2,424 research outputs found
Digital numerically controlled oscillator
The frequency and phase of an output signal from an oscillator circuit are controlled with accuracy by a digital input word. Positive and negative alterations in output frequency are both provided for by translating all values of input words so that they are positive. The oscillator reference frequency is corrected only in one direction, by adding phase to the output frequency of the oscillator. The input control word is translated to a single algebraic sign and the digital 1 is added thereto. The translated input control word is then accumulated. A reference clock signal having a frequency at an integer multiple of the desired frequency of the output signal is generated. The accumulated control word is then compared with a threshold level. The output signal is adjusted in a single direction by dividing the frequency of the reference clock signal by a first integer or by an integer different from the first integer
Interacting Quintessence, Cosmic Acceleration and the Coincidence Problem
Faced by recent evidence for a flat universe dominated by dark energy,
cosmologists grapple with deep cosmic enigmas such as the cosmological constant
problem, extreme fine-tuning and the cosmic coincidence problem. The extent to
which we observe the dimming of distant supernovae suggests that the cosmic
acceleration is as least as severe as in cosmological constant models.
Extrapolating this to our cosmic future implies terrifying visions of either a
cold and empty universe or an explosive demise in a ``Big Rip.'' We construct a
class of dynamical scalar field models of dark energy and dark matter. Within
this class we can explain why supernovae imply a cosmic equation of state
, address fine tuning issues, protect the universe from premature
acceleration and predict a constant fraction of dark energy to dark matter in
the future (thus solving the coincidence problem), satisfy the dominant energy
condition, and ensure that gravitationally bound objects remain so forever
(avoid a Big Rip). This is achieved with a string theory inspired Lagrangian
containing standard kinetic terms, exponential potentials and couplings, and
parameters of order unity.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figures, submitted to PRL on March 25 200
The Risk of Thromboembolic Complications in Fontan Patients with Atrial Flutter/fibrillation Treated with Electrical Cardioversion
Atrial flutter or fibrillation (AFF) remains a major chronic complication of the Fontan procedure. This complication further predisposes this patient population to thromboembolic events. However, the incidence of thromboembolic complications in Fontan patients with AFF prior to or acutely after electrical cardioversion is unknown. This study aimed to characterize the risk of post-cardioversion thromboembolic events in this population. We performed a retrospective medical record review of all patients with a history of Fontan operation treated with direct current cardioversion for AFF at Riley Children’s Hospital between June 1992 and March 2014. A total of 57 patients were identified and reviewed. A total of 216 episodes of AFF required electrical cardioversion. Patients were treated with anticoagulation/antiplatelet therapy in 86.1 % (N = 186) of AFF episodes. Right atrial or Fontan conduit clots were observed in 33 patients (57.9 %) with 61 episodes of AFF. Approximately half (49.2 %, N = 30) of these episodes were treated immediately with electrical cardioversion. Twenty-five of 33 (75.8 %) patients with intracardiac thrombi had an atriopulmonary Fontan. Five (15.2 %) patients with a lateral caval tunnel had clots in the Fontan conduit, and three (9.1 %) patients with right atrium to right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) connections presented with right atrial mural thrombi. Nine of the 57 (15.8 %) patients had documented stroke, and three (5.3 %) patients had pulmonary emboli during follow-up, although none of these emboli were associated with electrical cardioversion. The risk of thrombus and thromboembolism associated with AFF is high in the Fontan population. However, the risk of thromboembolism associated with cardioversion in the setting of anticoagulation is very low
Chemoenzymatic elaboration of monosaccharides using engineered cytochrome P450_(BM3) demethylases
Polysaccharides comprise an extremely important class of biopolymers
that play critical roles in a wide range of biological processes,
but the synthesis of these compounds is challenging because of
their complex structures. We have developed a chemoenzymatic
method for regioselective deprotection of monosaccharide substrates
using engineered Bacillus megaterium cytochrome P450
(P450_(BM3)) demethylases that provides a highly efficient means
to access valuable intermediates, which can be converted to a
wide range of substituted monosaccharides and polysaccharides.
Demethylases displaying high levels of regioselectivity toward a
number of protected monosaccharides were identified using a
combination of protein and substrate engineering, suggesting that
this approach ultimately could be used in the synthesis of a wide
range of substituted mono- and polysaccharides for studies in
chemistry, biology, and medicine
Impact of Lattice Strangeness Asymmetry Data in the CTEQ-TEA Global Analysis
We study the impact of lattice data on the determination of the strangeness
asymmetry distribution in the general
CTEQ-TEA global analysis of parton distribution functions (PDFs) of the proton.
