2,889 research outputs found
Men's basketball team, 1964-1965
Norwich University men's basketball team, including Tom Rogan (class of 1965) in jersey number 33
The invention of another tradition: Tim Rogan on a trio of radical historians in 20th century Britain
Tim Rogan: The Moral Economists: R. H. Tawney, Karl Polanyi, E. P. Thompson, and the Critique of Capitalism. Princeton, NJ / Oxford: Princeton University Press 2017. 978-0-691-17300-
Actors, roles and responsibilities in the pre-trial detention decision-making process
This chapter will examine the key players in the decision-making process for pre-trial detention (PTD), specifically judges, prosecutors, defence lawyers and the probation service. It notes that prosecutors play a critical role in these decisions and can be highly influential. This indicates the need for any strategies to reduce PTD to work closely with prosecutors. The chapter also explores the challenges faced by defence lawyers, such as having sufficient time to prepare for the proceedings, being able to suggest alternatives to PTD and the availability of resources such as funded legal assistance. It examines the relative positions and influences of these actors, and the legal and social cultures that surround them. Some countries represented in this volume have a role for the probation service in decision-making, the chapter will also assess how this role operates in practice, and the barriers faced
CCDC 2057270: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination. Crystallographic data for "Charge assisted assembly of zwitterionic pyridone hydrates"
UREZID : 3-(3,5-dimethylpyridin-1-ium-1-yl)-4-methyl-6-oxo-1,6-dihydropyridin-2-olate tetrahydrate Space Group: P 1 (2), Cell: a 7.4411(15)Å b 10.581(2)Å c 11.235(2)Å, α 108.96(3)° β 96.14(3)° γ 107.41(3)°Crystallographic data (CCDC 2057270) for the article: Mašulović, A. D., Lađarević, J. M., Radovanović, L. D., Vitnik, Ž. J., Vitnik, V. D., Rogan, J. R.,& Mijin, D. Ž. (2021). Charge assisted assembly of zwitterionic pyridone hydrates. Journal of Molecular Structure, Elsevier., 1237, 130419. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molstruc.2021.130419]The published version of the article: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4506]The peer-reviewed version of the article: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4507]Supporting information: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4508]Related crystallographic data (CCDC 2057269): [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4509
CCDC 2057269: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination. Crystallographic data for "Charge assisted assembly of zwitterionic pyridone hydrates"
UREZEZ : 4-methyl-6-oxo-5-(pyridin-1-ium-1-yl)-1,6-dihydropyridin-2-olate dihydrate Space Group: P 1 (2), Cell: a 7.2258(14)Å b 8.0470(16)Å c 11.287(2)Å, α 70.71(3)° β 74.88(3)° γ 79.85(3)°Crystallographic data (CCDC 2057269) for the article: Mašulović, A. D., Lađarević, J. M., Radovanović, L. D., Vitnik, Ž. J., Vitnik, V. D., Rogan, J. R.,& Mijin, D. Ž. (2021). Charge assisted assembly of zwitterionic pyridone hydrates. Journal of Molecular Structure, Elsevier., 1237, 130419. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molstruc.2021.130419]The published version of the article: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4506]The peer-reviewed version of the article: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4507]Supporting information: [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4508]Related crystallographic data (CCDC 2057270): [https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4510
FIG. 1. Bursaphelenchus hildegardae. A in First record of Bursaphelenchus hildegardae Braasch et al., 2006 (Nematoda) in New Zealand with updated information on morphology, sequencing and a key to species of the eggersi-group
FIG. 1. Bursaphelenchus hildegardae. A: Female; B: Male; C: Anterior part of female; D: Reproductive system of female; E: Posterior part of female; F: Spicules; G: Bursa; H: Posterior end of male; I: Lateral lines. (Scale bars: A–C = 50 μm; D–I = 20 μm)Published as part of Zhao, Zeng Qi, Surrey, Michael, Ho, Wellcome, Marinov, Milen, Bleach, Carolyn, Rogan, Brent & Alexander, Brett, 2021, First record of Bursaphelenchus hildegardae Braasch et al., 2006 (Nematoda) in New Zealand with updated information on morphology, sequencing and a key to species of the eggersi-group, pp. 151-165 in Zootaxa 5071 (1) on page 155, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5071.1.9, http://zenodo.org/record/572344
Juvenile life history of NE Atlantic orange roughy from otolith stable isotopes
Otoliths of pre-recruit orange roughy (Hoplostethus atlanticus) were sampled from different deep-water habitats (‘flat’and ‘hill’) and areas (north and south) on the Porcupine Bank. Age-based profiles for stable isotopes of carbon (d13C) andoxygen (d18O) in these otoliths were developed, which provide a fish life-history record of water depth and metabolicactivity. These profiles were consistent among all individuals implying endogenous (ontogenic) influences on the pattern.The data indicate that post-larval orange roughy are mesopelagic active foragers, early juvenile fish move into a low energydeep-demersal phase, and older pre-recruit orange roughy assume the habitat depth and metabolic rate typical of adults.Comparison of otolith stable isotope profiles among areas and habitats on the Porcupine Bank suggest that juvenile orangeroughy from South ‘hill’ and ‘flat’ habitats experience differing temperature and metabolic status at certain life stages. Thismay reflect oceanographic and ecological divergence between the two environments and suggests fine-scale populationstructure that may reduce resilience to exploitation
Supporting Data for Incorporating Polar Oxazolidinones into Polycyclooctadiene via Frontal Ring-Opening Metathesis Polymerization
