222 research outputs found
Generalized Convexity and Inequalities
Let R+ = (0,infinity) and let M be the family of all mean values of two
numbers in R+ (some examples are the arithmetic, geometric, and harmonic
means). Given m1, m2 in M, we say that a function f : R+ to R+ is
(m1,m2)-convex if f(m1(x,y)) < or = m2(f(x),f(y)) for all x, y in R+ . The
usual convexity is the special case when both mean values are arithmetic means.
We study the dependence of (m1,m2)-convexity on m1 and m2 and give sufficient
conditions for (m1,m2)-convexity of functions defined by Maclaurin series. The
criteria involve the Maclaurin coefficients. Our results yield a class of new
inequalities for several special functions such as the Gaussian hypergeometric
function and a generalized Bessel function.Comment: 17 page
Tietze Extension Theorem for Ordered Fuzzy Gδ-extremally Disconnected Spaces
In this paper, a new class of fuzzy topological spaces called ordered fuzzy G -extremally disconnected spaces is introduced. Tietze extension theorem for ordered fuzzy Gδ-extremally disconnected spaces has been discussed as in [10] besides proving several other propositions and lemmas
Seed coat mediated resistance against Aspergillus flavus infection in peanut
Toxic metabolites known as aflatoxins are produced via certain species of the Aspergillus genus, specifically A. flavus, A. parasiticus, A. nomius, and A. tamarie. Although various pre- and post-harvest strategies have been employed, aflatoxin contamination remains a major problem within peanut crop, especially in subtropical environments. Aflatoxins are the most well-known and researched mycotoxins produced within the Aspergillus genus (namely Aspergillus flavus) and are classified as group 1 carcinogens. Their effects and etiology have been extensively researched and aflatoxins are commonly linked to growth defects and liver diseases in humans and livestock. Despite the known importance of seed coats in plant defense against pathogens, peanut seed coat mediated defenses against Aspergillus flavus resistance, have not received considerable attention. The peanut seed coat (testa) is primarily composed of a complex cell wall matrix consisting of cellulose, lignin, hemicellulose, phenolic compounds, and structural proteins. Due to cell wall desiccation during seed coat maturation, postharvest A. flavus infection occurs without the pathogen encountering any active genetic resistance from the live cell(s) and the testa acts as a physical and biochemical barrier only against infection. The structure of peanut seed coat cell walls and the presence of polyphenolic compounds have been reported to inhibit the growth of A. flavus and aflatoxin contamination; however, there is no comprehensive information available on peanut seed coat mediated resistance. We have recently reviewed various plant breeding, genomic, and molecular mechanisms, and management practices for reducing A. flavus infection and aflatoxin contamination. Further, we have also proved that seed coat acts as a physical and biochemical barrier against A. flavus infection. The current review focuses specifically on the peanut seed coat cell wall-mediated disease resistance, which will enable researchers to understand the mechanism and design efficient strategies for seed coat cell wall-mediated resistance against A. flavus infection and aflatoxin contamination
Hawking Radiation from AdS Black Holes
We investigate Hawking radiation from black holes in (d+1)-dimensional
anti-de Sitter space. We focus on s-waves, make use of the geometrical optics
approximation, and follow three approaches to analyze the radiation. First, we
compute a Bogoliubov transformation between Kruskal and asymptotic coordinates
and compare the different vacua. Second, following a method due to Kraus,
Parikh, and Wilczek, we view Hawking radiation as a tunneling process across
the horizon and compute the tunneling probablility. This approach uses an
anti-de Sitter version of a metric originally introduced by Painleve for
Schwarzschild black holes. From the tunneling probability one also finds a
leading correction to the semi-classical emission rate arising from the
backreaction to the background geometry. Finally, we consider a spherically
symmetric collapse geometry and the Bogoliubov transformation between the
initial vacuum state and the vacuum of an asymptotic observer.Comment: 13 pages, latex2e, v2: some clarifications and references adde
De Sitter and Schwarzschild-De Sitter According to Schwarzschild and De Sitter
When de Sitter first introduced his celebrated spacetime, he claimed,
following Schwarzschild, that its spatial sections have the topology of the
real projective space RP^3 (that is, the topology of the group manifold SO(3))
rather than, as is almost universally assumed today, that of the sphere S^3.
(In modern language, Schwarzschild was disturbed by the non-local correlations
enforced by S^3 geometry.) Thus, what we today call "de Sitter space" would not
have been accepted as such by de Sitter. There is no real basis within
classical cosmology for preferring S^3 to RP^3, but the general feeling appears
to be that the distinction is in any case of little importance. We wish to
argue that, in the light of current concerns about the nature of de Sitter
space, this is a mistake. In particular, we argue that the difference between
"dS(S^3)" and "dS(RP^3)" may be very important in attacking the problem of
understanding horizon entropies. In the approach to de Sitter entropy via
Schwarzschild-de Sitter spacetime, we find that the apparently trivial
difference between RP^3 and S^3 actually leads to very different perspectives
on this major question of quantum cosmology.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, typos fixed, references added, equation numbers
finally fixed, JHEP versio
From ten to four and back again: how to generalize the geometry
We discuss the four-dimensional N=1 effective approach in the study of warped
type II flux compactifications with SU(3)x SU(3)-structure to AdS_4 or flat
Minkowski space-time. The non-trivial warping makes it natural to use a
supergravity formulation invariant under local complexified Weyl
transformations. We obtain the classical superpotential from a standard
argument involving domain walls and generalized calibrations and show how the
resulting F-flatness and D-flatness equations exactly reproduce the full
ten-dimensional supersymmetry equations. Furthermore, we consider the effect of
non-perturbative corrections to this superpotential arising from gaugino
condensation or Euclidean D-brane instantons. For the latter we derive the
supersymmetry conditions in N=1 flux vacua in full generality. We find that the
non-perturbative corrections induce a quantum deformation of the internal
generalized geometry. Smeared instantons allow to understand KKLT-like AdS
vacua from a ten-dimensional point of view. On the other hand, non-smeared
instantons in IIB warped Calabi-Yau compactifications 'destabilize' the
Calabi-Yau complex structure into a genuine generalized complex one. This
deformation gives a geometrical explanation of the non-trivial superpotential
for mobile D3-branes induced by the non-perturbative corrections.Comment: LaTeX, 47 pages, v2, references, hyperref added, v3, correcting small
inaccuracies in eqs. (2.6a) and (5.16
The Taming of Closed Time-like Curves
We consider a orbifold, where acts by time and space
reversal, also known as the embedding space of the elliptic de Sitter space.
