757 research outputs found
Does a Carbonatite Deposit Influence Its Surrounding Ecosystem?
Carbonatites are unusual alkaline rocks with diverse compositions. Although previous work has characterized the effects these rocks have on soils and plants, little is known about their impacts on local ecosystems. Using a deposit within the Great LakesâSt. Lawrence forest in northern Ontario, Canada, we investigated the effect of a carbonatite on soil chemistry and on the structure of plant and soil microbial communities. This was done using a vegetation survey conducted above and around the deposit, with corresponding soil samples collected for determining soil nutrient composition and for assessing microbial community structure using 16S/ITS Illumina Mi-Seq sequencing. In some soils above the deposit a soil chemical signature of the carbonatite was found, with the most important effect being an increase in soil pH compared with the non-deposit soils. Both plants and microorganisms responded to the altered soil chemistry: the plant communities present in carbonatite-impacted soils were dominated by ruderal species, and although differences in microbial communities across the surveyed areas were not obvious, the abundances of specific bacteria and fungi were reduced in response to the carbonatite. Overall, the deposit seems to have created microenvironments of relatively basic soil in an otherwise acidic forest soil. This study demonstrates for the first time how carbonatites can alter ecosystems in situ
Ugandan stakeholder hopes and concerns about gene drive mosquitoes for malaria control:New directions for gene drive risk governance
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMC via the DOI in this record.âŻAvailability of data and materials: The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are
available in the UK DATA SERVICE repository, https://ukdataservice.ac.uk/. The
datasets during and/or analyzed during the current study are also available
from the corresponding author on reasonable request.Background: The African Unionâs High-Level Panel on Emerging Technologies identified gene drive mosquitoes as a priority technology for malaria elimination. The first field trials are expected in 5â10Â years in Uganda, Mali or Burkina Faso. In preparation, regional and international actors are developing risk governance guidelines which will delineate the framework for identifying and evaluating risks. Scientists and bioethicists have called for African stakeholder involvement in these developments, arguing the knowledge and perspectives of those people living in malaria-afflicted countries is currently missing. However, few African stakeholders have been involved to date, leaving a knowledge gap about the local social-cultural as well as ecological context in which gene drive mosquitoes will be tested and deployed. This study investigates and analyses Ugandan stakeholdersâ hopes and concerns about gene drive mosquitoes for malaria control and explores the new directions needed for risk governance. Methods: This qualitative study draws on 19 in-depth semi-structured interviews with Ugandan stakeholders in 2019. It explores their hopes for the technology and the risks they believed pertinent. Coding began at a workshop and continued through thematic analysis. Results: Participantsâ hopes and concerns for gene drive mosquitoes to address malaria fell into three themes: (1) ability of gene drive mosquitoes to prevent malaria infection; (2) impacts of gene drive testing and deployment; and, (3) governance. Stakeholder hopes fell almost exclusively into the first theme while concerns were spread across all three. The study demonstrates that local stakeholders are able and willing to contribute relevant and important knowledge to the development of risk frameworks. Conclusions: International processes can provide high-level guidelines, but risk decision-making must be grounded in the local context if it is to be robust, meaningful and legitimate. Decisions about whether or not to release gene drive mosquitoes as part of a malaria control programme will need to consider the assessment of both the risks and the benefits of gene drive mosquitoes within a particular social, political, ecological, and technological context. Just as with risks, benefitsâand importantly, the conditions that are necessary to realize themâmust be identified and debated in Uganda and its neighbouring countries.British Academ
Reduction of the Three Dimensional Schrodinger Equation for Multilayered Films
In this paper, we present a method for reducing the three dimensional
Schrodinger equation to study confined metallic states, such as quantum well
states, in a multilayer film geometry. While discussing some approximations
that are employed when dealing with the three dimensionality of the problem, we
derive a one dimensional equation suitable for studying such states using an
envelope function approach. Some applications to the Cu/Co multilayer system
with regard to spin tunneling/rotations and angle resolved photoemission are
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
Phase-Locking of Vortex Lattices Interacting with Periodic Pinning
We examine Shapiro steps for vortex lattices interacting with periodic
pinning arrays driven by AC and DC currents. The vortex flow occurs by the
motion of the interstitial vortices through the periodic potential generated by
the vortices that remain pinned at the pinning sites. Shapiro steps are
observed for fields B_{\phi} < B < 2.25B_{\phi} with the most pronouced steps
occuring for fields where the interstitial vortex lattice has a high degree of
symmetry. The widths of the phase-locked current steps as a function of the
magnitude of the AC driving are found to follow a Bessel function in agreement
with theory.Comment: 5 pages 5 postscript figure
Inhibition of glycolysis modulates prednisolone resistance in acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells
