13,501 research outputs found
Antenna Impedance in a Warm Plasma
Impedance of biconical and cylindrical dipoles in warm isotropic plasm
Arkansas Soybean Performance Tests 2018
Soybean variety and strain performance tests are conducted each year in Arkansas by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture’s Arkansas Crop Variety Improvement Program. The tests provide information to companies developing varieties and/or marketing seed within the State, and aid the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service in formulating variety recommendations for soybean producers
Quantum discord in spin-cluster materials
The total quantum correlation (discord) in Heisenberg dimers is expressed via
the spin-spin correlation function, internal energy, specific heat or magnetic
susceptibility. This allows one to indirectly measure the discord through
neutron scattering, as well as calorimetric or magnetometric experiments. Using
the available experimental data, we found the discord for a number of binuclear
Heisenberg substances with both antiferro- and ferromagnetic interactions. For
the dimerized antiferromagnet copper nitrate Cu(NO_3)_2*2.5H_2O, the three
independent experimental methods named above lead to a discord of approximately
0.2-0.3 bit/dimer at a temperature of 4 K. We also determined the temperature
behavior of discord for hydrated and anhydrous copper acetates, as well as for
the ferromagnetic binuclear copper acetate complex [Cu_2L(OAc)]*6H_2O, where L
is a ligand.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Kinematics in Kapteyn's Selected Area 76: Orbital Motions Within the Highly Substructured Anticenter Stream
We have measured the mean three-dimensional kinematics of stars in Kapteyn's
Selected Area (SA) 76 (l=209.3, b=26.4 degrees) that were selected to be
Anticenter Stream (ACS) members on the basis of their radial velocities, proper
motions, and location in the color-magnitude diagram. From a total of 31 stars
ascertained to be ACS members primarily from its main sequence turnoff, a mean
ACS radial velocity (derived from spectra obtained with the Hydra multi-object
spectrograph on the WIYN 3.5m telescope) of V_helio = 97.0 +/- 2.8 km/s was
determined, with an intrinsic velocity dispersion sigma_0 = 12.8 \pm 2.1 km/s.
The mean absolute proper motions of these 31 ACS members are mu_alpha cos
(delta) = -1.20 +/- 0.34 mas/yr and mu_delta = -0.78 \pm 0.36 mas/yr. At a
distance to the ACS of 10 \pm 3 kpc, these measured kinematical quantities
produce an orbit that deviates by ~30 degrees from the well-defined swath of
stellar overdensity constituting the Anticenter Stream in the western portion
of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey footprint. We explore possible explanations for
this, and suggest that our data in SA 76 are measuring the motion of a
kinematically cold sub-stream among the ACS debris that was likely a fragment
of the same infalling structure that created the larger ACS system. The ACS is
clearly separated spatially from the majority of claimed Monoceros ring
detections in this region of the sky; however, with the data in hand, we are
unable to either confirm or rule out an association between the ACS and the
poorly-understood Monoceros structure.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. 48 pages, 20 figures, preprint forma
The shapes of Milky Way satellites: looking for signatures of tidal stirring
We study the shapes of Milky Way satellites in the context of the tidal
stirring scenario for the formation of dwarf spheroidal galaxies. The standard
procedures used to measure shapes involve smoothing and binning of data and
thus may not be sufficient to detect structural properties like bars, which are
usually subtle in low surface brightness systems. Taking advantage of the fact
that in nearby dwarfs photometry of individual stars is available we introduce
discrete measures of shape based on the two-dimensional inertia tensor and the
Fourier bar mode. We apply these measures of shape first to a variety of
simulated dwarf galaxies formed via tidal stirring of disks embedded in dark
matter halos and orbiting the Milky Way. In addition to strong mass loss and
randomization of stellar orbits, the disks undergo morphological transformation
that typically involves the formation of a triaxial bar after the first
pericenter passage. These tidally induced bars persist for a few Gyr before
being shortened towards a more spherical shape if the tidal force is strong
enough. We test this prediction by measuring in a similar way the shape of
nearby dwarf galaxies, satellites of the Milky Way. We detect inner bars in
Ursa Minor, Sagittarius, LMC and possibly Carina. In addition, six out of
eleven studied dwarfs show elongated stellar distributions in the outer parts
that may signify transition to tidal tails. We thus find the shapes of Milky
Way satellites to be consistent with the predictions of the tidal stirring
model.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Recommended from our members
Inhibition of histone deacetylase as a treatment for cardiac hypertrophy
The present invention provides for methods of treating and preventing cardiac hypertrophy. Class II HDACs, which are known to participate in regulation of chromatin structure and gene expression, have been shown to have beneficial effects on cardiac hypertrophy. Surprisingly, the present invention demonstrates that HDAC inhibitors inhibit cardiac hypertrophy by inhibiting fetal cardiac gene expression and interfering with sarcomeric organization.Board of Regents, University of Texas Syste
