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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: [ppt] + web + 0.22  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

IBERIABANK Corporation Reports Improved Credit Quality
PR Newswire (press release), NY - Jul 22, 2008
The PowerPoint presentation may be accessed on the Company's web site, http://www.iberiabank.com, under "Investor Relations" and then "Presentations. ...IBKC
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1 http://www. isaca. org Content Areas
AFON PPT, XLSFL HTM - ejournals.library.miami.edu
... Process&btnG=Search. Top of Form. Bottom of Form. Web. Results 1 - 10 of about
545,000 for .ppt IS Audit Process . (0.22 seconds). [PPT] CAC ...
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Response of a benthic food web to hydrocarbon contamination -
KR Carman, JW Fleeger, SM Pomarico - Limnology and Oceanography, 1997 - JSTOR
... sedi- ments on the meiofaunal-microalgal food web of a ... from the bottle, and 1 liter
of 15-ppt artificial seawater ... LA HB P. wellsi 0.77 <0.001 0.018 0.22 C2A MA ...

Long-Term Deprivation of Substance P in PPT-A Mutant Mice Alters the Anoxic Response of the Isolated … -
P Telgkamp, YQ Cao, AI Basbaum, JM Ramirez - Journal of Neurophysiology, 2002 - Am Physiological Soc
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science ... group for direct comparisons with
the PPT-A mutant ... min episode, decreased significantly from 0.22 ? 0.04 Hz ...

[PDF] Web Appendix A Simulating Working-Land Payment Programs
P Here - ers.usda.gov
... To model hurdle rates, payments are simulated for reducing the number of Aggregate
Environmental Index points (see Web Appendix B ... X VC P X AEI AEI PPT X VC P ...
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[PDF] Food web interactions in the plankton of Long Island bays, with preliminary observations on brown … -
DJ Lonsdale, EM Cosper, WS Kim, M Doall, A … - Marine ecology progress series. Oldendorf, 1996 - int-res.com
... Food web interactions in the plankton ... terminated by size fraction- ation and filtered
onto 0.22 pm Millipore ... pre- pared at a salinity of 30 ppt (Guillard & ...
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Coverage, relevance, and ranking: The impact of query operators on Web search engine results -
CM Eastman, BJ Jansen - ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS), 2003 - portal.acm.org
... They first reviewed the summary presented by the search engine; they then retrieved
the full text of the Web site if the ... Google?AOL 0.22 * 0.13?0.31 ...

Short-term variability in microbial food web dynamics in a shallow tidal estuary -
A Iriarte, I Madariaga, M Revilla, A Sarobe - Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 2003 - int-res.com
... At Stn 1 surface salinity was always >33 ppt, and at Stn 5 it varied between 0.8
and 11.2 ppt (Fig. ... Iriarte et al.: Microbial food web dynamics in an estuary ...

The significance of food web structure for the condition and tracer lipid content of juvenile snail … -
L Pedersen - Journal of Plankton Research, 1999 - Oxford Univ Press
... water to maximum salin- ity below 40 m (33.5 ppt). ... Food web structure, condition
and tracer lipid content ... towards north with values ranging from 0.22 to 2.82 ...

[PDF] … Accumulation of Polychlorinated Biphenyl Congeners in the Aquatic Food Web at the Kalamazoo River … -
DP Kay, AL Blankenship, KK Coady, AM Neigh, MJ … - Environmental Science & Technology, 2005 - usask.ca
... excellent signal- to-noise ratio of a 25 ppt standard, and ... total PCB concentrations
in the tree swallow food web at FC was ... odonata 5 5.12 0.32 ( 0.22 (1.19) f f ...

[CITATION] … EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH TOWARD UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF MEIOFAUNA IN A DETRITUS BASED MARINE FOOD WEB
C MASTROPAOLO - Radioecology and Energy Resources: Proceedings of the Fourth …, 1976 - Dowden Hutchinson and Ross
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13.4 Billion Years After the Big Bang

 

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Caption: This image from a supercomputer simulation of the evolution of the universe shows a cubic volume of outer space measuring approximately 280 million light years across. At this stage, the universe is 13.4 billion years old (the present). The bright dots correspond with high concentrations of dark matter, which are associated with sites of galaxy formation. The simulation shows how dark matter, an invisible material of unknown composition, herded luminous matter in the universe from its initial smooth state into the cosmic web of galaxies and galaxy clusters that populate the universe. The University of Chicago 's Andrey Kravtsov, Charlie Conroy and Risa Weschlser will describe these findings in a paper published in the June 20 issue of the Astrophysical Journal.