A full description can be found in the README.txt file. The files below include raw data used in the corresponding manuscript including: nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data, size exclusion chromatography (SEC) data, thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA) data, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) data, attenuated total reflectance Infrared (IR) data, front velocity data, and front temperature data. The ChemDraw schemes and photos of tensile samples are included as .jpg files. The videos recorded to calculate front velocity are included as .mp4 files. NMR data are included as .fid files and can be opened in any NMR analysis software (e.g. MestReNova). All other raw data was converted to .csv or .txt files for simplicity and can be opened using a spreadsheet editor such as Microsoft Excel.Frontal ring-opening metathesis polymerization (FROMP) is a rapid, facile method that requires little energy input by utilizing the polymerization exotherm to self-propagate. Although FROMP is efficient, its scope has been limited to highly strained monomers to provide enough energy to drive the polymerization front. Copolymerization has been a viable strategy to introduce more diverse monomers to make polar-functionalized dicyclopentadiene-based thermosets. In contrast, analagous FROMP copolymerizations to produce soluble thermoplastics containing polar repeat units have yet to be explored. Herein, we report the frontal copolymerization of cyclooctadiene (COD) with 1–5 mol % of a lower ring-strain oxazolidinone-fused cyclooctene (Oxa) to synthesize polybutadiene-based copolymers. As expected, as the Oxa loading increased, the front velocity decreased by up to 50% and maximum front temperature decreased by ~16 °C compared to pCOD homopolymer. While the degradation and glass transition temperatures were minimally affected, the polar Oxa units greatly influenced crystallization and tensile properties of the resulting materials. In particular, the ductility dramatically increased from 220% strain at break for pCOD to 1900% for copolymers with 5 mol % Oxa. This study provides an easy method to incorporate polar functionality into ubiquitous polyolefins and further demonstrates the impact of dipoles on material properties towards future applications.National Science Foundation (NSF) Center for Sustainable Polymers (CSP) (CHE-1901635)3M Non-Tenured Faculty AwardUniversity of Minnesota (UMN)Minnesota NMR Center: National Institutes of Health (NIH, S10OD011952)American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Marion Milligan Mason Award for Women in the Chemical SciencesLester C. and Joan M. Krogh Excellence FellowshipUMN Polymer Processing and Characterization Facility: NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) (DMR-2011401)Aguilar-Romero, Jazmin E; Rogan, Elizabeth G; Wong, Allison R; Hosford, Brandon M; Mosconi, Angela L; Lamb, Jessica R. (2025). Supporting Data for Incorporating Polar Oxazolidinones into Polycyclooctadiene via Frontal Ring-Opening Metathesis Polymerization. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/7fxw-6g59
Sparticles in motion: analyzing compressed SUSY scenarios with a new method of event reconstruction
The observation of light superpartners from a supersymmetric extension to the Standard Model is an intensely sought-after experimental outcome, providing an explanation for the stabilization of the electroweak scale and indicating the existence of new particles which could be consistent with dark matter phenomenology. For compressed scenarios, where sparticle spectra mass splittings are small and decay products carry low momenta, dedicated techniques are required in all searches for supersymmetry. In this paper we suggest an approach for these analyses based on the concept of recursive jigsaw reconstruction, decomposing each event into a basis of complementary observables, for cases where strong initial state radiation has sufficient transverse momentum to elicit the recoil of any final state sparticles. We introduce a collection of kinematic observables which can be used to probe compressed scenarios, in particular exploiting the correlation between missing momentum and that of radiative jets. As an example, we study squark and gluino production, focusing on mass-splittings between parent superparticles and their lightest decay products between 25 and 200 GeV, in hadronic final states where there is an ambiguity in the provenance of reconstructed jets.Paul Jackson, Christopher Rogan and Marco Santon
Trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, Aphanopus carbo in the NE Atlantic—Assessment through stomach content and stable isotope analyses
The black scabbardfish is a deep water species of high commercial interest in the NE Atlantic. Specimens were collected from commercial trawls to the west of the British Isles and from longliners operating near Madeira between September 2008 and May 2010. Stomach content analysis was confined to samples from the northern area, because of a high number of empty stomachs from Madeira. Stable isotope analyses identified that black scabbardfish feeds on species with epipelagic and benthopelagic affinities. For the west of British Isles, the ?N values were significantly different between seasons suggesting a change in the diet throughout the year. Black scabbardfish have higher ?N and ?C values compared with other co-occurring benthopelagic feeders and lower nitrogen values than the true benthic predators and/or scavengers. Comparison with stable isotope analysis in samples from Madeira indicated that black scabbardfish feed at a similar trophic level and has the same trophic niche width in both areas, assuming similar baseline isotope compositions. The diet in the northern area comprised fish (68% N), crustaceans (22% N) and cephalopods (15% N) with blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou) constituting 40% of the prey. Seasonal shift in diet was observed, with a predominance of blue whiting (70%) in the first quarter of the year, shifting to a more diverse diet in the remainder of the year. These results indicate that the diet of black scabbardfish is closely linked with the seasonal migration of blue whiting and that they likely select prey in proportion to availability. This study demonstrates that the combined used of both methods can elucidate the trophic ecology of black scabbardfish, in situations where conventional methods alone provide insufficient data
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