2,227 research outputs found
Stationary and non-stationary fluid flow of a Bose-Einstein condensate through a penetrable barrier
We experimentally study the fluid flow induced by a broad, penetrable barrier
moving through an elongated dilute gaseous Bose-Einstein condensate. The
barrier is created by a laser beam swept through the condensate, and the
resulting dipole potential can be either attractive or repulsive. We examine
both cases and find regimes of stable and unstable fluid flow: At slow speeds
of the barrier, the fluid flow is stationary due to the superfluidity of the
condensate. At intermediate speeds, we observe a non-stationary regime in which
the condensate gets filled with dark solitons. At faster speeds, soliton
formation completely ceases and a remarkable absence of excitation in the
condensate is seen again.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Capital Region Climate Change Forum: Citizens' Report
The Capital Region Climate Change Forum was organised, facilitated and evaluated by the Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF) at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS). The NSW Greenhouse Office and the ACT Department of Territory and Municipal Services provided funding for the Forum. The Forum was held from Friday 1 December to Sunday 3 December 2006. The primary objectives of the Forum were to: * Test the use of a citizens jury as a way of helping the community to engage with the issue of climate change and develop informed recommendations on how to respond * Provide the NSW and ACT Governments with a greater understanding of how the community in the Capital Region would like to respond to climate change * Improve understanding of community perspectives on climate change more broadly. The Forum grew out of an earlier proposal for a National Conversation on Climate Change (NCCC), developed by ISF. The NCCC proposal is provided in Appendix A. The aim of the NCCC is to stimulate public debate on Australia's response to climate change by undertaking a series of high profile citizen forums in all Australian states and developing an associated website and other media outputs. It seeks to promote public deliberation on climate change response. Deliberation is an approach to decision making in which citizens consider relevant facts from multiple points of view, converse with one another to think critically about options before them and enlarge their perspectives, opinions and understandings. In a deliberative process, participants are provided with information, training, time and other resources to allow them to learn about and debate an issue and come to a considered view. A deliberative process acts as a capacity building exercise in which non expert members of the community are empowered to discuss and form valid opinions about the subject
Animal, Plant, Collagen and Blended Dietary Proteins: Effects on Musculoskeletal Outcomes
This is the final version. Available from MDPI via the DOI in this record.Dietary protein is critical for the maintenance of musculoskeletal health, whereappropriate intake (i.e., source, dose, timing) can mitigate declines in muscle and bone mass and/orfunction. Animal-derived protein is a potent anabolic source due to rapid digestion and absorptionkinetics stimulating robust increases in muscle protein synthesis and promoting bone accretion andmaintenance. However, global concerns surrounding environmental sustainability has led to anincreasing interest in plant- and collagen-derived protein as alternative or adjunct dietary sources.This is despite the lower anabolic profile of plant and collagen protein due to the inferior essentialamino acid profile (e.g., lower leucine content) and subordinate digestibility (versus animal). Thisreview evaluates the efficacy of animal-, plant- and collagen-derived proteins in isolation, and asprotein blends, for augmenting muscle and bone metabolism and health in the context of ageing,exercise and energy restriction.Medical Research Council (MRC)National Institute for Health Researc
- and -spin relaxation time limitations of phosphorous donor electrons near crystalline silicon to silicon dioxide interface defects
A study of donor electron spins and spin--dependent electronic transitions
involving phosphorous (P) atoms in proximity of the (111) oriented
crystalline silicon (c-Si) to silicon dioxide (SiO) interface is
presented for [P] = 10 and [P] =
10 at about liquid He temperatures (
). Using pulsed electrically detected magnetic
resonance (pEDMR), spin--dependent transitions between the \Phos donor state
and two distinguishable interface states are observed, namely (i) \Pb centers
which can be identified by their characteristic anisotropy and (ii) a more
isotropic center which is attributed to E defects of the \sio bulk
close to the interface. Correlation measurements of the dynamics of
