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LTAG semantics for questions
(2004)
This papers presents a compositional semantic analysis of interrogatives clauses in LTAG (Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammar) that captures the scopal properties of wh- and nonwh-quantificational elements. It is shown that the present approach derives the correct semantics for examples claimed to be problematic for LTAG semantic approaches based on the derivation tree. The paper further provides an LTAG semantics for embedded interrogatives.
Hinreichend kalte und dichte Quarkmaterie ist ein Farbsupraleiter. Ähnlich wie Elektronen in einem gewöhnlichen Supraleiter bilden Quarks Cooper-Paare. Während bei Elektronen der Austausch von Phononen zu einer Anziehung führt, ist im Falle von Quarks der Antitriplett-Kanal der starken Wechselwirkung attraktiv. Arbeiten in den letzten Jahren haben verschiedene Phasen von farbsupraleitender Quarkmaterie untersucht und sich dabei vor allem auf Phasen konzentriert, m denen der Gesamtspin eines Cooper-Paares verschwindet. In der vorliegenden Dissertation habe ich hauptsächlich Farbsupraleiter diskutiert, deren Cooper-Paare im Spin-Triplett-Kanal kondensieren, d.h. die Cooper-Paare haben den Gesamtspin 1. Diese Art von Supraleiter ist möglicherweise relevant für Systeme in der Natur, wie z.B. das Innere von Neutronensternen. Denn bei der Spin-0-Farbsupraleitung wird vorausgesetzt, dass die Fermi-Impulse zweier Quark-Flavor gleich ist oder zumindest hinreichend klein, was für realistische Systeme, also für nicht zu große Dichten, fragwürdig ist. Diese Einschränkung gibt es im Falle von Spin-1-Farbsupraleitern nicht, da hier Quarks des gleichen Flavors Cooper-Paare bilden. Ich habe in meiner Dissertation die verschiedenen möglichen Phasen eines Spin-1-Farbsupraleiters systematisch klassifiziert. Dies wurde mit Hilfe von gruppen-theoretischen Methoden durchgeführt, basierend auf der Tatsache, dass die Farbsupraleitung durch das theoretische Konzept der spontanen Symmetriebrechung beschrieben werden kann. Ähnlich wie bei supraflüssigem Helium-3 gibt es eine Vielzahl theoretisch möglicher Phasen. Ich habe die physikalischen Eigenschaften von vier dieser Phasen untersucht, nämlich der polaren und planaren Phasen sowie der A- und CSL-(color-spin-locked)Phasen. Mit Hilfe der QCD-Lückengleichung wurde die Energielücke sowie die kritische Temperatur bestimmt. Es stellt sich heraus, dass die Energielücke eines Spin-1-Farbsupraleiters um 2-3 Größenordnungen kleiner ist als die eines Spin-0-Farbsupraleiters, d.h. sie liegt im Bereich von 10 - 100 keV. Zwei besondere Eigenschaften der Energielücke werden diskutiert, nämlich eine 2-Lücken-Struktur, die in zwei der untersuchten Fälle auftritt, sowie mögliche Anisotropien, insbesondere Nullstellen der Lückenfunktion. Die Berechnung der kritischen Temperatur zeigt, dass es durchaus farbsupraleitende Materie in einer Spin-1-Phase im Innern von Neutronensternen geben kann, da die Temperatur von alten Neutronensternen im Bereich von einigen keV oder sogar darunter liegt. Darüber hinaus wurde die Frage untersucht, ob ein Farbsupraleiter auch ein gewöhnlicher Supraleiter ist. In diesem Zusammenhang ist die Frage von Interesse, ob ein Spin-1-Farbsupraleiter gewöhnliche Magnetfelder aus seinem Innern verdrängt, was sicherlich Auswirkungen auf die Observablen eines Neutronensterns hätte. Tatsächlich stellt sich heraus, dass ein Spin-1-Farbsupraleiter, im Gegensatz zu einem Spin-0-Farbsupraleiter, einen elektronmagnetischen Meissner-Effekt aufweist. Dieses Ergebnis wurde mit Hilfe von gruppentheoretischen Überlegungen vorausgesagt und mit Hilfe einer detaillierten Berechnung der Photon-Meissner-Massen bestätigt.
