112 research outputs found
SBF Distances to Dwarf Elliptical Galaxies in the Sculptor Group
As part of an ongoing search for dwarf elliptical galaxies (dE) in the
vicinity of the Local Group, we acquired deep B and R-band images for five dE
candidates identified in the Sculptor (Scl) group region. We carried out a
surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) analysis on the R-band images to measure
the apparent fluctuation magnitude \bar{m}_R for each dE. Using predictions
from stellar population synthesis models the galaxy distances were determined.
All of these dE candidates turned out to be satellites of Scl group major
members. A redshift measurement of the dE candidate ESO294-010 yielded an
independent confirmation of its group membership: the [OIII] and H
emission lines from a small HII region gave a heliocentric velocity of 117(\pm
5) km s-1, in close agreement with the velocity of its parent galaxy NGC 55
(v_\odot=125 km s-1). The precision of the SBF distances (5 to 10%) contributes
to delineating the cigar-like distribution of the Scl group members, which
extend over distances from 1.7 to 4.4 Mpc and are concentrated in three,
possibly four subclumps. The Hubble diagram for nine Scl galaxies, including
two of our dEs, exhibits a tight linear velocity--distance relation with a
steep slope of 119 km s-1 Mpc-1. The results indicate that gravitational
interaction among the Scl group members plays only a minor role in the dynamics
of the group. However, the Hubble flow of the entire system appears strongly
disturbed by the large masses of our Galaxy and M31 leading to the observed
shearing motion. From the distances and velocities of 49 galaxies located in
the Local Group and towards the Scl group, we illustrate the continuity of the
galaxy distribution which strongly supports the view that the two groups form a
single supergalactic structure.Comment: To appear in The Astronomical Journal, December 1998; 28 pages with
22 figure
Approximate quantum data storage and teleportation
In this paper we present an optimal protocol by which an unknown state on a
Hilbert space of dimension can be approximately stored in an
-dimensional quantum system or be approximately teleported via an
-dimensional quantum channel. The fidelity of our procedure is determined
for pure states as well as for mixed states and states which are entangled with
auxiliary quantum systems of varying Hilbert space dimension, and it is
compared with theoretical results for the maximally achievable fidelity.Comment: More detailed discussion of teleportation of entangled and mixed
states. Added reference to work by Banaszek. 8 pages, 1 figur
Organ-specific responses during brain death:increased aerobic metabolism in the liver and anaerobic metabolism with decreased perfusion in the kidneys
Hepatic and renal energy status prior to transplantation correlates with graft survival. However, effects of brain death (BD) on organ-specific energy status are largely unknown. We studied metabolism, perfusion, oxygen consumption, and mitochondrial function in the liver and kidneys following BD. BD was induced in mechanically-ventilated rats, inflating an epidurally-placed Fogarty-catheter, with sham-operated rats as controls. A 9.4T-preclinical MRI system measured hourly oxygen availability (BOLD-related R2*) and perfusion (T1-weighted). After 4 hrs, tissue was collected, mitochondria isolated and assessed with high-resolution respirometry. Quantitative proteomics, qPCR, and biochemistry was performed on stored tissue/plasma. Following BD, the liver increased glycolytic gene expression (Pfk-1) with decreased glycogen stores, while the kidneys increased anaerobic- (Ldha) and decreased gluconeogenic-related gene expression (Pck-1). Hepatic oxygen consumption increased, while renal perfusion decreased. ATP levels dropped in both organs while mitochondrial respiration and complex I/ATP synthase activity were unaffected. In conclusion, the liver responds to increased metabolic demands during BD, enhancing aerobic metabolism with functional mitochondria. The kidneys shift towards anaerobic energy production while renal perfusion decreases. Our findings highlight the need for an organ-specific approach to assess and optimise graft quality prior to transplantation, to optimise hepatic metabolic conditions and improve renal perfusion while supporting cellular detoxification
Entanglement in Many-Body Systems
The recent interest in aspects common to quantum information and condensed
matter has prompted a prosperous activity at the border of these disciplines
that were far distant until few years ago. Numerous interesting questions have
been addressed so far. Here we review an important part of this field, the
properties of the entanglement in many-body systems. We discuss the zero and
finite temperature properties of entanglement in interacting spin, fermionic
and bosonic model systems. Both bipartite and multipartite entanglement will be
