13,688 research outputs found

    Young children as citizens: learning from practice in the early childhood setting

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    This paper examines enactments of young children’s citizenship in early childhood settings in England, which is an under researched area, in this study young children are positioned as social actors, competent and capable of making decisions and enacting citizenship. Values, child rights and citizenship are interconnected and often inseparable in practice. A mixed methods multiple-case study was conducted in England across several early childhood settings in the private and independent sector. Our findings indicate that young children enact citizenship through micro acts embedded into their day-to-day activities; such acts are often spontaneous in response to events or interactions. These are often pro-social in nature comprised as behaviours such as helping or showing concern for others. Our findings give visibility to the distinctive ways in which young children may enact citizenship including, for example, physical expressions

    Is friction responsible for the reduction of fusion rates far below the Coulomb barrier?

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    The fusion of two interacting heavy ions traditionally has been interpreted in terms of the penetration of the projectile into the target. Observed rates well below the Coulomb barrier are considerably lower than estimates obtained from penetration factors. One approach in the analysis of the data invokes coupling to non-elastic channels in the scattering as the source of the depletion. Another is to analyze those data in terms of tunneling in semi-classical models, with the observed depletion being taken as evidence of a ``friction'' under the barrier. A complementary approach is to consider such tunneling in terms of a fully quantal model. We investigate tunneling with both one-dimensional and three-dimensional models in a fully quantal approach to investigate possible sources for such a friction. We find that the observed phenomenon may not be explained by friction. However, we find that under certain conditions tunneling may be enhanced or diminished by up to 50%, which finds analogy with observation, without the invocation of a friction under the barrier.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures embedde

    Measurement of σ(Hνeνeˉ)×BR(HZZ){\sigma(H\nu_e\bar{\nu_e})\times BR(H\rightarrow ZZ^\ast)} and Higgs production in ZZZZ fusion at a 1.4 TeV CLIC collider

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    This paper presents the potential measurement at 1.4 TeV CLIC of the cross-section (times branching ratio) of the Higgs production via WWWW fusion with the Higgs subsequently decaying in ZZZZ^\ast, σ(Hνeνeˉ)×BR(HZZ){\sigma(H\nu_e\bar{\nu_e})\times BR(H\rightarrow ZZ^\ast)}, and of the Higgs production via ZZZZ fusion with the Higgs subsequently decaying in bbˉb\bar{b}, σ(He+e)×BR(Hbbˉ){\sigma(He{^+}e{^-})\times BR(H\rightarrow b\bar{b})}. For the HZZH\rightarrow ZZ^\ast decay the hadronic final state, ZZqqˉqqˉ{ZZ^\ast\rightarrow q\bar{q}q\bar{q}}, and the semi-leptonic final state, ZZqqˉl+l{ZZ^\ast\rightarrow q\bar{q}l^+l^-}, are considered. The results show that σ(Hνeνeˉ)×BR(HZZ){\sigma(H\nu_e\bar{\nu_e})\times BR(H\rightarrow ZZ^\ast)} can be measured with a precision of 18.3% and 6% for the hadronic and semi-leptonic channel, respectively. σ(He+e)×BR(Hbbˉ){\sigma(He{^+}e{^-})\times BR(H\rightarrow b\bar{b})} can be measured with a precision of 1.7%. This measurement also contributes to the determination of the Higgs coupling to the ZZ boson, gHZZg_{H_{ZZ}}.Comment: Talk presented at the International Workshop on Future Linear Colliders (LCWS14), Belgrade, Serbia, 6-10 October 201

    The volcanic geology of Vestur – Skaftarfellssysla Iceland

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    A FAMILY OF CATION ATPASE-LIKE MOLECULES FROM PLASMODIUM-FALCIPARUM

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    Abstract. We report the nucleotide and derived amino acid sequence of the ATPase 1 gene from Plasmodium falciparum. The amino acid sequence shares homology with the family of "P-type cation transloeating ATPases in conserved regions important for nucleotide binding, conformational change, or phosphorylation. The gene, which is present on chromosome 5, has a product longer than any other reported for a P-type ATPase. Interstrain analysis from 12 parasite isolates by the polymerase chain reaction reveals that a 330-bp nucleotide sequence encoding three cytoplasmic regions conserved in cation ATPases (regions a-c) is of constant length. By contrast, another 360-bp sequence which is one of four regions we refer to as

    Endomorphisms, derivations, and polynomial rings

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    Electrometer system measures nanoamps at high voltage

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    Floating electrometer eliminates major source of error since any leakage from electrometer case, which is at high voltage, appears only as load on high voltage supply and not as part of current being measured. Commands to and data from floating electrometer are transferred across high voltage interface by means of optical channels

    Local and Global Superconductivity in Bismuth

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    We performed magnetization M(H,T) and magnetoresistance R(T,H) measurements on powdered (grain size ~ 149 micrometers) as well as highly oriented rhombohedral (A7) bismuth (Bi) samples consisting of single crystalline blocks of size ~ 1x1 mm2 in the plane perpendicular to the trigonal c-axis. The obtained results revealed the occurrence of (1) local superconductivity in powdered samples with Tc(0) = 8.75 \pm 0.05 K, and (2) global superconductivity at Tc(0) = 7.3 \pm 0.1 K in polycrystalline Bi triggered by low-resistance Ohmic contacts with silver (Ag) normal metal. The results provide evidence that the superconductivity in Bi is localized in a tiny volume fraction, probably at intergrain or Ag/Bi interfaces. On the other hand, the occurrence of global superconductivity observed for polycrystalline Bi can be accounted for by enhancement of the superconducting order parameter phase stiffness induced by the normal metal contacts, the scenario proposed in the context of "pseudogap regime" in cuprates [E. Berg et al., PRB 78, 094509 (2008)].Comment: 12 pages including 9 figures and 1 table, Special Issue to the 80th birthday anniversary of V. G. Peschansky, Electronic Properties of Conducting System

    Transcriptional Targeting in Cancer Gene Therapy

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    Cancer gene therapy has been one of the most exciting areas of therapeutic research in the past decade. In this review, we discuss strategies to restrict transcription of transgenes to tumour cells. A range of promoters which are tissue-specific, tumour-specific, or inducible by exogenous agents are presented. Transcriptional targeting should prevent normal tissue toxicities associated with other cancer treatments, such as radiation and chemotherapy. In addition, the specificity of these strategies should provide improved targeting of metastatic tumours following systemic gene delivery. Rapid progress in the ability to specifically control transgenes will allow systemic gene delivery for cancer therapy to become a real possibility in the near future
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