Deletion of Tsc2 in nociceptors reduces target innervation, ion channel expression, and sensitivity to heat
AbstractThe mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) is known to regulate cellular growth pathways, and its genetic activation is sufficient to enhance regenerative axon growth following injury to the central or peripheral nervous systems. However, excess mTORC1 activation may promote innervation defects, and mTORC1 activity mediates injury-induced hypersensitivity, reducing enthusiasm for the pathway as a therapeutic target. While mTORC1 activity is required for full expression of some pain modalities, the effects of pathway activation on nociceptor phenotypes and sensory behaviors are currently unknown. To address this, we genetically activated mTORC1 in mouse peripheral sensory neurons by conditional deletion of its negative regulator Tuberous Sclerosis Complex 2 (Tsc2). Consistent with the well-known role of mTORC1 in regulating cell size, soma size and axon diameter of C-nociceptors were increased in Tsc2-deleted mice. Glabrous skin and spinal cord innervation by C-fiber neurons were also disrupted. Transcriptional profiling of nociceptors enriched by fluorescence-associated cell sorting (FACS) revealed downregulation of multiple classes of ion channels as well as reduced expression of markers for peptidergic nociceptors in Tsc2-deleted mice. In addition to these changes in innervation and gene expression, Tsc2-deleted mice exhibited reduced noxious heat sensitivity and decreased injury-induced cold hypersensitivity, but normal baseline sensitivity to cold and mechanical stimuli. Together, these data show that excess mTORC1 activity in sensory neurons produces changes in gene expression, neuron morphology and sensory behavior.</jats:p
Interplay of static and dynamic effects in 6He+ 238U Fusion
We investigate the influence of the neutron halo and the breakup channel in
6He + 238U fusion at near-barrier energies. To include static effects of the
2n-halo in 6He nuclei, we use a single-folding potential obtained from an
appropriate nucleon-238U interaction and a realistic 6He density. Dynamical
effects arising from the breakup process are then included through
coupled-channel calculations. These calculations suggest that static effects
dominate the cross section at energies above the Coulomb barrier, while the
sub-barrier fusion cross section appears to be determined by coupling to the
breakup channel. This last conclusion is uncertain due to the procedure
employed to measure the fusion cross-section.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Gpr126/Adgrg6 has Schwann cell autonomous and nonautonomous functions in peripheral nerve injury and repair
Schwann cells (SCs) are essential for proper peripheral nerve development and repair, although the mechanisms regulating these processes are incompletely understood. We previously showed that the adhesion G protein-coupled receptor Gpr126/Adgrg6 is essential for SC development and myelination. Interestingly, the expression of Gpr126 is maintained in adult SCs, suggestive of a function in the mature nerve. We therefore investigated the role of Gpr126 in nerve repair by studying an inducible SC-specific Gpr126 knock-out mouse model. Here, we show that remyelination is severely delayed after nerve-crush injury. Moreover, we also observe noncell-autonomous defects in macrophage recruitment and axon regeneration in injured nerves following loss of Gpr126 in SCs. This work demonstrates that Gpr126 has critical SC-autonomous and SC-nonautonomous functions in remyelination and peripheral nerve repair. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Lack of robust remyelination represents one of the major barriers to recovery of neurological functions in disease or following injury in many disorders of the nervous system. Here we show that the adhesion class G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) Gpr126/Adgrg6 is required for remyelination, macrophage recruitment, and axon regeneration following nerve injury. At least 30% of all approved drugs target GPCRs; thus, Gpr126 represents an attractive potential target to stimulate repair in myelin disease or following nerve injury
Migrações na fase pelágica do Cherne, Polyprion americanus (Schneider, 1801), evidenciadas por marcação e recaptura
Vários chernes juvenis, Polyprion americanus (Schneider. 1801) foram capturados à superfície da água e marcados em vários locais próximos das ilhas do Grupo Central dos Açores. Um dos exemplares foi recapturado 3 meses depois ter sido marcado, a 217 km do local onde tinha sido libertado e a uma profundidade de 254 m. A recaptura deste espécime indica que o cherne passa para uma vida demersal quando atinge um comprimento total de cerca de 50 cm.ABSTRACT: Pelagic juvenile wreckfish, Polyprion americanus (Schneider, 1801) were tagged in the surface waters around the Central Group of the Azores. One wreckfish was recaptured three months after tagging, and 217 km from its release point. It had settled to the bottom in 254 m of water. The recapture of this specimen suggests that wreckfish take up a demersal life at a total length of about 50 cm
- …
