2,170 research outputs found
Milwaukie Downtown Revitalization Project: The Milwaukie Storefront (Final Report)
The Milwaukie Storefront was a one year program intended as a catalyst for the downtown and to focus attention on the potential for improved business activity. The Storefront, initiated in September of 1983, served as a technical resource, and as a coordinator and facilitator of promotional events in downtown Milwaukie.
This report describes the Storefront as an organization, looking at its structure and original purpose. A review of the individual projects is presented to demonstrate the range of Storefront activities. In drawing conclusions, the report looks at whether the Storefront was able to meet its expectations and cites the accomplishments and problems that were experienced. The report finally looks at the Storefront\u27s activities and applies them in a broader perspective to small town or neighborhood commercial revitalization programs
Abortion in Northern Ireland: has the Rubicon been crossed?
On 7 June 2018, the Supreme Court delivered their long anticipated ruling on whether the abortion laws in Northern Ireland are compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. Although the case was dismissed on procedural grounds, a majority of the court held that, obiter, the current Northern Irish law was incompatible with the right to respect for private and family life, protected by Article 8 ECHR, “insofar as it prohibits abortion in cases of rape, incest and fatal foetal abnormality”. This Supreme Court decision, seen alongside the May 2018 Irish referendum liberalising abortion, and the 5 June 2018 Parliamentary debate seeking to liberalise abortion laws in Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK, places renewed focus upon the abortion laws of Northern Ireland and Great Britain, which suggests that the ‘halfway house’ of the Abortion Act 1967 Act finally be close to being reformed to hand the decision of abortion to women themselves
High Energy Physics Forum for Computational Excellence: Working Group Reports (I. Applications Software II. Software Libraries and Tools III. Systems)
Computing plays an essential role in all aspects of high energy physics. As
computational technology evolves rapidly in new directions, and data throughput
and volume continue to follow a steep trend-line, it is important for the HEP
community to develop an effective response to a series of expected challenges.
In order to help shape the desired response, the HEP Forum for Computational
Excellence (HEP-FCE) initiated a roadmap planning activity with two key
overlapping drivers -- 1) software effectiveness, and 2) infrastructure and
expertise advancement. The HEP-FCE formed three working groups, 1) Applications
Software, 2) Software Libraries and Tools, and 3) Systems (including systems
software), to provide an overview of the current status of HEP computing and to
present findings and opportunities for the desired HEP computational roadmap.
The final versions of the reports are combined in this document, and are
presented along with introductory material.Comment: 72 page
The Universal Einstein Radius Distribution from 10,000 SDSS Clusters
We present results from strong-lens modelling of 10,000 SDSS clusters, to
establish the universal distribution of Einstein radii. Detailed lensing
analyses have shown that the inner mass distribution of clusters can be
accurately modelled by assuming light traces mass, successfully uncovering
large numbers of multiple-images. Approximate critical curves and the effective
Einstein radius of each cluster can therefore be readily calculated, from the
distribution of member galaxies and scaled by their luminosities. We use a
subsample of 10 well-studied clusters covered by both SDSS and HST to calibrate
and test this method, and show that an accurate determination of the Einstein
radius and mass can be achieved by this approach "blindly", in an automated
way, and without requiring multiple images as input. We present the results of
the first 10,000 clusters analysed in the range , and compare them
to theoretical expectations. We find that for this all-sky representative
sample the Einstein radius distribution is log-normal in shape, with <
Log(\theta_{e}\arcsec)>=0.73^{+0.02}_{-0.03},
, and with higher abundance of large
clusters than predicted by CDM. We visually inspect each
of the clusters with \theta_{e}>40 \arcsec () and find that
are boosted by various projection effects detailed here, remaining
with real giant-lens candidates, with a maximum of \theta_{e}=69\pm12
\arcsec () for the most massive candidate, in agreement with
semi-analytic calculations. The results of this work should be verified further