considered. At equilibrium we emphasize on how entanglement is connected to the
phase diagram of the underlying model. The behavior of entanglement can be
related, via certain witnesses, to thermodynamic quantities thus offering
interesting possibilities for an experimental test. Out of equilibrium we
discuss how to generate and manipulate entangled states by means of many-body
Hamiltonians.Comment: 61 pages, 29 figure
Recommended from our members
Purification and functional characterisation of rhiminopeptidase A, a novel aminopeptidase from the venom of Bitis gabonica rhinoceros
This study describes the discovery and characterisation of a novel aminopeptidase A from the venom of B. g. rhinoceros and highlights its potential biological importance. Similar to mammalian aminopeptidases, rhiminopeptidase A might be capable of playing roles in altering the blood pressure and brain function of victims. Furthermore, it could have additional effects on the biological functions of other host proteins by cleaving their N-terminal amino acids. This study points towards the importance of complete analysis of individual components of snake venom in order to develop effective therapies for snake bites
Consensus-Based Technical Recommendations for Clinical Translation of Renal Phase Contrast MRI
BACKGROUND:
Phase-contrast (PC) MRI is a feasible and valid noninvasive technique to measure renal artery blood flow, showing potential to support diagnosis and monitoring of renal diseases. However, the variability in measured renal blood flow values across studies is large, most likely due to differences in PC-MRI acquisition and processing. Standardized acquisition and processing protocols are therefore needed to minimize this variability and maximize the potential of renal PC-MRI as a clinically useful tool.
PURPOSE:
To build technical recommendations for the acquisition, processing, and analysis of renal 2D PC-MRI data in human subjects to promote standardization of renal blood flow measurements and facilitate the comparability of results across scanners and in multicenter clinical studies.
STUDY TYPE:
Systematic consensus process using a modified Delphi method.
POPULATION:
Not applicable.
SEQUENCE FIELD/STRENGTH:
Renal fast gradient echo-based 2D PC-MRI.
ASSESSMENT:
An international panel of 27 experts from Europe, the USA, Australia, and Japan with 6 (interquartile range 4–10) years of experience in 2D PC-MRI formulated consensus statements on renal 2D PC-MRI in two rounds of surveys. Starting from a recently published systematic review article, literature-based and data-driven statements regarding patient preparation, hardware, acquisition protocol, analysis steps, and data reporting were formulated.
STATISTICAL TESTS:
Consensus was defined as ≥75% unanimity in response, and a clear preference was defined as 60–74% agreement among the experts.
RESULTS:
Among 60 statements, 57 (95%) achieved consensus after the second-round survey, while the remaining three showed a clear preference. Consensus statements resulted in specific recommendations for subject preparation, 2D renal PC-MRI data acquisition, processing, and reporting.
DATA CONCLUSION:
These recommendations might promote a widespread adoption of renal PC-MRI, and may help foster the set-up of multicenter studies aimed at defining reference values and building larger and more definitive evidence, and will facilitate clinical translation of PC-MRI.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE:
1
TECHNICAL EFFICACY STAGE:
Many body physics from a quantum information perspective
The quantum information approach to many body physics has been very
successful in giving new insight and novel numerical methods. In these lecture
notes we take a vertical view of the subject, starting from general concepts
and at each step delving into applications or consequences of a particular
topic. We first review some general quantum information concepts like
entanglement and entanglement measures, which leads us to entanglement area
laws. We then continue with one of the most famous examples of area-law abiding
states: matrix product states, and tensor product states in general. Of these,
we choose one example (classical superposition states) to introduce recent
developments on a novel quantum many body approach: quantum kinetic Ising
models. We conclude with a brief outlook of the field.Comment: Lectures from the Les Houches School on "Modern theories of
correlated electron systems". Improved version new references adde
Technical recommendations for clinical translation of renal MRI: a consensus project of the Cooperation in Science and Technology Action PARENCHIMA
Purpose The potential of renal MRI biomarkers has been increasingly recognised, but clinical translation requires more
standardisation. The PARENCHIMA consensus project aims to develop and apply a process for generating technical recommendations on renal MRI.
