1,529 research outputs found
Glycine Receptors Support Excitatory Neurotransmitter Release in Developing Mouse Visual Cortex.
Glycine receptors (GlyRs) are found in most areas of the brain, and their dysfunction can cause severe neurological disorders. While traditionally thought of as inhibitory receptors, presynaptic-acting GlyRs (preGlyRs) can also facilitate glutamate release under certain circumstances, although the underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown. In the current study, we sought to better understand the role of GlyRs in the facilitation of excitatory neurotransmitter release in mouse visual cortex. Using whole-cell recordings, we found that preGlyRs facilitate glutamate release in developing, but not adult, visual cortex. The glycinergic enhancement of neurotransmitter release in early development depends on the high intracellular to extracellular Cl(-) gradient maintained by the Na(+)-K(+)-2Cl(-) cotransporter and requires Ca(2+) entry through voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels. The glycine transporter 1, localized to glial cells, regulates extracellular glycine concentration and the activation of these preGlyRs. Our findings demonstrate a developmentally regulated mechanism for controlling excitatory neurotransmitter release in the neocortex
The neutral hydrogen content of galaxies in cosmological hydrodynamic simulations
We examine the global HI properties of galaxies in quarter billion particle cosmological
simulations using GADGET-2, focusing on howgalactic outflows impactHI content.We consider
four outflow models, including a new one (ezw) motivated by recent interstellar medium
simulations in which the wind speed and mass loading factor scale as expected for momentumdriven
outflows for larger galaxies and energy-driven outflows for dwarfs (σ <75 km s−1). To
obtain predicted HI masses, we employ a simple but effective local correction for particle selfshielding
and an observationally constrained transition from neutral to molecular hydrogen.
Our ezw simulation produces an HI mass function whose faint-end slope of −1.3 agrees well
with observations from the Arecibo Fast Legacy ALFA survey; other models agree less well.
Satellite galaxies have a bimodal distribution in HI fraction versus halo mass, with smaller
satellites and/or those in larger haloes more often being HI deficient. At a given stellar mass,
HI content correlates with the star formation rate and inversely correlates with metallicity,
as expected if driven by stochasticity in the accretion rate. To higher redshifts, massive HI
galaxies disappear and the mass function steepens. The global cosmic HI density conspires
to remain fairly constant from z ∼ 5→0, but the relative contribution from smaller galaxies
increases with redshift.Department of HE and Training approved lis
Z boson decay to photon plus Kaluza-Klein graviton in large extra dimensions
In the large extra dimensional ADD scenario, Z bosons undergo a one-loop
decay into a photon and Kaluza-Klein towers of gravitons/gravi-scalars. We
calculate such a decay width, extending previous arguments about the general
form of the four-dimensional on-shell amplitude. The amplitudes calculated are
relevant to processes in other extra dimensional models where the Standard
Model fields are confined to a 4-brane.Comment: 47 pages, uses feynmp for diagrams. v2: typographical corrections for
letter-sized paper and to correct feynmf parsing error. v3: minor error in
polarisation averaging and reference corrected. v4: reflects changes for
published version; arithmetic error corrected and reference updated; section
on transversality conditions not present in published version retaine
The Photon Underproduction Crisis
We examine the statistics of the low-redshift Lyman-alpha forest from
smoothed particle hydrodynamic simulations in light of recent improvements in
the estimated evolution of the cosmic ultraviolet background (UVB) and recent
observations from the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS). We find that the value
of the metagalactic photoionization rate required by our simulations to match
the observed properties of the low-redshift Lyman-alpha forest is a factor of 5
larger than the value predicted by state-of-the art models for the evolution of
this quantity. This mismatch results in the mean flux decrement of the
Lyman-alpha forest being underpredicted by at least a factor of 2 (a 10-sigma
discrepancy with observations) and a column density distribution of Lyman-alpha
forest absorbers systematically and significantly elevated compared to
observations over nearly two decades in column density. We examine potential
resolutions to this mismatch and find that either conventional sources of
ionizing photons (galaxies and quasars) must be significantly elevated relative
to current observational estimates or our theoretical understanding of the
low-redshift universe is in need of substantial revision.Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters; 6 pages including 3 figure
Time evolution of a non-singular primordial black hole
There is growing notion that black holes may not contain curvature