A new experimental setup, for pump-probe fs DFWM measurements, which is based on a femtosecond laser system, has been constructed. It allows for the investigation of molecular species in the gas phase at different temperatures, from ~30 K in a seeded supersonic jet up to ~500 K in a heat-pipe oven. In comparison to other RCS methods the employed fs DFWM technique is less complicated and gives much higher signal-to-noise ratio [BFZ86, FeZ95a, CKS89, CCH90, HCF91, WRM02, Rie02]. A general computer code for the simulation of fs DFWM spectra of nonrigid asymmetric top molecules has been developed. This new DFWM code in combination with a non-linear fitting routine allows one to determine rotational and centrifugal distortion constants and obtain information on the polarizability tensor components from the experimental spectra. Fs DFWM spectroscopy was successfully applied to the medium-sized molecules benzene and benzene-d6 in a gas cell and in a supersonic jet. The spectrum from a seeded expansion has been measured up to delay time of 3.9 ns (restricted by the length of the delay stage) with excellent signal-to-noise ratio (102-103). In that way 87 and 72 J-type transients have been recorded for benzene and benzene-d6, correspondingly. A relative accuracy on the order of 10-5 has been achieved for the rotational constant. From the room temperature experiments, precise values of centrifugal distortion constants DJ and DJK have been extracted. The literature data for cyclohexane have been revised and a new precise rotational constant B0 has been obtained, which is (+5.5 MHz) shifted from the one reported in the former Raman investigation by Peters et al. [PWW73]. Additionally, high-level ab initio calculations of cyclohexane have been carried out using a large number of basis sets at several levels of theory. In particular, the vibrational averaging effects have been examined in order to critically compare the experimentally determined and theoretically evaluated rotational constants. The contribution of highly symmetric vibrational modes to vibrational averaging effects was clarified. More structural information could be obtained from fs DFWM measurements of asymmetric top species, since different type of rotational recurrences can appear, and all three rotational constants (A, B, C) can be extracted. On the other hand the analysis of the asymmetric top spectra is no longer trivial. In fact the simple formula for rotational recurrence periods of symmetric top species (Tab. 2.1) can not be applied to asymmetric top molecules. Thus, in order to extract high-resolution data for asymmetric species, a complete fitting of the experimental spectra is necessary. The fs DFWM and (1+2') PPI method have been applied to the asymmetric top molecules pyridine in the ground (S0) and pDFB in the S0 and electronically excited (S1) states. By fitting the measured fs DFWM spectra the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants have been extracted with good precision and the value of the parametrized polarizability angle of pDFB was obtained. In this work, the first application of fs DFWM spectroscopy to a molecular cluster has been reported. Also, the chemical equilibrium between monomeric and dimeric species was studied. In particular formic and acetic acid have been investigated in a gas cell and in a supersonic expansion. Many spectral features have been observed and analized in the fs DFWM spectrum of formic acid vapor in a gas cell at room temperature. Most of them were attributed to rotational recurrences of the formic acid monomer, but also spectral feature originating from the formic acid dimer of O-H×××O/O×××H-O type have been detected and analyzed. From the fitted simulation, the rotational and centrifugal distortion constants, and parametrized polarizability angle were extracted for the dimeric structure of O-H×××O/O×××HO type. With the assumption of unperturbed monomers a center-of-mass distance of R = 2.990 ± 0.001 Å for the monomers within the dimer has been calculated from the spectroscopic results. This distance is 0.028 Å smaller than that reported from electron diffraction [ABM69]. Thus, the centers-of-mass distance was assigned as the main point of disagreement between results of fs DFWM and electron diffraction experiments. In contrast to formic acid, acetic acid shows strong recurrences from dimeric species even in the fs DFWM spectra at room temperature. This is explained in terms of different symmetry of the moments-of-inertia tensor, which modulates the intensity of RRs (the fs DFWM signal is in general stronger from symmetric species). Due to the symmetric nature of the acetic acid dimer, only the sum (B+C) of the rotational constants has been extracted. The changes of geometrical parameters upon dimer formation have been analyzed for, both, formic and acetic acid. A heat-pipe oven has been used in order to overcome the main drawback of fs DFWM spectroscopy – the square dependence of the signal intensity on the sample number density. Two-ring molecules (cyclohexylbenzene, para-cyclohexylaniline and nicotine) with low vapor pressure (<0.1 mbar) at room temperature have been investigated. From the analysis of the experimental and ab-initio results for CHB and pCHA a nearly perpendicular conformation of the aromatic vs. cyclohexane ring for both system is inferred. The enlargement of the benzene ring of CHB in the