1,336 research outputs found

    Does a Marriage Really Need Sex?: A Critical Analysis of the Gender Restriction on Marriage

    Get PDF
    This Note discusses the issues surrounding intersex persons and the right to marry. The Comment first discusses the constitutional protection of the right to marry, intersex conditions, and case law regarding intersex, transsexual, and same-sex marriage. It further addresses the consequences for marriage when it is narrowly defined. Further, the Comment proposes an alternative solution to the one many courts have used. This solution allows an intersex person to self-designate her gender and be able to marry either a man or a woman. Finally, this Comment argues that if an intersex person can marry either a man or a woman, then a male-to-female transsexual and a genetic woman must also be able to marry either a man or a woman because all are similarly situated and must be treated alike under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment

    Denied: Community College Students Lack Access to Affordable Loans

    Get PDF
    Highlights the racial/ethnic gaps in community college students' access to federal loans, and outlines various loan terms. Addresses the fear of defaults and consequent sanctions that has caused some community colleges to opt out of the federal program

    Improved Working Memory but No Effect on Striatal Vesicular Monoamine Transporter Type 2 after Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Supplementation

    Get PDF
    Studies in rodents indicate that diets deficient in omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) lower dopamine neurotransmission as measured by striatal vesicular monoamine transporter type 2 (VMAT2) density and amphetamine-induced dopamine release. This suggests that dietary supplementation with fish oil might increase VMAT2 availability, enhance dopamine storage and release, and improve dopamine-dependent cognitive functions such as working memory. To investigate this mechanism in humans, positron emission tomography (PET) was used to measure VMAT2 availability pre- and post-supplementation of n-3 PUFA in healthy individuals. Healthy young adult subjects were scanned with PET using [11C]-(+)-α-dihydrotetrabenzine (DTBZ) before and after six months of n-3 PUFA supplementation (Lovaza, 2 g/day containing docosahexaenonic acid, DHA 750 mg/d and eicosapentaenoic acid, EPA 930 mg/d). In addition, subjects underwent a working memory task (n-back) and red blood cell membrane (RBC) fatty acid composition analysis pre- and post-supplementation. RBC analysis showed a significant increase in both DHA and EPA post-supplementation. In contrast, no significant change in [11C]DTBZ binding potential (BPND) in striatum and its subdivisions were observed after supplementation with n-3 PUFA. No correlation was evident between n-3 PUFA induced change in RBC DHA or EPA levels and change in [11C]DTBZ BPND in striatal subdivisions. However, pre-supplementation RBC DHA levels was predictive of baseline performance (i.e., adjusted hit rate, AHR on 3-back) on the n-back task (y = 0.19+0.07, r2 = 0.55, p = 0.009). In addition, subjects AHR performance improved on 3-back post-supplementation (pre 0.65±0.27, post 0.80±0.15, p = 0.04). The correlation between n-back performance, and DHA levels are consistent with reports in which higher DHA levels is related to improved cognitive performance. However, the lack of change in [11C]DBTZ BPND indicates that striatal VMAT2 regulation is not the mechanism of action by which n-3 PUFA improves cognitive performance. © 2012 Narendran et al

    Limits of Time-Reversal Violating Interaction from Compound Nuclear Experiments

    Get PDF
    Mean square matrix elements of the time reversal invariance violating (TRIV) interaction between the compound nuclear states are calculated within the statistical model, using the explicit form of the TRIV interaction via the ρ\rho-meson exchange. From the comparison of the calculated values with the data known for p+27Al24Mg+αp+ ^{27}Al \Leftrightarrow ^{24}Mg + \alpha reaction, and for γ\gamma-correlation measurements in 113Cd(n,γ)114Cd^{113}Cd(n,\gamma)^{114}Cd process, the bounds on the TRIV constant are obtained {\bar g}_{\rho} \alt 1.8 \times 10^{-2} and {\bar g}_{\rho} \alt 1.1 \times 10^{-2}. The sensitivity of the recently proposed detailed balance test experiments on isolated resonances in 32S^{32}S to the value of gˉρ{\bar g}_{\rho} is shown to be as high as to reach values gˉρ104{\bar g}_{\rho} \sim 10^{-4}.Comment: Phys. Lett. B; to be published, 16 pages, REVTEX 3, no figure

    Neutron Resonance Data Exclude Random Matrix Theory

    Full text link
    Almost since the time it was formulated, the overwhelming consensus has been that random matrix theory (RMT) is in excellent agreement with neutron resonance data. However, over the past few years, we have obtained new neutron-width data at Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories that are in stark disagreement with this theory. We also have reanalyzed neutron widths in the most famous data set, the nuclear data ensemble (NDE), and found that it is seriously flawed, and, when analyzed carefully, excludes RMT with high confidence. More recently, we carefully examined energy spacings for these same resonances in the NDE using the Δ3\Delta_{3} statistic. We conclude that the data can be found to either confirm or refute the theory depending on which nuclides and whether known or suspected p-wave resonances are included in the analysis, in essence confirming results of our neutron-width analysis of the NDE. We also have examined radiation widths resulting from our Oak Ridge and Los Alamos measurements, and find that in some cases they do not agree with RMT. Although these disagreements presently are not understood, they could have broad impact on basic and applied nuclear physics, from nuclear astrophysics to nuclear criticality safety.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, submitted to special issue of Fortschritte Der Physik, Quantum Physics with Non-Hermitian Operator

    Fine Structure Discussion of Parity-Nonconserving Neutron Scattering at Epithermal Energies

    Full text link
    The large magnitude and the sign correlation effect in the parity non-conserving resonant scattering of epithermal neutrons from 232^{232}Th is discussed in terms of a non-collective 2p1h2p-1h local doorway model. General conclusions are drawn as to the probability of finding large parity violation effects in other regions of the periodic table.Comment: 6 pages, Tex. CTP# 2296, to appear in Z. Phys.

    Parity Violation in Neutron Capture Reactions

    Get PDF
    In the last decade, the scattering of polarized neutrons on compound nucleus resonances proved to be a powerful experimental technique for probing nuclear parity violation. Longitudinal analyzing powers in neutron transmission measurements on p-wave resonances in nuclei such as 139^{139}La and 232^{232}Th were found to be as large as 10%. Here we examine the possibilities of carrying out a parallel program to measure asymmetries in the (n,γ(n,\gamma) reaction on these same compound nuclear resonances. Symmetry-violating (n,γ(n,\gamma) studies can also show asymmetries as large as 10%, and have the advantage over transmission experiments of allowing parity-odd asymmetries in several different gamma-decay branches from the same resonance. Thus, studies of parity violation in the (n,γ)(n,\gamma) reaction using high efficiency germanium detectors at the Los Alamos Lujan facility, for example, could determine the parity-odd nucleon-nucleon matrix elements in complex nuclei with high accuracy. Additionally, simultaneous studies of the E1 and VPNCV_{PNC} matrix elements invol ved in these decays could be used to help constrain the statistical theory of parity non-conservation in compound nuclei.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
    corecore