567 research outputs found
Comparison of Best Management Practice Adoption Between Virginia\u27s Chesapeake Bay Basin and Southern Rivers Watersheds
Producers in two regions of Virginia (Chesapeake Bay basin and Southern Rivers region) were surveyed to compare farming practices and agricultural best management practice (BMP) adoption. Objectives were to assess farming operations and determine the extent of cost-share and non-cost-share BMP implementation and gain insight into the impact of selected socioeconomic factors on the BMP adoption. Although farming characteristics and producer attitudes toward pollution and water quality were similar, BMP implementation differed between the two regions. Differences in BMP implementation may be due to a more focused, longer-term NPS pollution control educational effort in the Bay basin
P5_2 Spaghettification: Surviving a Black Hole Event Horizon
We found that it is possible to stay conscious falling through the event horizon of aBlack Hole if the mass exceeds 19,000M_sol. This assumes the average person is ofgood health and can stay conscious with a relative force less than 5 g acting upon them
P5_3 Pigs on the Wing
This article explores the possibility of a pig flying over Battersea Power Station, as shown on the Pink Floyd album ’Animals,’ and the time it would take for the pig’s height to exceed the height of the chimneys. Using the lift force equation, we graphically show the minimum wind velocity required to lift a 70 kg pig 101 m, the height of the Battersea Power Station. We find that for a pig of this mass, a wind velocity of 20.4 ms-1 was required. Furthermore, in order to measure the time for the pig to reach the height of Battersea Power Station, an acceleration of 3.8 ms-2 was calculated; this assumes a severe gale wind velocity of 24 ms-1 as defined by The Met Office. We find that it would take 7.3 s to travel the required height, assuming only vertical movement.
P5_1 ”Everybody knows the Moon is made of cheese...”: Return of the Cheddar
This Letter explores the repercussions of the Moon turning into cheddar, and finds that with the same volume and lighter mass of m = 2.49 × 1022kg, it would escape the Earth’s sphere of influence. We looked at two possible escape trajectories, prograde and retrograde, and found the new orbital distances to be between 0.73AU and 1.00AU, and between 1.00AU and 1.51AU, respectively. Thus potentially carrying the Moon very near to the orbits of Venus or Mars.
Theoretical Analysis of the Stress Induced B-Z Transition in Superhelical DNA
We present a method to calculate the propensities of regions within a DNA molecule to transition from B-form to Z-form under negative superhelical stresses. We use statistical mechanics to analyze the competition that occurs among all susceptible Z-forming regions at thermodynamic equilibrium in a superhelically stressed DNA of specified sequence. This method, which we call SIBZ, is similar to the SIDD algorithm that was previously developed to analyze superhelical duplex destabilization. A state of the system is determined by assigning to each base pair either the B- or the Z-conformation, accounting for the dinucleotide repeat unit of Z-DNA. The free energy of a state is comprised of the nucleation energy, the sequence-dependent B-Z transition energy, and the energy associated with the residual superhelicity remaining after the change of twist due to transition. Using this information, SIBZ calculates the equilibrium B-Z transition probability of each base pair in the sequence. This can be done at any physiologically reasonable level of negative superhelicity. We use SIBZ to analyze a variety of representative genomic DNA sequences. We show that the dominant Z-DNA forming regions in a sequence can compete in highly complex ways as the superhelicity level changes. Despite having no tunable parameters, the predictions of SIBZ agree precisely with experimental results, both for the onset of transition in plasmids containing introduced Z-forming sequences and for the locations of Z-forming regions in genomic sequences. We calculate the transition profiles of 5 kb regions taken from each of 12,841 mouse genes and centered on the transcription start site (TSS). We find a substantial increase in the frequency of Z-forming regions immediately upstream from the TSS. The approach developed here has the potential to illuminate the occurrence of Z-form regions in vivo, and the possible roles this transition may play in biological processes
Electron self-trapping on a nano-circle
We study the self-trapping of quasiparticles (electrons, holes, excitons,
etc) in a molecular chain with the structure of a ring, taking into account the
electron-phonon interaction and the radial and tangential deformations of the
chain. A discrete system of equations is obtained and solved numerically. The
analytical solutions for the wave function of a quasiparticle and for the