The background has two potentially dangerous problems: time-nonorientability
and the existence of closed time-like curves. We first show that closed causal
curves disappear after a proper definition of the time function. We then
consider the one-loop vacuum expectation value of the stress tensor. A naive
QFT analysis yields a divergent result. We then analyze the stress tensor in
bosonic string theory, and find the same result as if the target space would be
just the Minkowski space , suggesting a zero result for the
superstring. This leads us to propose a proper reformulation of QFT, and
recalculate the stress tensor. We find almost the same result as in Minkowski
space, except for a potential divergence at the initial time slice of the
orbifold, analogous to a spacelike Big Bang singularity. Finally, we argue that
it is possible to define local S-matrices, even if the spacetime is globally
time-nonorientable.Comment: 37 pages, LaTeX2e, uses amssymb, amsmath and epsf macros, 8 eps and 3
ps figures; (v2): Two additional comments + one reference added; (v3):
corrections in discussion of CTCs + some clarification
U(N) Instantons on N=1/2 superspace -- exact solution & geometry of moduli space
We construct the exact solution of one (anti)instanton in N=1/2 super
Yang-Mills theory defined on non(anti)commutative superspace. We first identify
N = 1/2 superconformal invariance as maximal spacetime symmetry. For gauge
group U(2), SU(2) part of the solution is given by the standard
(anti)instanton, but U(1) field strength also turns out nonzero. The solution
is SO(4) rotationally symmetric. For gauge group U(N), in contrast to the U(2)
case, we show that the entire U(N) part of the solution is deformed by
non(anti)commutativity and fermion zero-modes. The solution is no longer
rotationally symmetric; it is polarized into an axially symmetric configuration
because of the underlying non(anti)commutativity. We compute the `information
metric' of one (anti) instanton. We find that moduli space geometry is deformed
from hyperbolic space (Euclidean anti-de Sitter space) in a way anticipated
from reduced spacetime symmetry. Remarkably, the volume measure of the moduli
space turns out to be independent of the non(anti)commutativity. Implications
to D-branes in Ramond- Ramond flux background and Maldacena's gauge-gravity
correspondence are discussed.Comment: 39 pages, 3 figures, JHEP style; v2. typos corrected + a paragraph
adde
A role for XRCC2 gene polymorphisms in breast cancer risk and survival
Background
The XRCC2 gene is a key mediator in the homologous recombination repair of DNA double strand breaks. It is hypothesised that inherited variants in the XRCC2 gene might also affect susceptibility to, and survival from, breast cancer.
Methods
The study genotyped 12 XRCC2 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 1131 breast cancer cases and 1148 controls from the Sheffield Breast Cancer Study (SBCS), and examined their associations with breast cancer risk and survival by estimating ORs and HRs, and their corresponding 95% CIs. Positive findings were further investigated in 860 cases and 869 controls from the Utah Breast Cancer Study (UBCS) and jointly analysed together with available published data for breast cancer risk. The survival findings were further confirmed in studies (8074 cases) from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC).
Results
The most significant association with breast cancer risk in the SBCS dataset was the XRCC2 rs3218408 SNP (recessive model p=2.3×10−4, minor allele frequency (MAF)=0.23). This SNP yielded an ORrec of 1.64 (95% CI 1.25 to 2.16) in a two-site analysis of SBCS and UBCS, and a meta-ORrec of 1.33 (95% CI 1.12 to 1.57) when all published data were included. This SNP may mark a rare risk haplotype carried by two in 1000 of the control population. Furthermore, the XRCC2 coding R188H SNP (rs3218536, MAF=0.08) was significantly associated with poor survival, with an increased per-allele HR of 1.58 (95% CI 1.01 to 2.49) in a multivariate analysis. This effect was still evident in a pooled meta-analysis of 8781 breast cancer patients from the BCAC (HR 1.19, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.36; p=0.01).
Conclusions
These findings suggest that XRCC2 SNPs may influence breast cancer risk and survival
Black Hole Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
We have known for more than thirty years that black holes behave as
thermodynamic systems, radiating as black bodies with characteristic
temperatures and entropies. This behavior is not only interesting in its own
right; it could also, through a statistical mechanical description, cast light
on some of the deep problems of quantizing gravity. In these lectures, I review
what we currently know about black hole thermodynamics and statistical
mechanics, suggest a rather speculative "universal" characterization of the
underlying states, and describe some key open questions.Comment: 35 pages, Springer macros; for the Proceedings of the 4th Aegean
Summer School on Black Hole
- …