613 research outputs found
Non-mean-field theory of anomalously large double-layer capacitance
Mean-field theories claim that the capacitance of the double-layer formed at
a metal/ionic conductor interface cannot be larger than that of the Helmholtz
capacitor, whose width is equal to the radius of an ion. However, in some
experiments the apparent width of the double-layer capacitor is substantially
smaller. We propose an alternate, non-mean-field theory of the ionic
double-layer to explain such large capacitance values. Our theory allows for
the binding of discrete ions to their image charges in the metal, which results
in the formation of interface dipoles. We focus primarily on the case where
only small cations are mobile and other ions form an oppositely-charged
background. In this case, at small temperature and zero applied voltage dipoles
form a correlated liquid on both contacts. We show that at small voltages the
capacitance of the double-layer is determined by the transfer of dipoles from
one electrode to the other and is therefore limited only by the weak
dipole-dipole repulsion between bound ions, so that the capacitance is very
large. At large voltages the depletion of bound ions from one of the capacitor
electrodes triggers a collapse of the capacitance to the much smaller
mean-field value, as seen in experimental data. We test our analytical
predictions with a Monte Carlo simulation and find good agreement. We further
argue that our ``one-component plasma" model should work well for strongly
asymmetric ion liquids. We believe that this work also suggests an improved
theory of pseudo-capacitance.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures; some Monte Carlo results and a section about
aqueous solutions adde
The argument of the broken pane: Suffragette consumerism and newspapers
Within the cut-throat world of newspaper advertising the newspapers of Britain's Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) Votes for Women and the Suffragette managed to achieve a balance that has often proved to be an impossible challenge for social movement pressânamely the maintenance of a highly political stance whilst simultaneously exploiting the market system with advertising and merchandising. When the militant papers advocated window smashing of West End stores in 1912â1913, the companies who were the target still took advertisements. Why? What was the relationship between news values, militant violence and advertising income? âDo-it-yourselfâ journalism operated within a context of ethical consumerism and promotionally orientated militancy. This resulted in newspaper connections between politics, commerce and a distinct market profile, evident in the customisation of advertising, retailer dialogue with militants and longer-term loyaltyâsymptomatic of a wider trend towards newspaper commercialism during this period
The Spitzer Survey of Interstellar Clouds in the Gould Belt. III. A Multi-Wavelength View of Corona Australis
We present Spitzer Space Telescope IRAC and MIPS observations of a 0.85 deg^2
field including the Corona Australis (CrA) star-forming region. At a distance
of 130 pc, CrA is one of the closest regions known to be actively forming
stars, particularly within its embedded association, the Coronet. Using the
Spitzer data, we identify 51 young stellar objects (YSOs) in CrA which include
sources in the well-studied Coronet cluster as well as distributed throughout
the molecular cloud. Twelve of the YSOs discussed are new candidates, one of
which is located in the Coronet. Known YSOs retrieved from the literature are
also added to the list, and a total of 116 candidate YSOs in CrA are compiled.
Based on these YSO candidates, the star formation rate is computed to be 12 M_o
Myr^-1, similar to that of the Lupus clouds. A clustering analysis was also
performed, finding that the main cluster core, consisting of 68 members, is
elongated (having an aspect ratio of 2.36), with a circular radius of 0.59 pc
and mean surface density of 150 pc^-2.
In addition, we analyze outflows and jets in CrA by means of new CO and H_2
data. We present 1.3 mm interferometric continuum observations made with the
Submillimeter Array (SMA) covering R CrA, IRS 5, IRS 7, and IRAS 18595-3712
(IRAS 32). We also present multi-epoch H_2 maps and detect jets and outflows,
study their proper motions, and identify exciting sources. The Spitzer and
ISAAC/VLT observations of IRAS 32 show a bipolar precessing jet, which drives a
CO (2-1) outflow detected in the SMA observations. There is also clear evidence
for a parsec-scale precessing outflow, E-W oriented, and originating in the SMA
2 region, likely driven by SMA 2 or IRS 7A.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS. 112 pages, 42 figures (quality
reduced), 13 tables. Full resolution version can be found at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~dpeterson/CrA/CrA_highres.pd
MAMBO 1.2mm observations of luminous starbursts at z~2 in the SWIRE fields
We report on--off pointed MAMBO observations at 1.2 mm of 61 Spitzer-selected
star-forming galaxies from the SWIRE survey. The sources are selected on the
basis of bright 24um fluxes (f_24um>0.4mJy) and of stellar dominated
near-infrared spectral energy distributions in order to favor z~2 starburst
galaxies. The average 1.2mm flux for the whole sample is 1.5+/-0.2 mJy. Our
analysis focuses on 29 sources in the Lockman Hole field where the average
1.2mm flux (1.9+/-0.3 mJy) is higher than in other fields (1.1+/-0.2 mJy). The
analysis of the sources multi-wavelength spectral energy distributions
indicates that they are starburst galaxies with far-infrared luminosities
~10^12-10^13.3 Lsun, and stellar masses of ~0.2-6 x10^11 M_sun. Compared to
sub-millimeter selected galaxies (SMGs), the SWIRE-MAMBO sources are among
those with the largest 24um/millimeter flux ratios. The origin of such large
ratios is investigated by comparing the average mid-infrared spectra and the
stacked far-infrared spectral energy distributions of the SWIRE-MAMBO sources
and of SMGs. The mid-infrared spectra exhibit strong PAH features, and a warm
dust continuum. The warm dust continuum contributes to ~34% of the mid-infrared
emission, and is likely associated with an AGN component. This constribution is
consistent with what is found in SMGs. The large 24um/1.2mm flux ratios are
thus not due to AGN emission, but rather to enhanced PAH emission compared to
SMGs. The analysis of the stacked far-infrared fluxes yields warmer dust
temperatures than typically observed in SMGs. Our selection favors warm
ultra-luminous infrared sources at high-z, a class of objects that is rarely
found in SMG samples. Our sample is the largest Spitzer-selected sample
detected at millimeter wavelengths currently available.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (51 pages; 16 figures). The quality
of some figures has been degraded for arXiv purposes. Full resolution version
available at this
http://www.iasf-milano.inaf.it/~polletta/mambo_swire/lonsdale08_ApJ_accepted.pd
Ceruloplasmin is an endogenous inhibitor of myeloperoxidase
Myeloperoxidase is a neutrophil enzyme that promotes oxidative stress in numerous inflammatory pathologies. It uses
hydrogen peroxide to catalyze the production of strong oxidants
including chlorine bleach and free radicals. A physiological
defense against the inappropriate action of this enzyme has yet
to be identified. We found that myeloperoxidase oxidized 75%
of the ascorbate in plasma from ceruloplasmin knock-out mice,
but there was no significant loss in plasma from wild type animals. When myeloperoxidase was added to human plasma it
became bound to other proteins and was reversibly inhibited.
