1,060 research outputs found
Pay Inequality in Cuba: the Special Period and After
This paper analyzes the evolution of pay inequality in Cuba from the early 1990s through 2004, during what was known as the “Special Period in Times of Peace” and after. We measure pay inequality across sectors and regions, using the between-groups component of Theil’s T statistic, and we map the changing components of that statistic in order to provide a compact summary of structural change in Cuba. This method helps us to observe the transition of the Cuban economy from one based fundamentally on sugar to one based largely on services, especially tourism, but also others with greater growth potential, such as information technology, pharmaceuticals, and biotechnology. Regionally, we observe that a main dividing line between winners and losers is the presence of tourist attractions: the recent increase of regional pay inequality is associated primarily with changing incomes in the city of Havana and the province of Matanzas.
CORP-oralidades
The goal of this paper is to share processes of corp-oral experimentation lived collectively. We want to expose the general process and the ways as the body appears, maintains and surpass the cognitive limits. The experience could be read as personal narrations but the interrelations between actions, feelings and experimentations invited us to think (us) as embodied subjectivities.El propósito de este texto es compartir procesos de construcción de corp-oralidades. Con el deseo de hacer visibles algunos de los caminos trazados en dichos procesos, se integran los modos como el cuerpo aparece, transita y traspasa fronteras cognitivas para provocar narraciones personales. A partir de las interrelaciones entre acciones, sentires y experimentaciones invitamos a pensar (nos) como subjetividades encarnadas
In Vivo Multimodal Imaging of Drusenoid Lesions in Rhesus Macaques.
Nonhuman primates are the only mammals to possess a true macula similar to humans, and spontaneously develop drusenoid lesions which are hallmarks of age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Prior studies demonstrated similarities between human and nonhuman primate drusen based on clinical appearance and histopathology. Here, we employed fundus photography, spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), fundus autofluorescence (FAF), and infrared reflectance (IR) to characterize drusenoid lesions in aged rhesus macaques. Of 65 animals evaluated, we identified lesions in 20 animals (30.7%). Using the Age-Related Eye Disease Study 2 (AREDS2) grading system and multimodal imaging, we identified two distinct drusen phenotypes - 1) soft drusen that are larger and appear as hyperreflective deposits between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and Bruchs membrane on SD-OCT, and 2) hard, punctate lesions that are smaller and undetectable on SD-OCT. Both exhibit variable FAF intensities and are poorly visualized on IR. Eyes with drusen exhibited a slightly thicker RPE compared with control eyes (+3.4 μm, P=0.012). Genetic polymorphisms associated with drusenoid lesions in rhesus monkeys in ARMS2 and HTRA1 were similar in frequency between the two phenotypes. These results refine our understanding of drusen development, and provide insight into the absence of advanced AMD in nonhuman primates
Muon Spin Rotation Measurement of the Magnetic Field Penetration Depth in Ba(Fe0.93 Co0.07)2 As2 : Evidence for Multiple Superconducting Gaps
We have performed transverse field muon spin rotation measurements of single
crystals of Ba(FeCoAs with the applied magnetic field
along the direction. Fourier transforms of the measured spectra
reveal an anisotropic lineshape characteristic of an Abrikosov vortex lattice.
We have fit the SRSR spectra to a microscopic model in terms of the
penetration depth and the Ginzburg-Landau parameter .
We find that as a function of temperature, the penetration depth varies more
rapidly than in standard weak coupled BCS theory. For this reason we first fit
the temperature dependence to a power law where the power varies from 1.6 to
2.2 as the field changes from 200G to 1000G. Due to the surprisingly strong
field dependence of the power and the superfluid density we proceeded to fit
the temperature dependence to a two gap model, where the size of the two gaps
is field independent. From this model, we obtained gaps of
and , corresponding to roughly 6 meV
and 3 meV respectively
Static magnetic order of SrAOFeAs (A = Sc and V) revealed by local probes
Static magnetic order of quasi two-dimensional FeAs compounds
Sr4A2O6-xFe2As2, with A = Sc and V, has been detected by 57Fe Moessbauer and
muon spin relaxation ({\mu}SR) spectroscopies. The non-superconducting
stoichiometric (x = 0) A = Sc system exhibits a static internal/hyperfine
magnetic field both at the 57Fe and {\mu}+ sites, indicating antiferromagnetic
order of Fe moments below TN = 35 K with ~ 0.1 Bohr magneton per Fe at T = 2 K.
The superconducting and oxygen deficient (x = 0.4) A = V system exhibits a
static internal field only at the {\mu}+ site below TN ~ 40 K, indicating
static magnetic order of V moments co-existing with superconductivity without
freezing of Fe moments. These results suggest that the 42622 FeAs systems
belong to the same paradigm with the 1111 and 122 FeAs systems with respect to
magnetic behavior of Fe moments.Comment: 4 pages 4 figures: for information, contact
[email protected]
Superfluid Density and Field-Induced Magnetism in Ba(Fe1-xCox)2As2 and Sr(Fe1-xCox)2As2 Measured with Muon Spin Relaxation
We report muon spin rotation (SR) measurements of single crystal
Ba(FeCo)As and Sr(FeCo)As. From
measurements of the magnetic field penetration depth we find that for
optimally- and over-doped samples, varies monotonically
with the superconducting transition temperature T. Within the
superconducting state we observe a positive shift in the muon precession
signal, likely indicating that the applied field induces an internal magnetic
field. The size of the induced field decreases with increasing doping but is
present for all Co concentrations studied.Comment: 7 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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