molecule displacements that determine the distortion of the ring, are also
obtained and solved in the continuum approximation. The numerical solutions of
the system of discrete nonlinear equations reveals several regimes of
quasiparticle localisation in the chain which depend on the values of the
parameters of the system. It is shown that the transversal deformation of the
chain favours the formation of a soliton.Comment: 43 pages 9 figure
Theoretical Analysis of Competing Conformational Transitions in Superhelical DNA
We develop a statistical mechanical model to analyze the competitive behavior of transitions to multiple alternate conformations in a negatively supercoiled DNA molecule of kilobase length and specified base sequence. Since DNA superhelicity topologically couples together the transition behaviors of all base pairs, a unified model is required to analyze all the transitions to which the DNA sequence is susceptible. Here we present a first model of this type. Our numerical approach generalizes the strategy of previously developed algorithms, which studied superhelical transitions to a single alternate conformation. We apply our multi-state model to study the competition between strand separation and B-Z transitions in superhelical DNA. We show this competition to be highly sensitive to temperature and to the imposed level of supercoiling. Comparison of our results with experimental data shows that, when the energetics appropriate to the experimental conditions are used, the competition between these two transitions is accurately captured by our algorithm. We analyze the superhelical competition between B-Z transitions and denaturation around the c-myc oncogene, where both transitions are known to occur when this gene is transcribing. We apply our model to explore the correlation between stress-induced transitions and transcriptional activity in various organisms. In higher eukaryotes we find a strong enhancement of Z-forming regions immediately 5′ to their transcription start sites (TSS), and a depletion of strand separating sites in a broad region around the TSS. The opposite patterns occur around transcript end locations. We also show that susceptibility to each type of transition is different in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. By analyzing a set of untranscribed pseudogenes we show that the Z-susceptibility just downstream of the TSS is not preserved, suggesting it may be under selection pressure
Dynamics of liquid 4He in Vycor
We have measured the dynamic structure factor of liquid 4He in Vycor using
neutron inelastic scattering. Well-defined phonon-roton (p-r) excitations are
observed in the superfluid phase for all wave vectors 0.3 < Q < 2.15. The p-r
energies and lifetimes at low temperature (T = 0.5 K) and their temperature
dependence are the same as in bulk liquid 4He. However, the weight of the
single p-r component does not scale with the superfluid fraction (SF) as it
does in the bulk. In particular, we observe a p-r excitation between T_c =
1.952 K, where SF = 0, and T_(lambda)=2.172 K of the bulk. This suggests, if
the p-r excitation intensity scales with the Bose condensate, that there is a
separation of the Bose-Einstein condensation temperature and the superfluid
transition temperature T_c of 4He in Vycor. We also observe a two-dimensional
layer mode near the roton wave vector. Its dispersion is consistent with
specific heat and SF measurements and with layer modes observed on graphite
surfaces.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
The distribution of inverted repeat sequences in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome
Although a variety of possible functions have been proposed for inverted repeat sequences (IRs), it is not known which of them might occur in vivo. We investigate this question by assessing the distributions and properties of IRs in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae (SC) genome. Using the IRFinder algorithm we detect 100,514 IRs having copy length greater than 6 bp and spacer length less than 77 bp. To assess statistical significance we also determine the IR distributions in two types of randomization of the S. cerevisiae genome. We find that the S. cerevisiae genome is significantly enriched in IRs relative to random. The S. cerevisiae IRs are significantly longer and contain fewer imperfections than those from the randomized genomes, suggesting that processes to lengthen and/or correct errors in IRs may be operative in vivo. The S. cerevisiae IRs are highly clustered in intergenic regions, while their occurrence in coding sequences is consistent with random. Clustering is stronger in the 3′ flanks of genes than in their 5′ flanks. However, the S. cerevisiae genome is not enriched in those IRs that would extrude cruciforms, suggesting that this is not a common event. Various explanations for these results are considered
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