Ceruloplasmin was the predominant protein associated with
myeloperoxidase. When the purified proteins were mixed, they
became strongly but reversibly associated. Ceruloplasmin was a
potent inhibitor of purified myeloperoxidase, inhibiting production of hypochlorous acid by 50% at 25 nM
11β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase type 1 is expressed in neutrophils and restrains an inflammatory response in male mice
Endogenous glucocorticoid action within cells is enhanced by prereceptor metabolism by 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD1), which converts intrinsically inert cortisone and 11-dehydrocorticosterone into active cortisol and corticosterone, respectively. 11β-HSD1 is highly expressed in immune cells elicited to the mouse peritoneum during thioglycollate-induced peritonitis and is down-regulated as the inflammation resolves. During inflammation, 11β-HSD1-deficient mice show enhanced recruitment of inflammatory cells and delayed acquisition of macrophage phagocytic capacity. However, the key cells in which 11β-HSD1 exerts these effects remain unknown. Here we have identified neutrophils (CD11b(+),Ly6G(+),7/4(+) cells) as the thioglycollate-recruited cells that most highly express 11β-HSD1 and show dynamic regulation of 11β-HSD1 in these cells during an inflammatory response. Flow cytometry showed high expression of 11β-HSD1 in peritoneal neutrophils early during inflammation, declining at later states. In contrast, expression in blood neutrophils continued to increase during inflammation. Ablation of monocytes/macrophages by treatment of CD11b-diphtheria-toxin receptor transgenic mice with diphtheria toxin prior to thioglycollate injection had no significant effect on 11β-HSD1 activity in peritoneal cells, consistent with neutrophils being the predominant 11β-HSD1 expressing cell type at this time. Similar to genetic deficiency in 11β-HSD1, acute inhibition of 11β-HSD1 activity during thioglycollate-induced peritonitis augmented inflammatory cell recruitment to the peritoneum. These data suggest that neutrophil 11β-HSD1 increases during inflammation to contribute to the restraining effect of glucocorticoids upon neutrophil-mediated inflammation. In human neutrophils, lipopolysaccharide activation increased 11β-HSD1 expression, suggesting the antiinflammatory effects of 11β-HSD1 in neutrophils may be conserved in humans
Habitat Characteristics and Eggshell Distribution of the Salt Marsh Mosquito, Aedes vigilax, in Marshes in Subtropical Eastern Australia
Research at 10 locations in coastal subtropical Queensland, Australia, has shown that salt marshes contained heterogeneous distributions of eggshells of the pest and vector mosquito Aedes vigilax (Skuse) (Diptera:Culicidae). The eggshell distribution was related to specific vegetation assemblages, with a mix of the grass, Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth (Poales: Poaceae), and the beaded glasswort, Sarcocornia quinqueflora (Bunge ex (Ung.-Stern) A.J. Scott (Caryophyllales: Chenopodiaceae), as significantly higher in eggshells than any other vegetation. There were also high numbers in the mix of S. virginicus with the arrowgrass, Triglochin striata Ruiz & PavĂłn (Alismatales: Juncaginaceae). Both mixed types are found in relatively wetter areas, despite very few eggshells being found generally in the low marsh. Most sites contained S. virginicus and eggshell locations were variable for this species alone. This was probably related to its life form variability in response to salinity and location on the marsh. Location on the marsh was important for eggshell distribution with most eggshells around the edges of pools and depressions, followed by, but to a significantly lesser extent, the marsh surface. Eggshells were fewest in the low marsh. Partition analysis resulted in a tree that simplified and summarised the factors important for eggshell distribution confirming the individual analyses. The potential effects of climate, sea level and other change are also briefly discussed in the context of likely changes to land cover and relative location on the marsh. For example, increased sea level may lead to low marsh conditions extending into higher marsh area with implications for oviposition and numbers of eggshells
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