electronically excited state (S1) has been found to cause the smaller rotational constants in S1. This conclusion has been drawn from the comparison of the ground and electronically excited state experimental rotational constants in combination with ab-initio calculations. The extraction of precise structural information for nicotine was not possible due to it weak fs DFWM signal. However, the fact that fs DFWM technique can be applied to conformational analysis of molecular species in an equilibrium mixture opens other applications for this kind of spectroscopy. In general the results obtained in this work show that the fs DFWM technique, being an experimental implementation of RCS, provides one with an important tool for structural analysis of molecular species in the gas phase in particular for the species to which microwave spectroscopy can not be applied. It gives spectra with excellent signal-to-noise ratio even at low number density samples expanded in a seeded supersonic jet. It provides an alternative and innovative approach towards rotational Raman spectroscopy of large polyatomic molecules applicable under various experimental conditions (broad temperature and pressure range). With the introduction of femtosecond (10-15s) laser pulses (usually picosecond (10-12s) laser pulses were used in RCS) an improvement in time-resolution and therefore in precision for the rotational constants by more than one order of magnitude has been achieved. Molecular systems in the ground electronic state without permanent dipole moment and chromophore can be studied with high precision, providing thereby molecular benchmark systems for the electronic structure theory. As has been shown, the study of molecular clusters by fs DFWM spectroscopy is possible, but its potential are restricted by the square dependence of the fs DFWM signal from the sample number density, which is even more important for supersonic jet expansions. Here, the application of near-resonant and resonant FWM schemes should help in order to compensate for the low sample concentration. With the introduction of the heat pipe oven for fs DFWM experiments, the investigation of large nonvolatile molecules under equilibrium conditions is possible now. In our laboratory the first results on the structural analysis of different conformers of pyrrolidine in the gas phase have been obtained [MaR04]. This method can have even more prospects for the structural investigations of large molecular species in combination with new non-thermal gas phase sources for nonvolatile molecules, like laser desorption [CTL89], laser oblation [MHL83], electrospray [FMM90], laser induced liquid beam ion desorption [KAB96, Sob00] etc. A very recent application of the fs DFWM technique is the investigation of the influence of strong laser fields on molecular gas phase sample, which could range from active alignment [PPB03] over molecular deformation to field ionization [CSD03]. In regards to future development in fs DFWM spectroscopy for more complex molecules one has to take into account, how large amplitude motions such as the van der Waals vibrations or internal rotation (see section 6.4.2) affect the rotational coherences. In any case, femtosecond Degenerate Four-Wave Mixing as experimental implementation of Rotational Coherence Spectroscopy can be considered as an innovative, developing, and powerful method for the structural investigation of the molecular species, which are hard to study by classical frequency-resolved spectroscopy [FeZ95a, Dan01, Rie02].
Reliable communication in the central nervous system requires the precise control of the duration and the intensity of neurotransmitter action at specific molecular targets. After their release at the synapse, neurotransmitters activate pre- and/or postsynaptic receptors. To terminate synaptic transmission, neurotransmitters are in turn inactivated by either enzymatic degradation or active uptake into neuronal and/or glial cells by neurotransmitter transporters. In the present study, two types of membrane proteins involved in transcellular signal transduction were investigated, the P2X receptors, which are ATP-gated ion channels and the glutamate transporters of the EAAT family. The first part of this study is concerned with the targeting and anchoring of P2X receptors at specific locations. P2X receptors play a role of fast excitatory neurotransmission to extracellular ATP in both the peripheral and central nervous system. For several ligand-gated ion channel, like glycine receptors or nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, it is known that specific binding proteins exist, which are involved in receptor trafficking and anchoring of the receptors at appropriate sites on the synapse. Within the P2X family, amino acid homology is scattered over the protein sequence excepted of the cytoplasmic C-terminal tails, which do not share significant sequence similarity, indicating that they might provide peculiar properties to the respective receptor isoforms. Using GST fusion proteins containing the C terminal end of the P2X2A, P2X5 and P2X7 subunits as baits, ßIII tubulin was identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry as a direct interacting partner of P2X2A. ßIII tubulin did not interact with P2X5 nor with P2X7. The tubulin binding motif of P2X2A could be confined to a 42 amino acid long region ranging from amino acid 371 to 412 of the complete P2X2A subunit. This domain, which includes a total of six serine residues and twelve proline residues, interestingly overlaps to a significant extent with a 69 amino acid long sequence, which is lacking in P2X2B, a splice variant of P2X2A. P2X2B receptors are known to desensitize - significantly faster than P2X2A receptors. The interaction of the P2X2A receptor with ßIII tubulin may contribute to receptor desensitization as well as tethering of the P2X2A receptor at specialized regions of the cell. In a second part of this work, the oligomeric state of two distantly related glutamate transporters, the human glial glutamate transporter hEAAT2, and the glutamate transporter ecgltP of E.coli was determined. Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) buffer and remove synaptically released L-glutamate and maintain its concentration below neurotoxic levels. Mammalian glutamate transporter subunits are known to form homomultimers, but controversial numbers of subunits per transporter complex have been reported, ranging from 2-5. Both hEAAT2 and ecgltP proteins expressed at high levels in Xenopus laevis oocytes, from which they were purified in a [35S]methionine-labeled form under nondenaturing conditions by metal affinity chromatography. Blue native PAGE analysis revealed that both the hEAAT2 and ecgltP transporters exist exclusively as homogenous populations of homotrimers in Xenopus oocytes. The trimeric structure was corroborated by chemical crosslinking. Also, ecgltP purified as a recombinant protein from its natural host E.coli migrated as a trimeric protein on blue native PAGE gels. The conservation of the quaternary structure from prokaryotes to mammals assigns an important functional role to the trimeric structure. Glutamate transporters are known to exhibit a dual mode of operation by functioning both as glutamate Na+/K+/H+ co-transporters and as anion channels. It is intriguing to speculate that the EAAT monomer is responsible for the secondary active transport of glutamate, whereas a barrel-like arrangement of the three subunits forms a central anion pore mediating anion conductivity.
This dissertation study argues that 'policy advice formation', as a discourse development, is a differentiated hybrid resultant from merger between comparative education and policy studies disciplines. Through discourse analysis based on John Creswell's format, this study identifies revisions, restatements and shifts in emphasis of theories, methodological models and challenge topics of comparative education and policy studies. Findings which display the development of policy advice formation' discourse. In conclusion, this study found differential patterns seemingly formed because of collaborative affects of standardization in education science knowledge expressed within discourse.
A remarkable indictment and conviction following the sale of an ‘obscene’ comic book invites us to examine arguments brought forth to describe a specifically childlike reception of new media, as usually suggested by those who would motivate legal restrictions for such media. Trying to explain some perceived contradictions on the surface of these arguments, we discuss whether it is the failure or rather the extreme success of texts that is marked as ‘dangerous’ in such contexts.
The paper explores factors that influence the design of financing contracts between venture capital investors and European venture capital funds. 122 Private Placement Memoranda and 46 Partnership Agreements are investigated in respect to the use of covenant restrictions and compensation schemes. The analysis focuses on the impact of two key factors: the reputation of VC-funds and changes in the overall demand for venture capital services. We find that established funds are more severely restricted by contractual covenants. This contradicts the conventional wisdom which assumes that established market participants care more about their reputation, have less incentive to behave opportunistically and therefore need less covenant restrictions. We also find that managers of established funds are more often obliged to invest own capital alongside with investors money. We interpret this as evidence that established funds have actually less reason to care about their reputation as compared to young funds. One reason for this surprising result could be that managers of established VC funds are older and closer to retirement and therefore put less weight on the effects of their actions on future business opportunities. We also explore the effects of venture capital supply on contract design. Gompers and Lerner (1996) show that VC-funds in the US are able to reduce the number of restrictive covenants in years with high supply of venture capital and interpret this as a result of increased bargaining power by VC-funds. We do not find similar evidence for Europe. Instead, we find that VC-funds receive less base compensation and higher performance related compensation in years with strong capital inflows into the VC industry. This may be interpreted as a signal of overconfidence: Strong investor demand seems to coincide with overoptimistic expectations by fund managers which make them willing to accept higher powered incentive schemes. JEL: G32 Keywords: Venture Capital, Contracting, Limited Partnership, Funds, Principal Agent, Compensation, Covenants, Reputation, Bargaining Power