623 research outputs found
Guiding properties of a non-isothermal atmosphere for acoustic-gravity waves
The propagation of pressure waves in a stratified,
non-isothermal atmosphere is studied in the linear approximation. It is found that acoustic and
acoustic-gravity waves can be horizontally guided by the effect of the Earth’s thermocline alone, under very mild conditions on the temperature gradient steepness. The effect of the Earth’s surface is also studied. Lamb’s modes associated with the rigid surface are, then, identified and their behaviour, as a function of the Earth’s position, is discussed. Finally, dissipation is included, and its effect is derived using a perturbation technique
Neurohormonas y citocinas en la insuficiencia cardíaca. Correlación con la reserva de flujo coronario
Introduction and objectives. In heart failure, the coronary
flow reserve (CFR) measured by positron-emission
tomography (PET) is reduced. As neurohormone and cytokine
levels are also altered in patients with the condition,
our aim was to determine whether there is a correlation
between CFR and neurohormone and cytokine
levels.
Patients and method. The study included 40 patients
with heart failure but without ischemic heart disease. Myocardial
blood flow was measured by PET using nitrogen-
13 ammonia at baseline and during ATP infusion. The
CFR was calculated for each patient. In addition, levels of
the following were determined: norepinephrine, endothelin-
1, angiotensin-II, atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), brain
natriuretic peptide (BNP), tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin
(IL)-1β, soluble IL-2 receptor, and IL-6.
Results. All neurohormone levels were elevated above
reference values. The levels of all cytokines, except IL-1β,
were also elevated. There was a significant negative correlation
between CFR and the levels of several neurohormones:
ANP (r=–0.476), BNP (r=–0.442), and IL-6
(r=–0.509).
Conclusions. In heart failure, the decrease in CFR is
correlated with increases in the levels of certain neurohormones
(i.e., ANP and BNP) and cytokines (i.e., IL-6), with
vasodilatory effect. These increases are probably are related
to compensatory mechanisms that are unable to correct
for the endothelial dysfunction present in these patients
Incorporating changes in albedo in estimating the climate mitigation benefits of land use change projects
International audienceSome climate scientists are questioning whether the practice of converting of non-forest lands to forest land (afforestation or reforestation) is an effective climate change mitigation option. The discussion focuses particularly on areas where the new forest is primarily coniferous and there is significant amount of snow since the increased climate forcing due to the change in albedo may counteract the decreased climate forcing due to carbon dioxide removal. In this paper, we develop a stand-based model that combines changes in surface albedo, solar radiation, latitude, cloud cover and carbon sequestration. As well, we develop a procedure to convert carbon stock changes to equivalent climatic forcing or climatic forcing to equivalent carbon stock changes. Using the model, we investigate the sensitivity of combined affects of changes in surface albedo and carbon stock changes to model parameters. The model is sensitive to amount of cloud, atmospheric absorption, timing of canopy closure, carbon sequestration rate among other factors. The sensitivity of the model is investigated at one Canadian site, and then the model is tested at numerous sites across Canada. In general, we find that the change in albedo reduces the carbon sequestration benefits by approximately 30% over 100 years, but this is not drastic enough to suggest that one should not use afforestation or reforestation as a climate change mitigation option. This occurs because the forests grow in places where there is significant amount of cloud in winter. As well, variations in sequestration rate seem to be counterbalanced by the amount and timing of canopy closure. We close by speculating that the effects of albedo may also be significant in locations at lower latitudes, where there are less clouds, and where there are extended dry seasons. These conditions make grasses light coloured and when irrigated crops, dark forests or other vegetation such as biofuels replace the grasses, the change in carbon stocks may not compensate for the darkening of the surface
Ruthenium complexes containing mPTA and the thiopurines bis(8-thiotheophylline)-(CH2)n and mPTA (n= 1-3; mPTA = Nmethyl- 1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane)
HIV-1 Tat protein modulates the generation of cytotoxic T cell epitopes by modifying proteasome composition and enzymatic activity
