900 research outputs found
Knot concordance and homology cobordism
We consider the question: "If the zero-framed surgeries on two oriented knots
in the 3-sphere are integral homology cobordant, preserving the homology class
of the positive meridians, are the knots themselves concordant?" We show that
this question has a negative answer in the smooth category, even for
topologically slice knots. To show this we first prove that the zero-framed
surgery on K is Z-homology cobordant to the zero-framed surgery on many of its
winding number one satellites P(K). Then we prove that in many cases the tau
and s-invariants of K and P(K) differ. Consequently neither tau nor s is an
invariant of the smooth homology cobordism class of the zero-framed surgery. We
also show, that a natural rational version of this question has a negative
answer in both the topological and smooth categories, by proving similar
results for K and its (p,1)-cables.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Filtering smooth concordance classes of topologically slice knots
We propose and analyze a structure with which to organize the difference
between a knot in the 3-sphere bounding a topologically embedded 2-disk in the
4-ball and it bounding a smoothly embedded disk. The n-solvable filtration of
the topological knot concordance group, due to Cochran-Orr-Teichner, may be
complete in the sense that any knot in the intersection of its terms may well
be topologically slice. However, the natural extension of this filtration to
what is called the n-solvable filtration of the smooth knot concordance group,
is unsatisfactory because any topologically slice knot lies in every term of
the filtration. To ameliorate this we investigate a new filtration, {B_n}, that
is simultaneously a refinement of the n-solvable filtration and a
generalization of notions of positivity studied by Gompf and Cochran. We show
that each B_n/B_{n+1} has infinite rank. But our primary interest is in the
induced filtration, {T_n}, on the subgroup, T, of knots that are topologically
slice. We prove that T/T_0 is large, detected by gauge-theoretic invariants and
the tau, s, and epsilon-invariants; while the non-triviliality of T_0/T_1 can
be detected by certain d-invariants. All of these concordance obstructions
vanish for knots in T_1. Nonetheless, going beyond this, our main result is
that T_1/T_2 has positive rank. Moreover under a "weak homotopy-ribbon"
condition, we show that each T_n/T_{n+1} has positive rank. These results
suggest that, even among topologically slice knots, the fundamental group is
responsible for a wide range of complexity.Comment: 41 pages, slightly revised introduction, minor corrections and
up-dated references, this is the final version to appear in Geometry and
Topolog
Resting-state anticorrelations between medial and lateral prefrontal cortex: Association with working memory, aging, and individual differences
We examined how variation in working memory (WM) capacity due to aging or individual differences among young adults is associated with intrinsic or resting-state anticorrelations, particularly between (1) the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), a component of the default-mode network (DMN) that typically decreases in activation during external, attention-demanding tasks, and (2) the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a component of the fronto-parietal control network that supports executive functions and WM and typically increases in activation during attention-demanding tasks. We compared the magnitudes of MPFC-DLPFC anticorrelations between healthy younger and older participants (Experiment 1) and related the magnitudes of these anticorrelations to individual differences on two behavioral measures of WM capacity in two independent groups of young adults (Experiments 1 and 2). Relative to younger adults, older adults exhibited reductions in WM capacity and in MPFC-DLPFC anticorrelations. Within younger adults, greater MPFC-DLPFC anticorrelation at rest correlated with greater WM capacity. These findings show that variation in MPFC-DLPFC anticorrelations, whether related to aging or to individual differences, may reflect an intrinsic functional brain architecture supportive of WM capacity.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (National Institute on Aging Grant R21 AG030770)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant T32 GM007484)Barbara J. Weedon Fund Fellowshi
Palladium nanoparticles by electrospinning from poly(acrylonitrile-co-acrylic acid)-PdCl2 solutions. Relations between preparation conditions, particle size, and catalytic activity
Catalytic palladium (Pd) nanoparticles on electrospun copolymers of acrylonitrile and acrylic acid (PAN-AA) mats were produced via reduction of PdCl2 with hydrazine. Fiber mats were electrospun from homogeneous solutions of PAN-AA and PdCl2 in dimethylformamide (DMF). Pd cations were reduced to Pd metals when fiber mats were treated in an aqueous hydrazine solution at room temperature. Pd atoms nucleate and form small crystallites whose sizes were estimated from the peak broadening of X-ray diffraction peaks. Two to four crystallites adhere together and form agglomerates. Agglomerate sizes and fiber diameters were determined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Spherical Pd nanoparticles were dispersed homogeneously on the electrospun nanofibers. The effects of copolymer composition and amount of PdCl2 on particle size were investigated. Pd particle size mainly depends on the amount of acrylic acid functional groups and PdCl2 concentration in the spinning solution. Increasing acrylic acid concentration on polymer chains leads to larger Pd nanoparticles. In addition, Pd particle size becomes larger with increasing PdCl2 concentration in the spinning solution. Hence, it is possible to tune the number density and the size of metal nanoparticles. The catalytic activity of the Pd nanoparticles in electrospun mats was determined by selective hydrogenation of dehydrolinalool (3,7-dimethyloct-6- ene-1-yne-3-ol, DHL) in toluene at 90 °C. Electrospun fibers with Pd particles have 4.5 times higher catalytic activity than the current Pd/Al2O3 catalyst
In-Cave and Surface Geophysics to Detect a “Lost” River in the Upper Levels of the Mammoth Cave System
In early 1960, explorers accessed a significant underground river through a crawlspace beneath a ledge in Swinnerton Avenue southeast of the Duck-Under. However, later expeditions failed to find this crawlspace. Instead, the level of sediment in the passage is now generally at or above the rock ledge, leaving no openings to lower level passages other than the Duck-Under itself. Apparently recent organic material (leaves, twigs, etc.) observed in passages just below the Duck-Under may be related to open channel fl ow from storm events which could theoretically provide local sediment transport. Therefore we have used in-cave spontaneous potential (SP), ground penetrating radar (GPR), and acoustic profiling, as well as surface mise-a-la-masse resistivity profiling, in an attempt to locate the river itself rather than the missing crawlway. Incave dye studies and additional geophysical profiling are needed to work out the detailed 3-D hydraulics of this region of the cave system
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