246 research outputs found
Matter-wave grating distinguishing conservative and dissipative interactions
We propose an optical grating for matter waves that separates molecules depending on whether their interaction with the light is conservative or dissipative. Potential applications include fundamental tests of quantum mechanics, measurement of molecular properties and the ability to selectively prepare matter waves with different internal temperatures
Edge-ground hatchets on the Southern Curtis Coast, Central Queensland: A preliminary Assessment of Technology, Chronology and Provenance
A number of edge-ground hatchets were identified from various locations in central Queensland during recent investigations conducted as part of the Gooreng Gooreng Cultural Heritage Project. Macroscopic examination suggested that some hatchets were manufactured on a distinctive form of rhyolitic tuff which is restricted in occurrence to the Town of Seventeen Seventy - Agnes Water area on the southern Curtis Coast. The hatchets are distributed over an area of some 6000 km2, centred on the town of Lowmead within the ethnohistorically documented linguistic borders of Gooreng Gooreng country. Laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) was employed in an attempt to provenance the hatchets to particular outcrops of rhyolitic tuff on the basis of trace element geochemistry. Preliminary results confirm that all hatchets identified as rhyolitic tuff exhibit a similar geochemical signature. Moreover, this geochemistry can be correlated with the background samples from the Ironbark Site Complex, the only major rhyolite quarry known in the region. The study enhances our understanding of past Aboriginal lifeways in the region by situating strategies of stone procurement and use in the landscape
Optical Spectroscopy of Bright Fermi LAT Blazars
We report on HET and Palomar 5 m spectroscopy of recently identified
-ray blazars in the {\it Fermi} LAT Bright Source List. These data
provide identifications for 10 newly discovered -ray flat spectrum
radio quasars (FSRQ) and six new BL Lacs plus improved spectroscopy for six
additional BL Lacs. We substantially improve the identification completeness of
the bright LAT blazars and give new redshifts and constraints, new
estimates of the black hole masses and new measurements of the optical SED.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
A first sample of faint radio sources with virtually complete redshifts: I. Infrared images, the Hubble diagram, and the alignment effect
We have obtained redshifts and infrared images for a sample of faint B2/6C
radio sources whose fluxes are about six times fainter than those of sources in
the bright 3C sample. We now have unambiguous redshifts for 90% of the sources,
making this the first faint radio sample with such complete redshift
information. We find that the infrared Hubble diagrams (K versus z) of the 3C
sample and the B2/6C sample are similar at a low redshift (z < 0.6), but by a
redshift about 1 the 6C/B2 galaxies are on average about 0.6 mags fainter in
the K-band than 3C galaxies at the same redshift. This suggests that the bright
K-magnitudes of 3C galaxies at a redshift of about 1 are not the result of
stellar evolution, but of a correlation between infrared and radio luminosity.
We also find that the infrared stuctures of B2/6C galaxies at z=1 are less
clearly aligned with their radio structures than 3C galaxies at this redshift,
implying that the strength of the alignment effect depends on radio luminosity.
Finally, above a redshift of 2 we find that the dispersion in the K-z relation
of the B2/6C sample is about 2.7 times greater than that at low redshift, a
result which is expected if at these redshifts we are beginning to penetrate
into the epoch in which radio galaxies formed.Comment: 26 pages (TEX), 39 postscript figures (six of the larger figures can
be obtained from ftp://ftp.astro.cf.ac.uk/pub/sae), 5 latex tables, to appear
in MNRA
Fuel Poverty, Older People and Cold Weather: An All-Island Analysis
The research presented in this report is the culmination of 18 months of work which has been funded by The Centre for Ageing Research and Development in Ireland (CARDI). The research is concerned with older people and how they cope with cold weather, and whether they are able to keep sufficiently warm in winter. This report is structured into a number of distinct chapters, with each chapter dealing with a specific aspect of the fuel poverty issue
CGRaBS: An All-Sky Survey of Gamma-Ray Blazar Candidates
We describe a uniform all-sky survey of bright blazars, selected primarily by
their flat radio spectra, that is designed to provide a large catalog of likely
gamma-ray AGN. The defined sample has 1625 targets with radio and X-ray
properties similar to those of the EGRET blazars, spread uniformly across the
|b| > 10 deg sky. We also report progress toward optical characterization of
the sample; of objects with known R < 23, 85% have been classified and 81% have
measured redshifts. One goal of this program is to focus attention on the most
interesting (e.g., high redshift, high luminosity, ...) sources for intensive
multiwavelength study during the observations by the Large Area Telescope (LAT)
on GLAST.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 1 machine-readable table available at
http://astro.stanford.edu/CGRaBS/ ; accepted for publication in ApJ
Accumulation of a polyisoprene-linked amino sugar in polymyxin-resistant Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli: Structural characterization and transfer to lipid A in the periplasm