Tat, the trans activation protein of HIV, is produced early upon infection to promote and expand HIV replication and transmission. However, Tat appears to also have effects on target cells, which may affect Ag recognition both during infection and after vaccination. In particular, Tat targets dendritic cells and induces their maturation and Ag-presenting functions, increasing Th1 T cell responses. We show in this work that Tat modifies the catalytic subunit composition of immunoproteasomes in B and T cells either expressing Tat or treated with exogenous biological active Tat protein. In particular, Tat up-regulates latent membrane protein 7 and multicatalytic endopeptidase complex like-1 subunits and down-modulates the latent membrane protein 2 subunit. These changes correlate with the increase of all three major proteolytic activities of the proteasome and result in a more efficient generation and presentation of subdominant MHC-I-binding CTL epitopes of heterologous Ags. Thus, Tat modifies the Ag processing and modulates the generation of CTL epitopes. This may have an impact on both the control of virally infected cells during HIV-1 infection and the use of Tat for vaccination strategies
Superfluid-Insulator Transition unambiguously detected by entanglement in one-dimensional disordered superfluids
We use entanglement to track the superfluid-insulator transition (SIT) in
disordered fermionic superfluids described by the one-dimensional Hubbard
model. Entanglement is found to have remarkable signatures of the SIT driven by
i) the disorder strength , ii) the concentration of impurities and iii)
the particle density . Our results reveal the absence of a critical
potential intensity on the SIT driven by , i.e. any small suffices to
decrease considerably the degree of entanglement: it drops for
. We also find that entanglement is non-monotonic with the
concentration , approaching to zero for a certain critical value . This
critical concentration is found to be related to a special type of
localization, here named as fully-localized state, which can be also reached
for a particular density . Our results show that the SIT driven by or
has distinct nature whether it leads to the full localization or to the
ordinary one: it is a first-order quantum phase transition when leading to full
localization, and a smoother transition when reaching ordinary localization. In
contrast, the SIT driven by is always a smoother transition independently
on the type of localization reached.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Chirality scenario of the spin-glass ordering
Detailed account is given of the chirality scenario of experimental
spin-glass transitions. In this scenario, the spin glass order of weakly
anisotropic Heisenberg-like spin-glass magnets including canonical spin glasses
are essentially chirality driven. Recent numerical and experimental results are
discussed in conjunction with this scenario.Comment: Submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Japan "Special Issue on Frustration
Disminución de la reserva de flujo coronario en pacientes con insuficiencia cardíaca no isquémica
Introduction and objectives. Coronary flow reserve
(CFR) is impaired not only in ischemic heart disease, but
also in cardiac diseases that may or may not course with
heart failure. The aim of the present study was to determine
if the severity of heart failure can influence CFR impairment.
Methods. Forty patients with non-ischemic heart disease
and heart failure were studied 41 times. Four groups
were established: 1. 10 patients in functional class III-IV;
2. 10 patients in functional class II not taking beta-blockers;
3. 11 patients in class II treated with carvedilol, and 4.
10 patients in class I. These patients had a history of heart
failure and systolic dysfunction. Myocardial blood flow
(MBF) was measured with positron emission tomography
(PET) and N-13 ammonia at rest (r) and during adenosine
triphosphate (ATP) infusion.
Results. MBF and CFR were significantly higher in
group 4 (1.95 ± 0.58 and 2.40 ± 0.95 ml/min/g) than in
group 1 (1.02 ± 0.52 and 1.46 ± 0.48 ml/min/g). CFR tended
to be higher in groups 2 (1.73 ± 0.72), and 3 (1.89 ±
0.75) vs group 1. No significant correlation was found between
CFR and the following variables: age, systolic blood
pressure, ventricular mass index, ventricular volume indexes,
and ejection fraction.
Conclusions. Coronary microvascular function is impaired
in non-ischemic heart failure, and the impairment is
related to functional class, regardless of the underlying
responsible heart disease
Linear entropy fails to predict entanglement behavior in low-density fermionic systems
Entanglement is considered a fundamental ingredient for quantum technologies
and condensed matter systems are among the good candidates for quantum devices.
For bipartite pure states the von Neumann entropy is a proper measure of
entanglement, while the linear entropy, associated to the mixedness of the
reduced density matrices, is a simpler quantity to be obtained and is
considered to be qualitatively equivalent to the von Neumann. Here we
investigate both linear and von Neumann entropies for quantifying entanglement
in homogeneous, superlattice and disordered Hubbard chains. We find regimes of
parameters for which the linear entropy fails in reproducing the qualitative
behavior of the von Neumann entropy. This then may lead to incorrect
predictions i) of maximum and minimum entanglement states and ii) of quantum
phase transitions
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