when an extended calibration sample is available.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, 1 table; V2 accepted to MNRAS, includes a
significant revision, in particular a new discussion of the result
Miscentring in Galaxy Clusters: Dark Matter to Brightest Cluster Galaxy Offsets in 10,000 SDSS Clusters
We characterise the typical offset between the Dark Matter (DM) projected
centre and the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) in 10,000 SDSS clusters. To place
constraints on the centre of DM, we use an automated strong-lensing analysis,
mass-modelling technique which is based on the well-tested assumption that
light traces mass. The cluster galaxies are modelled with a steep power-law,
and the DM component is obtained by smoothing the galaxy distribution fitting a
low-order 2D polynomial (via spline interpolation), while probing a whole range
of polynomial degrees and galaxy power laws. We find that the offsets between
the BCG and the peak of the smoothed light map representing the DM, \Delta, are
distributed equally around zero with no preferred direction, and are well
described by a log-normal distribution with <log_{10}(\Delta [h^{-1}
Mpc])>=-1.895^{+0.003}_{-0.004}, and \sigma=0.501\pm0.004 (95% confidence
levels), or =0.564\pm0.005, and
\sigma=0.475\pm0.007. Some of the offsets originate in prior misidentifications
of the BCG or other bright cluster members by the cluster finding algorithm,
whose level we make an additional effort to assess, finding that ~10% of the
clusters in the probed catalogue are likely to be misidentified, contributing
to higher-end offsets in general agreement with previous studies. Our results
constitute the first statistically-significant high-resolution distributions of
DM-to-BCG offsets obtained in an observational analysis, and importantly show
that there exists such a typical non-zero offset in the probed catalogue. The
offsets show a weak positive correlation with redshift, so that higher
separations are generally found for higher-z clusters in agreement with the
hierarchical growth of structure, which in turn could help characterise the
merger, relaxation and evolution history of clusters, in future studies.
[ABRIDGED]Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures; MNRAS in press; V3 includes minor text update
Evidence for terror management theory II: The effects of mortality salience on reactions to those who threaten or bolster the cultural worldview.
US Cosmic Visions: New Ideas in Dark Matter 2017: Community Report
This white paper summarizes the workshop "U.S. Cosmic Visions: New Ideas in
Dark Matter" held at University of Maryland on March 23-25, 2017.Comment: 102 pages + reference
Emerging Infectious Disease leads to Rapid Population Decline of Common British Birds
Emerging infectious diseases are increasingly cited as threats to wildlife, livestock and humans alike. They can threaten geographically isolated or critically endangered wildlife populations; however, relatively few studies have clearly demonstrated the extent to which emerging diseases can impact populations of common wildlife species. Here, we report the impact of an emerging protozoal disease on British populations of greenfinch Carduelis chloris and chaffinch Fringilla coelebs, two of the most common birds in Britain. Morphological and molecular analyses showed this to be due to Trichomonas gallinae. Trichomonosis emerged as a novel fatal disease of finches in Britain in 2005 and rapidly became epidemic within greenfinch, and to a lesser extent chaffinch, populations in 2006. By 2007, breeding populations of greenfinches and chaffinches in the geographic region of highest disease incidence had decreased by 35% and 21% respectively, representing mortality in excess of half a million birds. In contrast, declines were less pronounced or absent in these species in regions where the disease was found in intermediate or low incidence. Also, populations of dunnock Prunella modularis, which similarly feeds in gardens, but in which T. gallinae was rarely recorded, did not decline. This is the first trichomonosis epidemic reported in the scientific literature to negatively impact populations of free-ranging non-columbiform species, and such levels of mortality and decline due to an emerging infectious disease are unprecedented in British wild bird populations. This disease emergence event demonstrates the potential for a protozoan parasite to jump avian host taxonomic groups with dramatic effect over a short time period
Evidence for terror management theory II: The effects of mortality salience on reactions to those who threaten or bolster the cultural worldview.
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