research has been primarily qualitative and has yielded new information on the behavior of trajectories near the libration points in the Earth-Moon-Sun and Sun-Jupiter-Saturn systems, and on the existence of periodic trajectories about the libration points of the circular and elliptical restricted four-body models. We have also implemented Birkhoff's normalization process for conservative and nonconservative Hamiltonian systems with equilibrium points. This makes available a technique for analyzing stability properties of certain nonlinear dynamical systems, and we have applied this technique to the circular and elliptical restricted three-body models. A related study was also conducted to determine the feasibility of using cislunar periodic trajectories for various space missions. Preliminary results suggest that this concept is attractive for space flight safety operations in cislunar space. Results of this research will be of interest to mathematicians, particularly those working in ordinary differential equations, dynamical systems and celestial mechanics; to astronomers; and to space guidance and mission analysts
Self-reported quality of care for older adults from 2004 to 2011: a cohort study
Background: little is known about changes in the quality of medical care for older adults over time. Objective: to assess changes in technical quality of care over 6 years, and associations with participants' characteristics. Design: a national cohort survey covering RAND Corporation-derived quality indicators (QIs) in face-to-face structured interviews in participants' households. Participants: a total of 5,114 people aged 50 or more in four waves of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Methods: the percentage achievement of 24 QIs in 10 general medical and geriatric clinical conditions was calculated for each time point, and associations with participants' characteristics were estimated using logistic regression. Results: participants were eligible for 21,220 QIs. QI achievement for geriatric conditions (cataract, falls, osteoarthritis and osteoporosis) was 41% [95% confidence interval (CI): 38–44] in 2004–05 and 38% (36–39) in 2010–11. Achievement for general medical conditions (depression, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, pain and cerebrovascular disease) improved from 75% (73–77) in 2004–05 to 80% (79–82) in 2010–11. Achievement ranged from 89% for cerebrovascular disease to 34% for osteoarthritis. Overall achievement was lower for participants who were men, wealthier, infrequent alcohol drinkers, not obese and living alone. Conclusion: substantial system-level shortfalls in quality of care for geriatric conditions persisted over 6 years, with relatively small and inconsistent variations in quality by participants' characteristics. The relative lack of variation by participants' characteristics suggests that quality improvement interventions may be more effective when directed at healthcare delivery systems rather than individuals
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