6,971 research outputs found
Spartan Daily, October 26, 1954
Volume 43, Issue 25https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/12077/thumbnail.jp
Resonant effects in random dielectric structures
Recently, a theory for artificial magnetism in two-dimensional photonic
crystals has been developed for large wavelength using homogenization
techniques. In this paper we pursue this approach within a rigorous stochastic
framework: dielectric parallel nanorods are randomly disposed, each of them
having, up to a large scaling factor, a random permittivity \epsilon(\omega)
whose law is represented by a density on a window \Delta=[a,b]x[0,h] of the
complex plane. We give precise conditions on the initial probability law
(permittivity, radius and position of the rods) under which the homogenization
process can be performed leading to a deterministic dispersion law for the
effective permeability with possibly negative real part.
Subsequently a limit analysis h->0, accounting a density law of \epsilon,
which concentrates on the real axis, reveals singular behavior due to the
presence of resonances in the microstructure
The effect of S-substitution at the O6-guanine site on the structure and dynamics of a DNA oligomer containing a G:T mismatch
The effect of S-substitution on the O6 guanine site of a 13-mer DNA duplex containing a G:T mismatch is studied using molecular dynamics. The structure, dynamic evolution and hydration of the S-substituted duplex are compared with those of a normal duplex, a duplex with Ssubstitution on guanine, but no mismatch and a duplex with just a G:T mismatch. The S-substituted mismatch leads to cell death rather than repair. One suggestion is that the G:T mismatch recognition protein recognises the S-substituted mismatch (GS:T) as G:T. This leads to a cycle of futile repair ending in DNA breakage and cell death. We find that some structural features of the helix are similar for the duplex with the G:T mismatch and that with the S-substituted mismatch, but differ from the normal duplex, notably the helical twist. These differences arise from the change in the hydrogen-bonding pattern of the base pair. However a marked feature of the S-substituted G:T mismatch duplex is a very large opening. This showed considerable variability. It is suggested that this enlarged opening would lend support to an alternative model of cell death in which the mismatch protein attaches to thioguanine and activates downstream damage-response pathways. Attack on the sulphur by reactive oxygen species, also leading to cell death, would also be aided by the large, variable opening
The Key 1996
Bowling Green State University 1996 Key Yearbookhttps://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/yearbooks/1156/thumbnail.jp
The Junkyard in the Jungle: Transnational, Transnatural Nature in Karen Tei Yamashita’s Through the Arc of the Rain Forest
[Abstract] In this new millennium the relatively young field of ecocriticism has had to face important transdisciplinary, transnational, and transnatural challenges. This article attempts to demonstrate how two of the major changes that environmental criticism is currently undergoing, the
transnational turn and the transnatural challenge, have both been encoded in Through the Arc of the Rain Forest (1990), the first novel published by Karen Tei Yamashita. I particularly focus on a significant episode in Through the Arc of the Rain Forest, when a peculiar anthropogenic
ecosystem is discovered, and interpret it according to Leo Marx’s classic paradigm of “the machine in the garden.” I intend to prove that Yamashita’s novel not only revisits the old master theory but also revamps it by destabilizing the classic human-nature divide inherent in firstwave
ecocriticism and by adding the transnational ingredient. Thus, the machine-in-the-garden paradigm is updated in order to incorporate the broadening of current environmental criticism, both literally (globalization) and conceptually (transnatural nature). While at times Marx’s paradigm may
metamorphose in intriguing ways, the old trope also corroborates its continuing validity. Though filtered by the sieve of globalization and shaken by the emergence of cyborg ecosystems, “the machine in the garden” has survived as a compelling ecocritical framework, even if it occasionally
mutates into a junkyard in the jungle.Xunta de Galicia; PGIDIT07PXIB104255P
Spartan Daily, March 27, 1953
Volume 41, Issue 110https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/11856/thumbnail.jp
Spartan Daily, May 22, 1959
Volume 46, Issue 132https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/3911/thumbnail.jp
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