1,037 research outputs found
U–Th–Pb zircon geochronology by ID-TIMS, SIMS, and laser ablation ICP-MS: recipes, interpretations, and opportunities
The chronologic record encoded in accessory minerals, based on the radioactive decay of U and Th, is indispensable to extract quantitative process rates over timescales encompassing Earth's evolution from the Hadean to the Holocene, and extending from terrestrial to extra-terrestrial realms. We have essentially three different U–Pb dating tools at hand, a high-precision, whole-grain bulk technique (isotope-dilution thermal ionization mass spectrometry, ID-TIMS), and two high-spatial resolution but less precise in-situ techniques (secondary ion mass spectrometry, SIMS, and laser ablation inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry, LA-ICP-MS), all of which are predominantly applied to the mineral zircon. All three have reached a technological and methodological maturity in data quality and quantity, but interpretational differences, which are often common (albeit at different temporal and spatial scales) to all isotopic dating techniques, remain largely unresolved. The choice to use one of these techniques should be governed by the scientific question posed, such as (1) the duration of the geological process to be resolved; (2) the size and abundance of the material to be analyzed; (3) the complexity of the sample material and of the geological history to be resolved; and (4) the number of dates needed to address the question. Our compilation demonstrates that, ultimately, the highest confidence geochronological data will not only result from the optimal choice of appropriate analysis technique and the accurate treatment of analytical and interpretational complexities, but also require comprehensive sample characterization that employs the full gamut of textural (e.g., cathodoluminescence, charge contrast imaging, electron backscatter diffraction) and compositional (e.g., trace element, stable and radiogenic isotope) analysis
Imaging in turbid media using quasi-ballistic photons
We study by means of experiments and Monte Carlo simulations, the scattering
of light in random media, to determine the distance upto which photons travel
along almost undeviated paths within a scattering medium, and are therefore
capable of casting a shadow of an opaque inclusion embedded within the medium.
Such photons are isolated by polarisation discrimination wherein the plane of
linear polarisation of the input light is continuously rotated and the
polarisation preserving component of the emerging light is extracted by means
of a Fourier transform. This technique is a software implementation of lock-in
detection. We find that images may be recovered to a depth far in excess of
what is predicted by the diffusion theory of photon propagation. To understand
our experimental results, we perform Monte Carlo simulations to model the
random walk behaviour of the multiply scattered photons. We present a new
definition of a diffusing photon in terms of the memory of its initial
direction of propagation, which we then quantify in terms of an angular
correlation function. This redefinition yields the penetration depth of the
polarisation preserving photons. Based on these results, we have formulated a
model to understand shadow formation in a turbid medium, the predictions of
which are in good agreement with our experimental results.Comment: LaTex 19 pages, 10 ps figures and 8 eps figures. psfig.sty included.
(submitted to Optics Commumications
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Targeted delivery of functionalized PLGA nanoparticles to macrophages by complexation with the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Nanoparticles (NPs) are able to deliver a variety of substances into eukaryotic cells. However, their usage is often hampered by a lack of specificity, leading to the undesired uptake of NPs by virtually all cell types. In contrast to this, yeast is known to be specifically taken up into immune cells after entering the body. Therefore, we investigated the interaction of biodegradable surface-modified poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) particles with yeast cells to overcome the unspecificity of the particulate carriers. Cells of different Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains were characterized regarding their interaction with PLGA-NPs under isotonic and hypotonic conditions. The particles were shown to efficiently interact with yeast cells leading to stable NP/yeast-complexes allowing to associate or even internalize compounds. Notably, applying those complexes to a coculture model of HeLa cells and macrophages, the macrophages were specifically targeted. This novel nano-in-micro carrier system suggests itself as a promising tool for the delivery of biologically active agents into phagocytic cells combining specificity and efficiency
Age of Obsidian Butte in Imperial County, California, through infrared stimulated luminescence dating of Potassium Feldspar from tuffaceous sediment
Obsidian Butte is an important lithic source for obsidian and artifacts from this location are distributed across archaeological sites in southern California and adjacent parts of northern Mexico. For this study, we used drill core material for infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) dating of potassium feldspar extracted from tuffaceous sediment directly underlying obsidian-bearing lava from Obsidian Butte. In addition, a core sample from lacustrine sediment below the tuffaceous sedimentary unit was dated by the same method. Stratigraphically consistent ages between 2.51 ± 0.32 kilo-annum (ka) (1 sigma uncertainty; average of two tuffaceous sediment samples) and 4.39 ± 0.49 ka (lacustrine sediment sample) were obtained. This constrains the eruption and earliest availability of the lithic resource of Obsidian Butte to 490 BCE (with uncertainty limits of ±320 years at ∼68 percent confidence, and ±640 years at ∼95 percent confidence). Since then, it would have been accessible during intermittent desiccation of Lake Cahuilla. This new date redefines obsidian from Obsidian Butte as a marker for the late prehistoric period