Credit: Image courtesy of Andrey Kravtsov

Usage Restrictions: This image may be used by news organizations in reports about the findings described in this news release.

 

 

Galaxy evolution in cyber universe matches astronomical observations in fine detail

Scientists at the University of Chicago have bolstered the case for a popular scenario of the big bang theory that neatly explains the arrangement of galaxies throughout the universe. Their supercomputer simulation shows how dark matter, an invisible material of unknown composition, herded luminous matter in the universe from its initial smooth state into the cosmic web of galaxies and galaxy clusters that populate the universe.

Previous studies by other researchers had already verified the main features of this scenario, called the cold dark matter model. The Chicago team further extended this work by comparing the results of their supercomputer simulations to the newest, most detailed astronomical observations available today. They found an excellent fit, and they did so without basing their simulations on a lot of complex assumptions. "The model we use is really, really simple," said Andrey Kravtsov, Associate Professor in Astronomy & Astrophysics. "We want to see how well this framework can do with a minimum number of assumptions."

A paper co-authored by Kravtsov, Charlie Conroy and Risa Wechsler describing these findings will be published in the June 20 issue of the Astrophysical Journal. The research was funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, with additional support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Simulations that Kravtsov's team conducted two years ago had predicted that galaxies of different luminosity or brightness would cluster differently when the universe was young than they do today. The team's Astrophysical Journal paper verifies that prediction and shows that similar differences appear in the recent data.

"In the early stages of evolution of the universe, each galaxy has a high probability of having a close neighbor of similar luminosity," Kravtsov said, much more so than galaxies today. "That was what was predicted and that's what the observations now seem to show us." The data that Kravtsov's team compared to its simulations came from the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe 2 (DEEP2) survey, and from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.

Using the Keck 10-meter telescopes in Hawaii, DEEP2 took detailed observations of how galaxies were clustered seven billion years ago, when the universe was approximately half its current age. The Sloan Survey, meanwhile, provided additional data regarding galaxy clustering from more recent epochs in the history of the universe.

"We essentially have data on the distribution of galaxies over most of the evolution of the universe, and the data are accurate," Kravtsov said. "Although the measurements at earlier epochs have larger errors, due to smaller data sets, their accuracy and power to constrain theoretical models is quite remarkable."

The Chicago scientists based their supercomputer simulations on the assumption that galaxies form in the center of dark-matter halos.

According to this scheme, gravity causes the dark matter in these regions to collapse into halos. These halos provide a central location where normal matter consisting of hydrogen, helium and a small amount of heavier elements would collect in gaseous form. Once this gas had cooled and condensed, it achieved sufficient density for star formation to begin on a galactic scale.

When the Chicago team compared the distribution of galaxies in its cyber universe to the real one, "that scheme turned out to work extremely well," Kravtsov said. "It wasn't guaranteed that it would actually work so well in reproducing the data."

Some fields of astrophysics are less fortunate: they have a large body of data but no way to explain it. "The data just kind of hang there. Nobody quite understands what it's telling us or how to interpret it."

But the Chicago simulations further support the idea that the universe behaves the way the cold dark matter scenario tells them it should, that galaxies tend to form in high-density regions of dark matter.

"We understand the distribution of these dark-matter halos, and the implication of this analysis is that we also understand how the properties of these halos are related to galaxy luminosity, how bright the galaxy is," Kravtsov said.

Brighter galaxies also are found in more pronounced large-scale structures. "If you look at fainter galaxies, their distribution becomes more diffuse. We can still see structure, but it's not as pronounced."

Additional data continues to become available. For example, the Sloan Survey has gone beyond mapping the galaxies to include measurements of the dark matter that surrounds them. And other new, high-quality data regarding the distribution of galaxies from the very early stages in the evolution of the universe are becoming available. The first comparisons of the theory's predictions with that data indicate good agreement over the span of about 12 billion years, Kravtsov said.

 
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