Polymyxin-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium accumulate a novel minor lipid that can donate 4-amino-4-deoxy-L-arabinose units (L-Ara4N) to lipid A. We now report the purification of this lipid from a pss- pmrAC mutant of E. coli and assign its structure as undecaprenyl phosphate-α-L-Ara4N. Approximately 0.2 mg of homogeneous material was isolated from an 8-liter culture by solvent extraction, followed by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, C18 reverse phase resin, and silicic acid. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight mass spectrometry in the negative mode yielded a single species [M - H]- at m/z 977.5, consistent with undecaprenyl phosphate-α-L-Ara4N (Mr = 978.41). 31P NMR spectroscopy showed a single phosphorus atom at -0.44 ppm characteristic of a phosphodiester linkage. Selective inverse decoupling difference spectroscopy demonstrated that the undecaprenyl phosphate group is attached to the anomeric carbon of the L-Ara4N unit. One- and two-dimensional 1H NMR studies confirmed the presence of a polyisoprene chain and a sugar moiety with chemical shifts and coupling constants expected for an equatorially substituted arabinopyranoside. Heteronuclear multiple-quantum coherence spectroscopy analysis demonstrated that a nitrogen atom is attached to C-4 of the sugar residue. The purified donor supports in vitro conversion of lipid IVA to lipid IIA, which is substituted with a single L-Ara4N moiety. The identification of undecaprenyl phosphate-α -L-Ara4N implies that L-Ara4N transfer to lipid A occurs in the periplasm of polymyxin-resistant strains, and establishes a new enzymatic pathway by which Gram-negative bacteria acquire antibiotic resistance
Periplasmic Cleavage and Modification of the 1-Phosphate Group of Helicobacter Pylori Lipid A
Pathogenic bacteria modify the lipid A portion of their lipopolysaccharide to help evade the host innate immune response. Modification of the negatively charged phosphate groups of lipid A aids in resistance to cationic antimicrobial peptides targeting the bacterial cell surface. The lipid A of Helicobacter pylori contains a phosphoethanolamine (pEtN) unit directly linked to the 1-position of the disaccharide backbone. This is in contrast to the pEtN units found in other pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria, which are attached to the lipid A phosphate group to form a pyrophosphate linkage. This study describes two enzymes involved in the periplasmic modification of the 1-phosphate group of H. pylori lipid A. By using an in vitro assay system, we demonstrate the presence of lipid A 1-phosphatase activity in membranes of H. pylori. In an attempt to identify genes encoding possible lipid A phosphatases, we cloned four putative orthologs of Escherichia coli pgpB, the phosphatidylglycerol-phosphate phosphatase, from H. pylori 26695. One of these orthologs, Hp0021, is the structural gene for the lipid A 1-phosphatase and is required for removal of the 1-phosphate group from mature lipid A in an in vitro assay system. Heterologous expression of Hp0021 in E. coli resulted in the highly selective removal of the 1-phosphate group from E. coli lipid A, as demonstrated by mass spectrometry. We also identified the structural gene for the H. pylori lipid A pEtN transferase (Hp0022). Mass spectrometric analysis of the lipid A isolated from E. coli expressing Hp0021 and Hp0022 shows the addition of a single pEtN group at the 1-position, confirming that Hp0022 is responsible for the addition of a pEtN unit at the 1-position in H. pylori lipid A. In summary, we demonstrate that modification of the 1-phosphate group of H. pylori lipid A requires two enzymatic steps
Constructing reparametrization invariant metrics on spaces of plane curves
Metrics on shape space are used to describe deformations that take one shape
to another, and to determine a distance between them. We study a family of
metrics on the space of curves, that includes several recently proposed
metrics, for which the metrics are characterised by mappings into vector spaces
where geodesics can be easily computed. This family consists of Sobolev-type
Riemannian metrics of order one on the space of
parametrized plane curves and the quotient space of unparametrized curves. For the space of open
parametrized curves we find an explicit formula for the geodesic distance and
show that the sectional curvatures vanish on the space of parametrized and are
non-negative on the space of unparametrized open curves. For the metric, which
is induced by the "R-transform", we provide a numerical algorithm that computes
geodesics between unparameterised, closed curves, making use of a constrained
formulation that is implemented numerically using the RATTLE algorithm. We
illustrate the algorithm with some numerical tests that demonstrate it's
efficiency and robustness.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures. Extended versio
Satellite Integrated Power and Attitude Control System Design Study
Technological advances have brought Flywheel Energy Storage (FES) systems to the point where they can be used in satellites as replacements for chemical batteries. Flywheels have characteristics that may overcome limitations inherent in batteries. These characteristics include high specific energy, minimal degradation over time, and precise knowledge of charge level. A further advantage of flywheels is that, in a combined system, they can be used to replace traditional attitude control hardware. These Integrated Power and Attitude Control Systems (IPACS) show the potential to have less mass than the systems they replace. The question this study seeks to answer is, In what circumstances should FES be used on-board satellites and, if so, how? The utility of power and attitude control systems using FES or IPACS was compared to baseline satellite designs using traditional battery energy storage. The results of this study show that IPACS is generally superior to current technology batteries. IPACS is most effective in satellite applications with many charge/discharge cycles. In the case of geosynchronous Earth orbit missions batteries proved to be marginally superior in a few cases. But for low Earth orbit missions IPACS was shown to be markedly superior
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