608 research outputs found

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 January 1901

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland. 18 January 1901. C4/C19

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 9 August 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland dated 9 August 1900. C4/C19

    Letters to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 26 Feb 1897 - 18 Jan 1901

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    Letters to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 26 Feb 1897 - 18 Jan 1901 regarding legal cases and federation. C4/C187-19

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 30 June 1899

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, 3 June 1899. C4/C18

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 December 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 18 December 1900,legal cases and federation. C4/C19

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland dated 27 November 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, 27 November 1900. C4/C19

    CP violation Beyond the MSSM: Baryogenesis and Electric Dipole Moments

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    We study electroweak baryogenesis and electric dipole moments in the presence of the two leading-order, non-renormalizable operators in the Higgs sector of the MSSM. Significant qualitative and quantitative differences from MSSM baryogenesis arise due to the presence of new CP-violating phases and to the relaxation of constraints on the supersymmetric spectrum (in particular, both stops can be light). We find: (1) spontaneous baryogenesis, driven by a change in the phase of the Higgs vevs across the bubble wall, becomes possible; (2) the top and stop CP-violating sources can become effective; (3) baryogenesis is viable in larger parts of parameter space, alleviating the well-known fine-tuning associated with MSSM baryogenesis. Nevertheless, electric dipole moments should be measured if experimental sensitivities are improved by about one order of magnitude.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figure

    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 29 June 1900

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    Letter to Andrew Inglis Clark, Tasmania, from Samuel Walker Griffith, Queensland, 29 June 1900. C4/C18

    Shedding light on the elusive role of endothelial cells in cytomegalovirus dissemination.

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    Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is frequently transmitted by solid organ transplantation and is associated with graft failure. By forming the boundary between circulation and organ parenchyma, endothelial cells (EC) are suited for bidirectional virus spread from and to the transplant. We applied Cre/loxP-mediated green-fluorescence-tagging of EC-derived murine CMV (MCMV) to quantify the role of infected EC in transplantation-associated CMV dissemination in the mouse model. Both EC- and non-EC-derived virus originating from infected Tie2-cre(+) heart and kidney transplants were readily transmitted to MCMV-naïve recipients by primary viremia. In contrast, when a Tie2-cre(+) transplant was infected by primary viremia in an infected recipient, the recombined EC-derived virus poorly spread to recipient tissues. Similarly, in reverse direction, EC-derived virus from infected Tie2-cre(+) recipient tissues poorly spread to the transplant. These data contradict any privileged role of EC in CMV dissemination and challenge an indiscriminate applicability of the primary and secondary viremia concept of virus dissemination
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