Firstly, we find that allowing a nonvanishing , at the initial
~GeV scale, in a global PDF analysis leads to a CT18As fit with
similar quality to CT18A. Secondly, including the lattice data in the
CT18As\_Lat fit greatly reduces the -PDF error band size in the large-
region. To further reduce its error would require more precise lattice data,
extended to smaller values. We take ATLAS 7 TeV and production
data, SIDIS di-muon production data, structure function data, E866 NuSea
data, and E906 SeaQuest data as examples to illustrate the implication of
CT18As and CT18As\_Lat fits. The parametrization dependence for PDF ratio
is analyzed with CT18As2 and CT18As2\_Lat
fits as results.Comment: 37 pages, 19 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:2204.0794
cis-Acting and trans-acting modulation of equine infectious anemia virus alternative RNA splicing
AbstractEquine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), a lentivirus distantly related to HIV-1, encodes regulatory proteins, EIAV Tat (ETat) and Rev (ERev), from a four-exon mRNA. Exon 3 of the tat/rev mRNA contains a 30-nucleotide purine-rich element (PRE) which binds both ERev and SF2/ASF, a member of the SR family of RNA splicing factors. To better understand the role of this element in the regulation of EIAV pre-mRNA splicing, we quantified the effects of mutation or deletion of the PRE on exon 3 splicing in vitro and on alternative splicing in vivo. We also determined the branch point elements upstream of exons 3 and 4. In vitro splicing of exon 3 to exon 4 was not affected by mutation of the PRE, and addition of purified SR proteins enhanced splicing independently of the PRE. In vitro splicing of exon 2 to exon 3 was dependent on the PRE; under conditions of excess SR proteins, either the PRE or the 5′ splice site of exon 3 was sufficient to activate splicing. We applied isoform-specific primers in real-time RT-PCR reactions to quantitatively analyze alternative splicing in cells transfected with rev-minus EIAV provirus constructs. In the context of provirus with wild-type exon 3, greater than 80% of the viral mRNAs were multiply spliced, and of these, less than 1% excluded exon 3. Deletion of the PRE resulted in a decrease in the relative amount of multiply spliced mRNA to about 40% of the total and approximately 39% of the viral mRNA excluded exon 3. Ectopic expression of ERev caused a decrease in the relative amount of multiply spliced mRNA to approximately 50% of the total and increased mRNAs that excluded exon 3 to about 4%. Over-expression of SF2/ASF in cells transfected with wild-type provirus constructs inhibited splicing but did not significantly alter exon 3 skipping
Global and regional effects of the photochemistry of CH_3O_2NO_2: evidence from ARCTAS
Using measurements from the NASA Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) experiment, we show that methyl peroxy nitrate (CH_3O_2NO_2) is present in concentrations of ~5–15 pptv in the springtime arctic upper troposphere. We investigate the regional and global effects of CH_3O_2NO_2 by including its chemistry in the GEOS-Chem 3-D global chemical transport model. We find that at temperatures below 240 K inclusion of CH_3O_2NO_2 chemistry results in decreases of up to ~20 % in NO_x, ~20 % in N_2O_5, ~5 % in HNO3, ~2 % in ozone, and increases in methyl hydrogen peroxide of up to ~14 %. Larger changes are observed in biomass burning plumes lofted to high altitude. Additionally, by sequestering NO_x at low temperatures, CH_3O_2NO_2 decreases the cycling of HO_2 to OH, resulting in a larger upper tropospheric HO_2 to OH ratio. These results may impact some estimates of lightning NO_x sources as well as help explain differences between models and measurements of upper tropospheric composition
Optimal search strategies for hidden targets
What is the fastest way of finding a randomly hidden target? This question of
general relevance is of vital importance for foraging animals. Experimental
observations reveal that the search behaviour of foragers is generally
intermittent: active search phases randomly alternate with phases of fast
ballistic motion. In this letter, we study the efficiency of this type of two
states search strategies, by calculating analytically the mean first passage
time at the target. We model the perception mecanism involved in the active
search phase by a diffusive process. In this framework, we show that the search
strategy is optimal when the average duration of "motion phases" varies like
the power either 3/5 or 2/3 of the average duration of "search phases",
depending on the regime. This scaling accounts for experimental data over a
wide range of species, which suggests that the kinetics of search trajectories
is a determining factor optimized by foragers and that the perception activity
is adequately described by a diffusion process.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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