spin--dependent recombination confirm that previously proposed transitions
between \Phos and the interface defects take place. The influence of these
electronic near--interface transitions on the \Phos donor spin coherence time
as well as the donor spin--lattice relaxation time is then
investigated by comparison of spin Hahn--echo decay measurements obtained from
conventional bulk sensitive pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance and surface
sensitive pEDMR, as well as surface sensitive electrically detected inversion
recovery experiments. The measurements reveal that both and of
\Phos donor electrons spins in proximity of energetically lower interface
states at K are reduced by several orders of magnitude
A Role for the Vacuolating Cytotoxin, VacA, in Colonization and Helicobacter pylori-Induced Metaplasia in the Stomach
Carriage of Helicobacter pylori strains producing more active (s1/i1) forms of VacA is strongly associated with gas-tric adenocarcinoma. To our knowledge, we are the
first to determine effects of different polymorphic forms of VacA on inflammation and metaplasia in the mouse stomach. Bacteria producing the less active s2/i2 form of VacA colonized mice more efficiently than mutants null for VacA or producing more active forms of it, providing the
first evidence of a positive role for the minimally active s2/i2 toxin. Strains producing more active toxin forms induced more severe and extensive metaplasia and in flammation in the mouse stomach than strains producing weakly active (s2/i2) toxin. We also examined the association in humans, controlling for cag PAI status. In human gastric biopsy specimens, the vacA i1 allele was strongly associated with precancerous intestinal metaplasia, with almost complete absence of intestinal metaplasia in subjects infected with i2-type strains, even in a vacA s1, cagA+ background
Independent control of polar and azimuthal anchoring
Monte Carlo simulation, experiment and continuum theory are used to examine
the anchoring exhibited by a nematic liquid crystal at a patterned substrate
comprising a periodic array of rectangles that, respectively, promote vertical
and planar alignment. It is shown that the easy axis and effective anchoring
energy promoted by such surfaces can be readily controlled by adjusting the
design of the pattern. The calculations reveal rich behavior: for strong
anchoring, as exhibited by the simulated system, for rectangle ratios
the nematic aligns in the direction of the long edge of the rectangles, the
azimuthal anchoring coefficient changing with pattern shape. In weak anchoring
scenarios, however, including our experimental systems, preferential anchoring
is degenerate between the two rectangle diagonals. Bistability between
diagonally-aligned and edge-aligned arrangement is predicted for intermediate
combinations of anchoring coefficient and system length-scale.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
Proliferation of private online healthcare companies:Should the NHS try to keep up?
With an app for just about everything, why not one for contacting your doctor? In the United Kingdom, private companies offering primary healthcare are proliferating, with Dr Morton, a website offering email or telephone consultations, and Dr Now, a smartphone app offering video consultations. Companies in the United States are offering an Uber-type experience, where instead of a car, a doctor appears at your door.
These companies operate in a climate where patients want convenience, flexibility, and speed of access, features which overstretched general practitioners in the UK are struggling to provide. Meanwhile, new companies are appearing regularly, with the UK digital health market currently worth Β£2bn (β¬2.6bn; $2.8bn) and expected to grow to Β£2.9bn by 2018.2 What are the implications for the NHS
Mechanism, dynamics, and biological existence of multistability in a large class of bursting neurons
Multistability, the coexistence of multiple attractors in a dynamical system,
is explored in bursting nerve cells. A modeling study is performed to show that
a large class of bursting systems, as defined by a shared topology when
represented as dynamical systems, is inherently suited to support
multistability. We derive the bifurcation structure and parametric trends
leading to multistability in these systems. Evidence for the existence of
multirhythmic behavior in neurons of the aquatic mollusc Aplysia californica
that is consistent with our proposed mechanism is presented. Although these
experimental results are preliminary, they indicate that single neurons may be
capable of dynamically storing information for longer time scales than
typically attributed to nonsynaptic mechanisms.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
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