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Institution

University of St Andrews

EducationSt Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom
About: University of St Andrews is a education organization based out in St Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Laser. The organization has 16260 authors who have published 43364 publications receiving 1636072 citations. The organization is also known as: St Andrews University & University of St. Andrews.
Topics: Population, Laser, Planet, Galaxy, Stars


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown here that both men and women judge photographs of women's faces that were taken in the fertile window of the menstrual cycle as more attractive than photographs taken during the luteal phase, indicating the existence of visible cues to ovulation in the human face.
Abstract: The lack of obvious visible manifestations of ovulation in human females, compared with the prominent sexual swellings of many primates, has led to the idea that human ovulation is concealed. While human ovulation is clearly not advertised to the same extent as in some other species, we show here that both men and women judge photographs of women's faces that were taken in the fertile window of the menstrual cycle as more attractive than photographs taken during the luteal phase. This indicates the existence of visible cues to ovulation in the human face, and is consistent with similar cyclical changes observed for preferences of female body odour. This heightened allure could be an adaptive mechanism for raising a female's relative value in the mating market at the time in the cycle when the probability of conception is at its highest.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Chaboy et al. as mentioned in this paper showed that the symmetry of the hexaaqua complex of Cu(H2O)62+ has a Jahn-Teller distortion effect (Sherman 2001; Bersuker 2006), whereby the two Cu-O distances of the vertical axial bond (Cu-Oax) are longer than four Cu O distances in the equatorial plane (Cu Oax).
Abstract: Copper, a native metal found in ores, is the principal metal in bronze and brass. It is a reddish metal with a density of 8920 kg m−3. All of copper’s compounds tend to be brightly colored: for example, copper in hemocyanin imparts a blue color to blood of mollusks and crustaceans. Copper has three oxidation states, with electronic configurations of Cu([Ar]3 d 104 s 1), Cu+([Ar]3 d 10), and Cu2+([Ar]3 d 9). Cu does not react with aqueous hydrochloric or sulfuric acids, but is soluble in concentrated nitric acid due to its lesser tendency to be oxidized. Cu(I) exists as the colorless cuprous ion, Cu+. Cu(II) is found as the sky-blue cupric ion, Cu2+. The Cu+ ion is unstable, and tends to disproportionate to Cu and Cu2+. Nevertheless, Cu(I) forms compounds such as Cu2O. Cu(I) bonds more readily to carbon than Cu(II), hence Cu(I) has an extensive chemistry with organic compounds. In aqueous solutions, Cu2+ ion occurs as an aquacomplex. There is no clearly predominant structure among the four-, five-, and six-fold coordinated Cu(II) species (Chaboy et al. 2006). Hydrated Cu(II) ion has been represented as the hexaaqua complex Cu(H2O)62+, which shows the Jahn–Teller distortion effect (Sherman 2001; Bersuker 2006), whereby the two Cu–O distances of the vertical axial bond (Cu–Oax) are longer than four Cu–O distances in the equatorial plane (Cu–Oeq). The Jahn–Teller effect lowers the symmetry of Cu(H2O)62+ from octahedral Th to D2h. The sixfold coordination of hydrated Cu(II) species is questioned by a finding of fivefold coordination (Pasquarello et al. 2001; Chaboy et al. 2006; Little et al. 2014b …

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Telemetry experiments show that the bluefin tuna can maintain a constant deep body temperature during marked changes in the temperature of its environment, suggesting the selective advantages of greater speed made possible by the warm muscle were important in the evolution of this system.
Abstract: SYNOPSIS. Two groups of fishes, the tuna and the lamnid sharks, have evolved ounter-currentheat-exchange mechanisms for conserving metabolic heat and raising their body temperatures. Warm muscle can produce more power, and considering the other adaptations for fast swimming in these fish, it seems likely that the selective advantages of greater speed made possible by the warm muscle were important in the evolution of this system. Some tunas such as the yellowfin and skip jack are at a fixed temperature difference above the water, but bluefin tuna can thermoregulate. Telemetry experiments show that the bluefin tuna can maintain a constant deep body temperature during marked changes in the temperature of its environment.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
23 Sep 2019-Nature
TL;DR: NMR spectroscopy of oxygen-17 reveals a drop of the Knight shift in the superconducting state, contradicting previous work and imposing tight constraints on the order parameter symmetry of the system.
Abstract: Phases of matter are usually identified through spontaneous symmetry breaking, especially regarding unconventional superconductivity and the interactions from which it originates. In that context, the superconducting state of the quasi-two-dimensional and strongly correlated perovskite Sr2RuO4 is considered to be the only solid-state analogue to the superfluid 3He-A phase1,2, with an odd-parity order parameter that is unidirectional in spin space for all electron momenta and breaks time-reversal symmetry. This characterization was recently called into question by a search for an expected 'split' transition in a Sr2RuO4 crystal under in-plane uniaxial pressure, which failed to find any such evidence; instead, a dramatic rise and a peak in a single-transition temperature were observed3,4. Here we use nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of oxygen-17, which is directly sensitive to the order parameter via hyperfine coupling to the electronic spin degrees of freedom, to probe the nature of superconductivity in Sr2RuO4 and its evolution under strain. A reduction of the Knight shift is observed for all strain values and at temperatures below the critical temperature, consistent with a drop in spin polarization in the superconducting state. In unstrained samples, our results contradict a body of previous NMR work reporting no change in the Knight shift5 and the most prevalent theoretical interpretation of the order parameter as a chiral p-wave state. Sr2RuO4 is an extremely clean layered perovskite and its superconductivity emerges from a strongly correlated Fermi liquid, and our work imposes tight constraints on the order parameter symmetry of this archetypal system.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The formation of lateral ‘lamp-brush’ loops in meiotic prophase, after synapsis, is claimed to represent the outcome of the master/slave matching process.
Abstract: In the genomes of chromosomal organisms, cytological evidence from disparate sources suggests that each unit of information encoded as a DNA base sequence is serially repeated. Further cytological and genetical evidence suggests that among such serially repeated sequences a terminal unit serves as the ‘master’ sequence, within which recombinational events can occur, followed by ‘slave’ sequences which are not directly involved in recombination but which are made congruent to the master sequence once per life-cycle. The formation of lateral ‘lamp-brush’ loops in meiotic prophase, after synapsis, is claimed to represent the outcome of the master/slave matching process.

261 citations


Authors

Showing all 16531 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yi Chen2174342293080
Paul M. Thompson1832271146736
Ian J. Deary1661795114161
Dongyuan Zhao160872106451
Mark J. Smyth15371388783
Harry Campbell150897115457
William J. Sutherland14896694423
Thomas J. Smith1401775113919
John A. Peacock140565125416
Jean-Marie Tarascon136853137673
David A. Jackson136109568352
Ian Ford13467885769
Timothy J. Mitchison13340466418
Will J. Percival12947387752
David P. Lane12956890787
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023127
2022387
20211,998
20201,996
20192,059
20181,946