Treatment failure in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is related to cellular resistance to glucocorticoids (eg, prednisolone). Recently, we demonstrated that genes associated with glucose metabolism are differentially expressed between prednisolone-sensitive and prednisolone-resistant precursor B-lineage leukemic patients. Here, we show that prednisolone resistance is associated with increased glucose consumption and that inhibition of glycolysis sensitizes prednisolone-resistant ALL cell lines to glucocorticoids. Treatment of prednisolone-resistant Jurkat and Molt4 cells with 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG), lonidamine (LND), or3-bromopyruvate (3-BrPA) increased the in vitro sensitivity to glucocorticoids, while treatment of the prednisolone-sensitive cell lines Tom-1 and RS4; 11 did not influence drug cyto-toxicity. This sensitizing effect of the glycolysis inhibitors in glucocorticoid-resistant ALL cells was not found for other classes of antileukemic drugs (ie, vincris-tine and daunorubicin). Moreover, down-regulation of the expression of GAPDH by RNA interference also sensitized to prednisolone, comparable with treatment with glycolytic inhibitors. Importantly, the ability of 2-DG to reverse glucocorticoid resistance was not limited to cell lines, but was also observed in isolated primary ALL cells from patients. Together, these findings indicate the importance of the glycolytic pathway in glucocorticoid resistance in ALL and suggest that targeting glycolysis is a viable strategy for modulating prednisolone resistance in ALL
High-Energy Cosmology: gamma rays and neutrinos from beyond the galaxy
Our knowledge of the high-energy universe is undergoing a period of rapid
change as new astronomical detectors of high-energy radiation start to operate
at their design sensitivities. Now is a boomtime for high-energy astrophysics,
with new discoveries from Swift and HESS, results from MAGIC and VERITAS
starting to be reported, the upcoming launches of the gamma-ray space
telescopes GLAST and AGILE, and anticipated data releases from IceCube and
Auger. A formalism for calculating statistical properties of cosmological
gamma-ray sources is presented. Application is made to model calculations of
the statistical distributions of gamma-ray and neutrino emission from (i)
beamed sources, specifically, long-duration GRBs, blazars, and extagalactic
microquasars, and (ii) unbeamed sources, including normal galaxies, starburst
galaxies and clusters. Expressions for the integrated intensities of faint
beamed and unbeamed high-energy radiation sources are also derived. A toy model
for the background intensity of radiation from dark-matter annihilation taking
place in the early universe is constructed. Estimates for the gamma-ray fluxes
of local group galaxies, starburst, and infrared luminous galaxies are briefly
reviewed. Because the brightest extragalactic gamma-ray sources are flaring
sources, and these are the best targets for sources of PeV -- EeV neutrinos and
ultra-high energy cosmic rays, rapidly slewing all-sky telescopes like MAGIC
and an all-sky gamma-ray observatory beyond Milagro will be crucial for optimal
science return in the multi-messenger age.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figs, accepted for publication in the Barcelona
Conference on Multimessenger Astronomy; corrected eq. 27, revised Fig. 3,
added 2 ref
The Determination of alpha_s from Tau Decays Revisited
We revisit the determination of alpha_s(m_tau) using a fit to inclusive tau
hadronic spectral moments in light of (1) the recent calculation of the
fourth-order perturbative coefficient K_4 in the expansion of the Adler
function, (2) new precision measurements from BABAR of e+e- annihilation cross
sections, which decrease the uncertainty in the separation of vector and
axial-vector spectral functions, and (3) improved results from BABAR and Belle
on tau branching fractions involving kaons. We estimate that the fourth-order
perturbative prediction reduces the theoretical uncertainty, introduced by the
truncation of the series, by 20% with respect to earlier determinations. We
discuss to some detail the perturbative prediction and show that the effect of
the incomplete knowledge of the series is reduced by using the so-called
contour-improved calculation, as opposed to fixed-order perturbation theory
which manifests convergence problems. The corresponding theoretical
uncertainties are studied at the tau and Z mass scales. Nonperturbative
contributions extracted from the most inclusive fit are small, in agreement
with earlier determinations. Systematic effects from quark-hadron duality
violation are estimated with simple models and found to be within the quoted
systematic errors. The fit gives alpha_s(m_tau) = 0.344 +- 0.005 +- 0.007,
where the first error is experimental and the second theoretical. After
evolution to M_Z we obtain alpha_s(M_Z) = 0.1212 +- 0.0005 +- 0.0008 +- 0.0005,
where the errors are respectively experimental, theoretical and due to the
evolution. The result is in agreement with the corresponding NNNLO value
derived from essentially the Z width in the global electroweak fit. The
alpha_s(M_Z) determination from tau decays is the most precise one to date.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
B-->pi and B-->K transitions in standard and quenched chiral perturbation theory
We study the effects of chiral logs on the heavy-->light pseudoscalar meson
transition form factors by using standard and quenched chiral perturbation
theory combined with the static heavy quark limit. The resulting expressions
are used to indicate the size of uncertainties due to the use of the quenched
approximation in the current lattice studies. They may also be used to assess
the size of systematic uncertainties induced by missing chiral log terms in
extrapolating toward the physical pion mass. We also provide the coefficient
multiplying the quenched chiral log, which may be useful if the quenched
lattice studies are performed with very light mesons.Comment: 33 pages, 8 PostScript figures, version to appear in PR
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