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Impact of Quaternary Climate on Seepage at Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Uranium-series ages, oxygen-isotopic compositions, and uranium contents were determined in outer growth layers of opal and calcite from 0.5- to 3-centimeter-thick mineral coatings hosted by lithophysal cavities in the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, the proposed site of a permanent repository for high-level radioactive waste. Micrometer-scale growth layering in the minerals was imaged using a cathodoluminescence detector on a scanning electron microscope. Determinations of the chemistry, ages, and delta oxygen-18 values of the growth layers were conducted by electron microprobe analysis and secondary ion mass spectrometry techniques at spatial resolutions of 1 to about 20 micrometers ({micro}m) and 25 to 40 micrometers, respectively. Growth rates for the last 300 thousand years (k.y.) calculated from about 300 new high-resolution uranium-series ages range from approximately 0.5 to 1.5 {micro}m/k.y. for 1- to 3-centimeter-thick coatings, whereas coatings less than about I-centimeter-thick have growth rates less than 0.5 {micro}m/k.y. At the depth of the proposed repository, correlations of uranium concentration and delta oxygen-18 values with regional climate records indicate that unsaturated zone percolation and seepage water chemistries have responded to changes in climate during the last several hundred thousand years
Antiferromagnetic Zigzag Spin Chain in Magnetic Fields at Finite Temperatures
We study thermodynamic behaviors of the antiferromagnetic zigzag spin chain
in magnetic fields, using the density-matrix renormalization group method for
the quantum transfer matrix. We focus on the thermodynamics of the system near
the critical fields in the ground-state magnetization process(- curve):
the saturation field, the lower critical field associated with excitation gap,
and the field at the middle-field cusp singularity. We calculate magnetization,
susceptibility and specific heat of the zigzag chain in magnetic fields at
finite temperatures, and then discuss how the calculated quantities reflect the
low-lying excitations of the system related with the critical behaviors in the
- curve.Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review
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Accessory mineral microstructure and chronology reveals no evidence for late heavy bombardment on the asteroid 4-Vesta
A long-standing paradigm in planetary science is that the inner Solar System experienced a period of intense and sustained bombardment between 4.2 and 3.9 Ga. Evidence of this period, termed the Late Heavy Bombardment is provided by the 40Ar/39Ar isotope systematics of returned Apollo samples, lunar meteorites, and asteroidal meteorites. However, it has been largely unsupported by more recent and robust isotopic age data, such as isotopic age data obtained using the U-Pb system. Here we conduct careful microstructural characterisation of baddeleyite, zircon, and apatite in six different eucrites prior to conducting SIMS and LA-ICP-MS measurement of U, Th, and Pb isotopic ratios and radiometric dating. Baddeleyite, displaying complex internal twinning linked to reversion from a high symmetry polymorph in two samples, records the formation of the parent body (4554 ± 3 Ma 2σ; n = 8), while structurally simple zircon records a tight spread of ages representing metamorphism between 4574 ± 14 Ma and 4487 ± 31 Ma (n = 6). Apatite, a more readily reset shock chronometer, records crystallisation ages of ∼4509 Ma (n = 6), with structurally deformed grains (attributed to impact events) yielding U-Pb ages of 4228 Ma (n = 12). In concert, there is no evidence within the measured U-Pb systematics or microstructural record of the eucrites examined in this study to support a period of late heavy bombardment between 4.2 and 3.9 Ga
Selenium Utilization by GPX4 Is Required to Prevent Hydroperoxide-Induced Ferroptosis
open24siSelenoproteins are rare proteins among all kingdoms of life containing the 21st amino acid, selenocysteine. Selenocysteine resembles cysteine, differing only by the substitution of selenium for sulfur. Yet the actual advantage of selenolate- versus thiolate-based catalysis has remained enigmatic, as most of the known selenoproteins also exist as cysteine-containing homologs. Here, we demonstrate that selenolate-based catalysis of the essential mammalian selenoprotein GPX4 is unexpectedly dispensable for normal embryogenesis. Yet the survival of a specific type of interneurons emerges to exclusively depend on selenocysteine-containing GPX4, thereby preventing fatal epileptic seizures. Mechanistically, selenocysteine utilization by GPX4 confers exquisite resistance to irreversible overoxidation as cells expressing a cysteine variant are highly sensitive toward peroxide-induced ferroptosis. Remarkably, concomitant deletion of all selenoproteins in Gpx4cys/cys cells revealed that selenoproteins are dispensable for cell viability provided partial GPX4 activity is retained. Conclusively, 200 years after its discovery, a specific and indispensable role for selenium is provided.openIngold, Irina; Berndt, Carsten; Schmitt, Sabine; Doll, Sebastian; Poschmann, Gereon; Buday, Katalin; Roveri, Antonella; Peng, Xiaoxiao; Porto Freitas, Florencio; Seibt, Tobias; Mehr, Lisa; Aichler, Michaela; Walch, Axel; Lamp, Daniel; Jastroch, Martin; Miyamoto, Sayuri; Wurst, Wolfgang; Ursini, Fulvio; Arnér, Elias S J; Fradejas-Villar, Noelia; Schweizer, Ulrich; Zischka, Hans; Friedmann Angeli, José Pedro; Conrad, MarcusIngold, Irina; Berndt, Carsten; Schmitt, Sabine; Doll, Sebastian; Poschmann, Gereon; Buday, Katalin; Roveri, Antonella; Peng, Xiaoxiao; Porto Freitas, Florencio; Seibt, Tobias; Mehr, Lisa; Aichler, Michaela; Walch, Axel; Lamp, Daniel; Jastroch, Martin; Miyamoto, Sayuri; Wurst, Wolfgang; Ursini, Fulvio; Arnér, Elias S J; Fradejas-Villar, Noelia; Schweizer, Ulrich; Zischka, Hans; Friedmann Angeli, José Pedro; Conrad, Marcu
Some Consequences of Thermosolutal Convection: The Grain Structure of Castings
The essential principles of thermosolutal convection are outlined, and how convection provides a transport mechanism between the mushy region of a casting and the open bulk liquid is illustrated. The convective flow patterns which develop assist in heat exchange and macroscopic solute segregation during solidification; they also provide a mechanism for the transport of dendritic fragments from the mushy region into the bulk liquid. Surviving fragments become nuclei for equiaxed grains and so lead to blocking of the parental columnar, dendritic growth front from which they originated. The physical steps in such a sequence are considered and some experimental data are provided to support the argument
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