532 research outputs found

    The structure and origin of magnetic clouds in the solar wind

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    Interspecific hybridization with Hordeum bulbosum and development of hybrids and haploids

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    Subrahmanyam, N.C. and Bothmer, R. von, 1987. Interspecific hybridization with Hordeum bulbosum and development of hybrids and haploids. - Hereditas 106: 119-127. Lund, Sweden. ISSN 001-0661. Received May 2, 1986.A total of 64 interspecific crossing combinations with H. bulbosum (2x and 4x) were attempted. The maximum seed set was generally very high. Progeny was obtained in 19 combinations with diploid and 13 combinations with tetraploid H. bulbosum. As a result of selective chromosome elimination, haploids were recorded in 7 interspecific combinations with diploid and 7 with tctraploid H. bulbosum. There are 7 new haploid-producing combinations, viz. H. cordobense monohaploids, H. marinum mono- and dihaploids. and H. brevisubularum di- and trihaploids in crosses with H. bulbosum (4x), H. capense dihaploids and H. murinum dihaploids with H. bulbosum (2x). The theory of a hierarchical chromosome elimination system is strengthened by the present results.Roland yon Bothmer, Department of Crop Genetics and Breeding, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, S-268 00 Svalov, Sweden

    Inositol phospholipid kinases in Alzheimer's disease

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    Phosphatidylinositol kinase is reduced in Alzheimer's disease

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    Abstract: Phosphatidylinositol (PI) kinase and PI phosphate (PIP) kinase activities were measured in postmortem samples of brain tissue from patients with Alzheimer's disease and nondemented control subjects. A membrane‐free cytosolic fraction from four neocortical locations, with exogenous inositol lipids as the substrate, was used. Tissue from patients with Alzheimer's disease was characterized by reduced PIP formation; the reduction was 50% in prefrontal cortex, temporal cortex, and parietal cortex and 40% in precentral gyrus. In contrast, no alterations were found in PI bisphosphate formation in these four neocortical locations. The specific changes in PI kinase but not PIP kinase activity suggest that the findings may have functional relevance to the involvement of brain membrane processes in Alzheimer's disease

    Genome Symbols in the Triticeae (Poaceae)

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    A system for the application of nuclear genome symbols in the tribe Triticeae is proposed. It is based mainly on prevailing symbols. In agreement with this, the system uses individual upper case letters as symbols in the first place. Since the number of basic nuclear genomes in the Triticeae exceeds the number of single letters in the Roman alphabet, some basic genomes are designated with an upper case letter followed by a lower case letter, e.g. Ns for the genome of Psathyrostachys. Superscripts in small letters are used when modified versions of a basic genome are referred to, e.g. HP for the genome found in Hordeum pusillum. Unknown or equivocally identified genomes are designated by X followed by a lower case letter, e.g. Xu for Hordeum murinum. Underline of the relevant genome symbol can be used to indicate the origin of the cytoplasm

    Forbush decreases and turbulence levels at CME fronts

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    We seek to estimate the average level of MHD turbulence near coronal mass ejection (CME) fronts as they propagate from the Sun to the Earth. We examine the cosmic ray data from the GRAPES-3 tracking muon telescope at Ooty, together with the data from other sources for three well observed Forbush decrease events. Each of these events are associated with frontside halo Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) and near-Earth magnetic clouds. In each case, we estimate the magnitude of the Forbush decrease using a simple model for the diffusion of high energy protons through the largely closed field lines enclosing the CME as it expands and propagates from the Sun to the Earth. We use estimates of the cross-field diffusion coefficient DD_{\perp} derived from published results of extensive Monte Carlo simulations of cosmic rays propagating through turbulent magnetic fields. Our method helps constrain the ratio of energy density in the turbulent magnetic fields to that in the mean magnetic fields near the CME fronts. This ratio is found to be \sim 2% for the 11 April 2001 Forbush decrease event, \sim 6% for the 20 November 2003 Forbush decrease event and \sim 249% for the much more energetic event of 29 October 2003.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. (Abstract abridged) Typos correcte

    Characterization of genetic diversity in core collection accessions of wild barley, Hordeum vulgare ssp. spontaneum

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    Publisher's version/PDFGenetic variability in the 143 core accessions of wild barley, Hordeum vulgare ssp. spontaneum, was assessed by allozyme analysis. A total of 34 alleles were detected at ten isozyme loci. All loci were polymorphic except Pgd-1, which was monomorphic. Est-2 and Est-4 were the most diverse loci, with genetic diversity values of 0.747 and 0.686, respectively. The comparison of the results with those of previous studies indicates that all alleles occurring in cultivated and wild barley are observed in this set of the wild Barley Core Collection. Only one allele (Pgd-1 Tj ) was absent. It is noteworthy that one new allele at the Ndh-2 locus and another new allele at Aco-2 locus were first detected in the present study. Nine of the 34 alleles were rare and detected only in one to four accessions. The genetic similarities among the 143 accessions ranged from 0.18 to 1.00. Data analysis based on clustering and principal coordinate analysis showed that a high level of genetic variability exists in this set of core accessions, and indicated that some duplication probably exists in this set core based on the present study

    Partially-erupting prominences: a comparison between observations and model-predicted observables

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    <p><b>Aims:</b> We investigate several partially-erupting prominences to study their relationship with other CME-associated phenomena and compare these observations with observables predicted by a model of partially-expelled-flux-ropes (Gibson & Fan 2006a, ApJ, 637, L65; 2006b, J. Geophys. Res., 111, 12103).</p> <p><b>Methods:</b> We studied 6 selected events with partially-erupting prominences using multi-wavelength observations recorded by the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT), Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE), Mauna Loa Solar Observatory (MLSO), Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO), and Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT). The observational features associated with partially-erupting prominences were then compared with the predicted observables from the model.</p> <p><b>Results:</b> The partially-expelled-flux-rope (PEFR) model can explain the partial eruption of these prominences, and in addition predicts a variety of other CME-related observables that provide evidence of internal reconnection during eruption. We find that all of the partially-erupting prominences studied in this paper exhibit indirect evidence of internal reconnection. Moreover, all cases showed evidence of at least one observable unique to the PEFR model, e.g., dimmings external to the source region and/or a soft X-ray cusp overlying a reformed sigmoid.</p> <p><b>Conclusions:</b> The PEFR model provides a plausible mechanism to explain the observed evolution of partially-erupting-prominence-associated CMEs in our study.</p&gt

    Galactic Abundances: Report of Working Group 3

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    We summarize the various methods and their limitations and strengths to derive galactic abundances from in-situ and remote-sensing measurements, both from ground-based observations and from instruments in space. Because galactic abundances evolve in time and space it is important to obtain information with a variety of different methods covering different regions from the Very Local Insterstellar Medium (VLISM) to the distant galaxy, and different times throughout the evolution of the galaxy. We discuss the study of the present-day VLISM with neutral gas, pickup ions, and Anomalous Cosmic Rays, the study of the local interstellar medium (ISM) at distances <1.5 kpc utilizing absorption line measurements in H I clouds, and the study of galactic cosmic rays, sampling contemporary (~15 Myr) sources in the local ISM within a few kiloparsec of the solar system. Solar system abundances, derived from solar abundances and meteorite studies are discussed in several other chapters of this volume. They provide samples of matter from the ISM from the time of solar system format ion, about 4.5 Gyr ago. The evolution of galactic abundances on longer time scales is discussed in the context of nuclear synthesis in the various contributing stellar objects
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