100,078 research outputs found
Medical Recycling Saves L I. F .E.: \u3cem\u3eL\u3c/em\u3eearning, \u3cem\u3eI\u3c/em\u3edeas, \u3cem\u3eF\u3c/em\u3eacts, \u3cem\u3eE\u3c/em\u3education
Dilaton Stabilization in Brane Gas Cosmology
Brane Gas Cosmology is an M-theory motivated attempt to reconcile aspects of
the standard cosmology based on Einstein's theory of general relativity.
Dilaton gravity, when incorporating winding p-brane states, has verified the
Brandenberger--Vafa mechanism --a string-motivated conjecture which explains
why only three of the nine spatial dimensions predicted by string theory grow
large. Further investigation of this mechanism has argued for a hierarchy of
subspaces, and has shown the internal directions to be stable to initial
perturbations. These results, however, are dependent on a rolling dilaton, or
varying strength of Newton's gravitational constant. In these proceedings we
show that it is not possible to stabilize the dilaton and maintain the
stability of the internal directions within the standard Brane Gas Cosmology
setup.Comment: 6 pages, no figures. To appear in the Proceedings of MRST 2004, held
at Concordia University, Montreal, QC, 12-14 May 200
Leeds Met Library Facebook application
At the Leeds Met staff development festival in 2008 a library graduate trainee, Anna Hepworth, took part in a ‘Dragons’ Den’ event which saw staff propose new, innovative ideas to a panel of senior managers. Anna’s suggestion was to develop a Facebook application (or ‘app’) for the library and it was one of the competition winners. Anna’s initial proposal was to create a Leeds Met library catalogue application, but after discussions with members of the library’s ‘technologies for learning’ team it was decided to take the application a stage further, creating a mash-up using data from the library management system (Sirsi-Dynix Symphony). The Facebook application would send a library catalogue search box to a Facebook profile, but would also add value by delivering customised user data, including library record details such as number of issues, reservations and overdues. There would also be links to the library website and online self-service functions from the application
A detective story: emphatics in Mehri
Until 1970, Ethio-Semitic was believed to be the only Semitic language sub-family in which the main correlate of “emphasis” is
glottalization, a feature said at the time to be due to Cushitic influence. Since the work of T.M. Johnstone, however, it has been
argued that glottalization is a South Semitic feature, attested not only in Ethio-Semitic, but also in the Modern South Arabian
languages. Two statements in the literature on Modern South Arabian, however, suggested to us that the original evidence needed
to be re-investigated: first, some of the “ejectives” are described as at least partially voiced, not a phonetic impossibility, but so
far unheard of in the phonological system of any language; and secondly, the degree of glottalization is frequently described
as dependent on the phonological environment, although details of the environment in which emphatics are always realized as
ejectives are not given. In this paper, we consider acoustic data from Mahriyōt (a Mehri dialect spoken in the easternmost province
of Yemen), we examine descriptions of emphatics in other dialects of Mehri and other Modern South Arabian languages, we look at
phonological environments in which emphatics are realized as ejectives and those in which they are not, and we conclude that the
file on emphasis in these languages needs to be re-opened to fresh judgement
Detection and recognition of simple spatial forms
A model of human visual sensitivity to spatial patterns is constructed. The model predicts the visibility and discriminability of arbitrary two-dimensional monochrome images. The image is analyzed by a large array of linear feature sensors, which differ in spatial frequency, phase, orientation, and position in the visual field. All sensors have one octave frequency bandwidths, and increase in size linearly with eccentricity. Sensor responses are processed by an ideal Bayesian classifier, subject to uncertainty. The performance of the model is compared to that of the human observer in detecting and discriminating some simple images
Nutrient budgets on organic farms: a review of published
This report was presented at the UK Organic Research 2002 Conference. On organic farms it is important that a balance between inputs and outputs of nutrients is achieved. This paper collates nutrient budgets collated at the farm scale for 88 farms in 9 temperate countries. The majority of budgets were compiled for dairy farms (56). All the nitrogen budgets showed an N surplus (average 83 kg N ha-1 year-1). The phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) budgets showed both surpluses and deficits (average 3.4 kg P ha-1 year-1; 13.7 kg K ha-1 year-1). For all nutrients as nutrient inputs increased the surplus increased more significantly than the nutrient outputs. Overall, the data illustrate the diversity of management systems in place on organic farms, which consequently lead to significant variability in nutrient use efficiency and potential nutrient sustainability between farms. There are opportunities for almost all organic farmers to improve the efficiency of nutrient cycling on the farm and increase short-term productivity and long-term sustainability
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