24,160 research outputs found
Racism and Aids: African Origin Theories of HIV-1
The AIDS epidemic, first discovered in the United States in 1981, has caused a great deal of speculation with regard to the origins of both the HIV-1 retrovirus and the early pathways for the epidemic itself. The African origins theory is the most widely accepted origin theory for HIV-1 in the West. This theory is based upon six assertions, all of which either lack evidence or, when evidence has been present, these assertions have been contradicted. The African origins theory is unsubstantiated. The African origins theory is based not upon scientific logic but rather upon victim-blaming, the attempt to define the other as the cause of disease, and racism
Workers' Compensation Insurance In North America: Lessons for Victoria?
Among the issues we will consider here are the following. Who carries the underwriting(insurance) risk for workers' compensation benefits? How is workers' compensation insuranceprices, and by whom? What fundamental principles guide the insurance pricing system? Whomonitors benefits for compliance with statutory requirements? Are the availability of coverageand the payment of insurers' claims obligations guaranteed? Is self-insurance allowed and, if so, for whom? How are incentives for prevention of accidents, and resulting workers' compensation claims, maintained? What is the performance of the overall system? In summary, how are these questions answered and what so the answers reveal about how these responsibilities are allocated among government agencies, other public entities and private firms
High-temperature ''hydrostatic'' extrusion
Quasi-fluids permit hydrostatic extrusion of solid materials. The use of sodium chloride, calcium fluoride, or glasses as quasi-fluids reduces handling, corrosion, and sealing problems, these materials successfully extrude steel, molybdenum, ceramics, calcium carbonate, and calcium oxide. This technique also permits fluid-to-fluid extrusion
What has NMR taught us about stripes and inhomogeneity?
The purpose of this brief invited paper is to summarize what we have (not)
learned from NMR on stripes and inhomogeneity in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4}. We explain
that the reality is far more complicated than generally accepted.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Proceedings of the LT-23 Conference
(invited
X-ray film holder permits single continuous picture of tubing joint
X ray technique produces a clear continuous picture of a welded brazed tubing joint on a single film with one exposure. A stationary X ray source located in the plane of the joint to be inspected, a means of rotating the tube, and a unique internal film holder and positioning fixture are used
Use of Baited Pitfall Traps for Monitoring Pales Weevil, \u3ci\u3eHylobius Pales\u3c/i\u3e (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)
Pitfall traps baited with ethanol and turpentine serve as an effective tool for monitoring pales weevil (Hylobius pales) populations. Males and females are equally attracted to this bait. Neither component alone showed any attractiveness. The presence of a pine stem for weevil feeding does not affect the number or sex ratio of captured weevils. The potential of using attraction to baited traps as a sampling method for pales weevil is discussed
(63)Cu NQR Evidence for Spatial Variation of Hole Concentration in La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4)
We report experimental evidence for the spatial variation of hole
concentration x_(hole) in the high Tc superconductor La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO(4) (0.04
<= x <= 0.16) by using (63)Cu NQR for (63)Cu isotope enriched samples. We
demonstrate that the extent of the spatial variation of the local hole
concentration D(x)_(hole) is reflected on (63)1/T1 and deduce the temperature
dependence. D(x)_(hole) increases below 500 - 600K, and reaches values as large
as D(x)_(hole)/x ~ 0.5 below ~ 150K. We estimate the length scale of the
spatial variation in x_(hole) to be R_(hole) >~ 3nm from analysis of the NQR
spectrum.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
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