singularities (and that indeed nature in general may abhor such spacetime
defects). This notion could have implications on our understanding of the
evolution of primordial black holes (PBHs) and possibly on their contribution
to cosmic energy. This paper discusses the evolution of a non-singular black
hole (NSBH) based on a recent model [1]. We begin with a study of the
thermodynamic process of the black hole in this model, and demonstrate the
existence of a maximum horizon temperature T_{max}, corresponding to a unique
mass value. At this mass value the specific heat capacity C changes signs to
positive and the body begins to lose its black hole characteristics. With no
loss of generality, the model is used to discuss the time evolution of a
primordial black hole (PBH), through the early radiation era of the universe to
present, under the assumption that PBHs are non-singular. In particular, we
track the evolution of two benchmark PBHs, namely the one radiating up to the
end of the cosmic radiation domination era, and the one stopping to radiate
currently, and in each case determine some useful features including the
initial mass m_{f} and the corresponding time of formation t_{f}. It is found
that along the evolutionary history of the universe the distribution of PBH
remnant masses (PBH-RM) PBH-RMs follows a power law. We believe such a result
can be a useful step in a study to establish current abundance of PBH-MRs.Comment: To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
The COS-Dwarfs Survey: The Carbon Reservoir Around sub-L* Galaxies
We report new observations of circumgalactic gas from the COS-Dwarfs survey,
a systematic investigation of the gaseous halos around 43 low-mass z 0.1
galaxies using background QSOs observed with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph.
From the projected 1D and 2D distribution of C IV absorption, we find that C IV
absorption is detected out to ~ 0.5 R of the host galaxies. The C IV
absorption strength falls off radially as a power law and beyond 0.5 R,
no C IV absorption is detected above our sensitivity limit of ~ 50-100 m.
We find a tentative correlation between detected C IV absorption strength and
star formation, paralleling the strong correlation seen in highly ionized
oxygen for L~L* galaxies by the COS-Halos survey. The data imply a large carbon
reservoir in the CGM of these galaxies, corresponding to a minimum carbon mass
of 1.2 out to ~ 110 kpc. This mass is
comparable to the carbon mass in the ISM and more than the carbon mass
currently in stars of these galaxies. The C IV absorption seen around these
sub-L* galaxies can account for almost two-thirds of all > 100 m C IV
absorption detected at low z. Comparing the C IV covering fraction with
hydrodynamical simulations, we find that an energy-driven wind model is
consistent with the observations whereas a wind model of constant velocity
fails to reproduce the CGM or the galaxy properties.Comment: 18 Pages, 11 Figures, ApJ 796 13
The Impact of Wind Scalings on Stellar Growth and the Baryon Cycle in Cosmological Simulations
Many phenomenologically successful cosmological simulations employ kinetic winds to model galactic outflows. Yet systematic studies of how variations in kinetic wind scalings might alter observable galaxy properties are rare. Here we employ GADGET-3 simulations to study how the baryon cycle, stellar mass function, and other galaxy and CGM predictions vary as a function of the assumed outflow speed and the scaling of the mass-loading factor with velocity dispersion. We design our fiducial model to reproduce the measured wind properties at 25 per cent of the virial radius from the Feedback In Realistic Environments simulations
The Blue Tip of the Stellar Locus: Measuring Reddening with the SDSS
We present measurements of reddening due to dust using the colors of stars in
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We measure the color of main sequence
turn-off stars by finding the "blue tip" of the stellar locus: the prominent
blue edge in the distribution of stellar colors. The method is sensitive to
color changes of order 18, 12, 7, and 8 mmag of reddening in the colors u-g,
g-r, r-i, and i-z, respectively, in regions measuring 90' by 14'. We present
maps of the blue tip colors in each of these bands over the entire SDSS
footprint, including the new dusty southern Galactic cap data provided by the
SDSS-III. The results disfavor the best fit O'Donnell (1994) and Cardelli et
al. (1989) reddening laws, but are well described by a Fitzpatrick (1999)
reddening law with R_V = 3.1. The SFD dust map is found to trace the dust well,
but overestimates reddening by factors of 1.4, 1.0, 1.2, and 1.4 in u-g, g-r,
r-i, and i-z, largely due to the adopted reddening law. In select dusty regions
of the sky, we find evidence for problems in the SFD temperature correction. A
dust map normalization difference of 15% between the Galactic north and south
sky may be due to these dust temperature errors.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figure
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