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The Good Food Institute (GFI) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that promotes plant- and cell-based alternatives to animal products, particularly meat, dairy, and eggs. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was created in 2016 by the nonprofit organization Mercy For Animals with Bruce Friedrich as the chief executive officer.
Cannon Fodder 3 is an action-strategy PC game developed and published – originally in Russia – by Game Factory Interactive (GFI), along with developer Burut CT. The game is the second sequel to Cannon Fodder, a commercially and critically successful game released for multiple formats in 1993.
The first 15 superior highly composite numbers, 2, 6, 12, 60, 120, 360, 2520, 5040, 55440, 720720, 1441440, 4324320, 21621600, 367567200, 6983776800 (sequence A002201 in the OEIS) are also the first 15 colossally abundant numbers, which meet a similar condition based on the sum-of-divisors function rather than the number of divisors. Neither ...
Kibble may refer to: Dry compound feed , especially when used as dog food or cat food chalk and flint rubble , also known as kibble in East Devon, used to consolidate ground
Superior is a creator-owned comic book series written by Mark Millar and illustrated by Leinil Francis Yu, following a young boy with multiple sclerosis who sells his ...
Properties of the model were further considered by Guralnik in 1965, [24] by Higgs in 1966, [25] by Kibble in 1967, [26] and further by GHK in 1967. [27] The original three 1964 papers showed that when a gauge theory is combined with an additional field that spontaneously breaks the symmetry, the gauge bosons can consistently acquire a finite mass.
Zinc finger protein Gfi-1 is a transcriptional repressor that in humans is encoded by the GFI1 gene. [5] It is important normal hematopoiesis . [ 6 ] Gfi1 (growth factor independence 1) is a transcriptional repressor that plays a critical role in hematopoiesis and in protecting hematopoietic cells against stress-induced apoptosis.
Although Lee clarified in his footnotes that "'Higgs' is an abbreviation for Higgs, Kibble, Guralnik, Hagen, Brout, Englert", [184] his use of the term (and perhaps also Steven Weinberg's mistaken cite of Higgs' paper as the first in his seminal 1967 paper [92] [188] [187]) meant that by around 1975–1976 others had also begun to use the name ...