3,035 research outputs found
Enhanced photoenergy harvesting and extreme Thomson effect in hydrodynamic electronic systems
The thermoelectric (TE) properties of a material are dramatically altered
when electron-electron interactions become the dominant scattering mechanism.
In the degenerate hydrodynamic regime, the thermal conductivity is reduced and
becomes a {\it decreasing} function of the electronic temperature, due to a
violation of the Wiedemann-Franz (WF) law. We here show how this peculiar
temperature dependence gives rise to new striking TE phenomena. These include
an 80-fold increase in TE efficiency compared to the WF regime, dramatic
qualitative changes in the steady state temperature profile, and an anomalously
large Thomson effect. In graphene, which we pay special attention to here,
these effects are further amplified due to a doubling of the thermopower.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
The DiskMass Survey. X. Radio synthesis imaging of spiral galaxies
We present results from 21 cm radio synthesis imaging of 28 spiral galaxies
from the DiskMass Survey obtained with the VLA, WSRT, and GMRT facilities. We
detail the observations and data reduction procedures and present a brief
analysis of the radio data. We construct 21 cm continuum images, global HI
emission-line profiles, column-density maps, velocity fields, and
position-velocity diagrams. From these we determine star formation rates
(SFRs), HI line widths, total HI masses, rotation curves, and
azimuthally-averaged radial HI column-density profiles. All galaxies have an HI
disk that extends beyond the readily observable stellar disk, with an average
ratio and scatter of R_{HI}/R_{25}=1.35+/-0.22, and a majority of the galaxies
appear to have a warped HI disk. A tight correlation exists between total HI
mass and HI diameter, with the largest disks having a slightly lower average
column density. Galaxies with relatively large HI disks tend to exhibit an
enhanced stellar velocity dispersion at larger radii, suggesting the influence
of the gas disk on the stellar dynamics in the outer regions of disk galaxies.
We find a striking similarity among the radial HI surface density profiles,
where the average, normalized radial profile of the late-type spirals is
described surprisingly well with a Gaussian profile. These results can be used
to estimate HI surface density profiles in galaxies that only have a total HI
flux measurement. We compare our 21 cm radio continuum luminosities with 60
micron luminosities from IRAS observations for a subsample of 15 galaxies and
find that these follow a tight radio-infrared relation, with a hint of a
deviation from this relation at low luminosities. We also find a strong
correlation between the average SFR surface density and the K-band surface
brightness of the stellar disk.Comment: 22 pages + Appendix, 16 figures + Atlas, 5 tables. Accepted for
publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Experiments on the Integration of the Danish Language into a Natural Language Text Generation System
The DiskMass Survey. VIII. On the Relationship Between Disk Stability and Star Formation
We study the relationship between the stability level of late-type galaxy
disks and their star-formation activity using integral-field gaseous and
stellar kinematic data. Specifically, we compare the two-component (gas+stars)
stability parameter from Romeo & Wiegert (Q_RW), incorporating stellar
kinematic data for the first time, and the star-formation rate estimated from
21cm continuum emission. We determine the stability level of each disk
probabilistically using a Bayesian analysis of our data and a simple dynamical
model. Our method incorporates the shape of the stellar velocity ellipsoid
(SVE) and yields robust SVE measurements for over 90% of our sample. Averaging
over this subsample, we find a meridional shape of sigma_z/sigma_R =
0.51^{+0.36}_{-0.25} for the SVE and, at 1.5 disk scale lengths, a stability
parameter of Q_RW = 2.0 +/- 0.9. We also find that the disk-averaged
star-formation-rate surface density (Sigma-dot_e,*) is correlated with the
disk-averaged gas and stellar mass surface densities (Sigma_e,g and Sigma_e,*)
and anti-correlated with Q_RW. We show that an anti-correlation between
Sigma-dot_e,* and Q_RW can be predicted using empirical scaling relations, such
that this outcome is consistent with well-established statistical properties of
star-forming galaxies. Interestingly, Sigma-dot_e,* is not correlated with the
gas-only or star-only Toomre parameters, demonstrating the merit of calculating
a multi-component stability parameter when comparing to star-formation
activity. Finally, our results are consistent with the Ostriker et al. model of
self-regulated star-formation, which predicts
Sigma-dot_e,*/Sigma_e,g/sqrt(Sigma_e,*). Based on this and other theoretical
expectations, we discuss the possibility of a physical link between disk
stability level and star-formation rate in light of our empirical results.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 15 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. An
electronic version of Table 1 is available by request, or at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~westfall/research/dmVIII_table1.tx
Targeting the mTOR pathway in hepatocellular carcinoma: Current state and future trends
SummaryMechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) regulates cell growth, metabolism and aging in response to nutrients, cellular energy stage and growth factors. mTOR is frequently up-regulated in cancer including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and is associated with bad prognosis, poorly differentiated tumors, and earlier recurrence. Blocking mTOR with rapamycin and first generation mTOR inhibitors, called rapalogs, has shown promising reduction of HCC tumor growth in preclinical models. Currently, rapamycin/rapalogs are used in several clinical trials for the treatment of advanced HCC, and as adjuvant therapy in HCC patients after liver transplantation and TACE. A second generation of mTOR pathway inhibitors has been developed recently and is being tested in various clinical trials of solid cancers, and has been used in preclinical HCC models. The results of series of clinical trials using mTOR inhibitors in HCC treatment will emerge in the near future
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