29,005 research outputs found
Local Quasiconvexity of Groups acting on Small Cancellation Complexes
Given a group acting cellularly and cocompactly on a simply-connected
2-complex, we provide a criterion establishing that all finitely generated
subgroups have quasiconvex orbits. This work generalizes the "perimeter
method". As an application, we show that high-powered one-relator products A
\ast B / \nclose{r^n} are coherent if and are coherent.Comment: version 1. 14 pages, 4 figure
The adaptation of cognitive behavioural therapy for adult Maori clients with depression: A pilot study
A semistructured cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) programme for depression was adapted for use with Maori adult clients with depression. Adaptations were developed in consultation with an advisory group consisting of Maori clinical psychologists and kaumatua with experience working in mental health services. The programme was piloted with 2 participants who were clients of a Maori mental health service. The programme builds on a more traditional CBT treatment programme by integrating concepts such as whakatauki, whanaungatanga, whanau involvement, and whakapapa into the therapeutic context. Despite limitations the results demonstrate considerable promise. Depressive symptoms increased substantially in both cases and both clients reflected positively on the adaptations incorporated into therapy
The Age, Metallicity and Alpha-Element Abundance of Galactic Globular Clusters from Single Stellar Population Models
Establishing the reliability with which stellar population parameters can be
measured is vital to extragalactic astronomy. Galactic GCs provide an excellent
medium in which to test the consistency of Single Stellar Population (SSP)
models as they should be our best analogue to a homogeneous (single) stellar
population. Here we present age, metallicity and -element abundance
measurements for 48 Galactic globular clusters (GCs) as determined from
integrated spectra using Lick indices and SSP models from Thomas, Maraston &
Korn, Lee & Worthey and Vazdekis et al. By comparing our new measurements to
independent determinations we are able to assess the ability of these SSPs to
derive consistent results -- a key requirement before application to
heterogeneous stellar populations like galaxies.
We find that metallicity determinations are extremely robust, showing good
agreement for all models examined here, including a range of enhancement
methods. Ages and -element abundances are accurate for a subset of our
models, with the caveat that the range of these parameters in Galactic GCs is
limited. We are able to show that the application of published Lick index
response functions to models with fixed abundance ratios allows us to measure
reasonable -element abundances from a variety of models. We also
examine the age-metallicity and [/Fe]-metallicity relations predicted
by SSP models, and characterise the possible effects of varied model horizontal
branch morphology on our overall results.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Real-time monitoring of solid-phase peptide synthesis using a variable bed flow reactor
On-resin aggregation and incomplete amide bond formation are major challenges for solid-phase peptide synthesis that are difficult to be monitored in real-time. Incorporation of a pressure-based variable bed flow reactor into an automated solid-phase peptide synthesizer permitted real-time monitoring of resin swelling to determine amino acid coupling efficiency and on-resin aggregation
USAID Contributes to Building National Capacity to Strengthen Food Security: An Example from Mali
Food Security and Poverty, Downloads May 2008-July 2009: 13,
Activities of \gamma-ray emitting isotopes in rainwater from Greater Sudbury, Canada following the Fukushima incident
We report the activity measured in rainwater samples collected in the Greater
Sudbury area of eastern Canada on 3, 16, 20, and 26 April 2011. The samples
were gamma-ray counted in a germanium detector and the isotopes 131I and 137Cs,
produced by the fission of 235U, and 134Cs, produced by neutron capture on
133Cs, were observed at elevated levels compared to a reference sample of
ice-water. These elevated activities are ascribed to the accident at the
Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear reactor complex in Japan that followed the 11 March
earthquake and tsunami. The activity levels observed at no time presented
health concerns.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure
Engineering the Cambrian explosion: the earliest bioturbators as ecosystem engineers
By applying modern biological criteria to trace fossil types and assessing burrow morphology, complexity, depth, potential burrow function and the likelihood of bioirrigation, we assign ecosystem engineering impact (EEI) values to the key ichnotaxa in the lowermost Cambrian (Fortunian). Surface traces such as Monomorphichnus have minimal impact on sediment properties and have very low EEI values; quasi-infaunal traces of organisms that were surficial modifiers or biodiffusors, such as Planolites, have moderate EEI values; and deeper infaunal, gallery biodiffusive or upward-conveying/downward-conveying traces, such as Teichichnus and Gyrolithes, have the highest EEI values. The key Cambrian ichnotaxon Treptichnus pedum has a moderate to high EEI value, depending on its functional interpretation. Most of the major functional groups of modern bioturbators are found to have evolved during the earliest Cambrian, including burrow types that are highly likely to have been bioirrigated. In fine-grained (or microbially bound) sedimentary environments, trace-makers of bioirrigated burrows would have had a particularly significant impact, generating advective fluid flow within the sediment for the first time, in marked contrast with the otherwise diffusive porewater systems of the Proterozoic. This innovation is likely to have created significant ecospace and engineered fundamentally new infaunal environments for macrobiotic and microbiotic organisms alike
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