Methods A task force was formed in July 2018 focused on fve methods. A draft process for attaining consensus was distributed publicly for consultation and fnalised at an open meeting (Prague, October 2018). Four expert panels completed
surveys between October 2018 and March 2019, discussed results and refned the surveys at a face-to-face meeting (Aarhus,
March 2019) and completed a second round (May 2019).
Results A seven-stage process was defned: (1) formation of expert panels; (2) defnition of the context of use; (3) literature
review; (4) collection and comparison of MRI protocols; (5) consensus generation by an approximate Delphi method; (6)
reporting of results in vendor-neutral and vendor-specifc terms; (7) ongoing review and updating. Application of the process
resulted in 166 consensus statements.
Conclusion The process generated meaningful technical recommendations across very diferent MRI methods, while allowing for improvement and refnement as open issues are resolved. The results are likely to be widely supported by the renal
MRI community and thereby promote more harmonisation
Consensus-based technical recommendations for clinical translation of renal ASL MRI
Objectives: To develop technical recommendations for the acquisition, processing and analysis of renal ASL data in the human kidney at 1.5T and 3T field strengths that can promote standardization of renal perfusion measurements and facilitate the comparability of results across scanners and in multi-center clinical studies.Methods: An international panel of 23 renal ASL experts followed a modified Delphi process, including on-line surveys and two in-person meetings, to formulate a series of consensus statements regarding patient preparation, hardware, acquisition protocol, analysis steps and data reporting.Results: Fifty-nine statements achieved consensus, while agreement could not be reached on two statements related to patient preparation. As a default protocol, the panel recommends pseudo-continuous (PCASL) or flow-sensitive alternating inversion recovery (FAIR) labeling with a single-slice spin-echo EPI readout with background suppression, and a simple but robust quantification model.Discussion: This approach is considered robust and reproducible and can provide renal perfusion images of adequate quality and SNR for most applications. If extended kidney coverage is desirable, a 2D multislice readout is recommended. These recommendations are based on current available evidence and expert opinion. Nonetheless they are expected to be updated as more data becomes available, since the renal ASL literature is rapidly expanding
Prolactin Receptor Signaling Is Essential for Perinatal Brown Adipocyte Function: A Role for Insulin-like Growth Factor-2
BACKGROUND: The lactogenic hormones prolactin (PRL) and placental lactogens (PL) play central roles in reproduction and mammary development. Their actions are mediated via binding to PRL receptor (PRLR), highly expressed in brown adipose tissue (BAT), yet their impact on adipocyte function and metabolism remains unclear. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: PRLR knockout (KO) newborn mice were phenotypically characterized in terms of thermoregulation and their BAT differentiation assayed for gene expression studies. Derived brown preadipocyte cell lines were established to evaluate the molecular mechanisms involved in PRL signaling on BAT function. Here, we report that newborn mice lacking PRLR have hypotrophic BAT depots that express low levels of adipocyte nuclear receptor PPARgamma2, its coactivator PGC-1alpha, uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) and the beta3 adrenoceptor, reducing mouse viability during cold challenge. Immortalized PRLR KO preadipocytes fail to undergo differentiation into mature adipocytes, a defect reversed by reintroduction of PRLR. That the effects of the lactogens in BAT are at least partly mediated by Insulin-like Growth Factor-2 (IGF-2) is supported by: i) a striking reduction in BAT IGF-2 expression in PRLR KO mice and in PRLR-deficient preadipocytes; ii) induction of cellular IGF-2 expression by PRL through JAK2/STAT5 pathway activation; and iii) reversal of defective differentiation in PRLR KO cells by exogenous IGF-2. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings demonstrate that the lactogens act in concert with IGF-2 to control brown adipocyte differentiation and growth. Given the prominent role of brown adipose tissue during the perinatal period, our results identified prolactin receptor signaling as a major player and a potential therapeutic target in protecting newborn mammals against hypothermia
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