14,374 research outputs found
Exact Fermi coordinates for a class of spacetimes
We find exact Fermi coordinates for timelike geodesic observers for a class
of spacetimes that includes anti-de Sitter spacetime, de Sitter spacetime, the
constant density interior Schwarzschild spacetime with positive, zero, and
negative cosmological constant, and the Einstein static universe. Maximal
charts for Fermi coordinates are discussed.Comment: 15 page
Should New Anti-Malarial Drugs be Subsidized?
We use analytical and numerical models to explain and quantify the welfare effects of subsidies for artemisinin combination treatments (ACTs), a valuable new class of antimalarial drugs. There are two (second-best) efficiency rationales for such subsidies: by expanding drug use, they reduce infection transmission from one individual to another, and they slow the evolution of drug resistance by deterring use of substitute monotherapy drugs for which resistance emerges more rapidly than for ACTs. Our analysis merges epidemiological models of malaria transmission among individuals and mosquitoes, evolution of drug resistance, and economic models of the demand for alternative drugs; parameter values for the simulations are representative of malaria prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa. We find that large subsidies for ACT are welfare improving across many plausible scenarios for malaria transmission, drug-demand elasticities, and evolution of drug resistance; the benefits of the policy are often several times larger than the costs.antimalarial drugs, resistance externality, transmission externality, subsidies, welfare effects
Chemokines in the balance: Maintenance of homeostasis and protection at CNS barriers
In the adult central nervous system (CNS), chemokines and their receptors are involved in developmental, physiological and pathological processes. Although most lines of investigation focus on their ability to induce the migration of cells, recent studies indicate that chemokines also promote cellular interactions and activate signaling pathways that maintain CNS homeostatic functions. Many homeostatic chemokines are expressed on the vasculature of the blood brain barrier including CXCL12, CCL19, CCL20, and CCL21. While endothelial cell expression of these chemokines is known to regulate the entry of leukocytes into the CNS during immunosurveillance, new data indicate that CXCL12 is also involved in diverse cellular activities including adult neurogenesis and neuronal survival, having an opposing role to the homeostatic chemokine, CXCL14, which appears to regulate synaptic inputs to neural precursors. Neuronal expression of CX3CL1, yet another homeostatic chemokine that promotes neuronal survival and communication with microglia, is partly regulated by CXCL12. Regulation of CXCL12 is unique in that it may regulate its own expression levels via binding to its scavenger receptor CXCR7/ACKR3. In this review, we explore the diverse roles of these and other homeostatic chemokines expressed within the CNS, including the possible implications of their dysfunction as a cause of neurologic disease
Cellular aspect ratio and cell division mechanics underlie the patterning of cell progeny in diverse mammalian epithelia.
Cell division is essential to expand, shape, and replenish epithelia. In the adult small intestine, cells from a common progenitor intermix with other lineages, whereas cell progeny in many other epithelia form contiguous patches. The mechanisms that generate these distinct patterns of progeny are poorly understood. Using light sheet and confocal imaging of intestinal organoids, we show that lineages intersperse during cytokinesis, when elongated interphase cells insert between apically displaced daughters. Reducing the cellular aspect ratio to minimize the height difference between interphase and mitotic cells disrupts interspersion, producing contiguous patches. Cellular aspect ratio is similarly a key parameter for division-coupled interspersion in the early mouse embryo, suggesting that this physical mechanism for patterning progeny may pertain to many mammalian epithelia. Our results reveal that the process of cytokinesis in elongated mammalian epithelia allows lineages to intermix and that cellular aspect ratio is a critical modulator of the progeny pattern
Ariel - Volume 5 Number 5
Editors
Mark Dembert
J. D. Kanofsky
Entertainment
Robert Breckenridge
Joe Conti
Gary Kaskey
Photographer
Scot Kastner
Overseas Editor
Mike Sinason
Circulation
Jay Amsterdam
Humorist
Jim McCann
Staff
Ken Jaffe
Bob Sklaroff
Janet Welsh
Dave Jacoby
Phil Nimoityn
Frank Chervane
Electrical Control of 2D Magnetism in Bilayer CrI3
The challenge of controlling magnetism using electric fields raises
fundamental questions and addresses technological needs such as low-dissipation
magnetic memory. The recently reported two-dimensional (2D) magnets provide a
new system for studying this problem owing to their unique magnetic properties.
For instance, bilayer chromium triiodide (CrI3) behaves as a layered
antiferromagnet with a magnetic field-driven metamagnetic transition. Here, we
demonstrate electrostatic gate control of magnetism in CrI3 bilayers, probed by
magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) microscopy. At fixed magnetic fields near
the metamagnetic transition, we realize voltage-controlled switching between
antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic states. At zero magnetic field, we
demonstrate a time-reversal pair of layered antiferromagnetic states which
exhibit spin-layer locking, leading to a remarkable linear dependence of their
MOKE signals on gate voltage with opposite slopes. Our results pave the way for
exploring new magnetoelectric phenomena and van der Waals spintronics based on
2D materials.Comment: To appear in Nature Nanotechnolog
Clinically immune hosts as a refuge for drug-sensitive malaria parasites
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mutations in <it>Plasmodium falciparum </it>that confer resistance to first-line antimalarial drugs have spread throughout the world from a few independent foci, all located in areas that were likely characterized by low or unstable malaria transmission. One of the striking differences between areas of low or unstable malaria transmission and hyperendemic areas is the difference in the size of the population of immune individuals. However, epidemiological models of malaria transmission have generally ignored the role of immune individuals in transmission, assuming that they do not affect the fitness of the parasite. This model reconsiders the role of immunity in the dynamics of malaria transmission and its impact on the evolution of antimalarial drug resistance under the assumption that immune individuals are infectious.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The model is constructed as a two-stage susceptible-infected-susceptible (SIS) model of malaria transmission that assumes that individuals build up clinical immunity over a period of years. This immunity reduces the frequency and severity of clinical symptoms, and thus their use of drugs. It also reduces an individual's level of infectiousness, but does not impact the likelihood of becoming infected.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Simulations found that with the introduction of resistance into a population, clinical immunity can significantly alter the fitness of the resistant parasite, and thereby impact the ability of the resistant parasite to spread from an initial host by reducing the effective reproductive number of the resistant parasite as transmission intensity increases. At high transmission levels, despite a higher basic reproductive number, <it>R</it><sub>0</sub>, the effective reproductive number of the resistant parasite may fall below the reproductive number of the sensitive parasite.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results suggest that high-levels of clinical immunity create a natural ecological refuge for drug-sensitive parasites. This provides an epidemiological rationale for historical patterns of resistance emergence and suggests that future outbreaks of resistance are more likely to occur in low- or unstable-transmission settings. This finding has implications for the design of drug policies and the formulation of malaria control strategies, especially those that lower malaria transmission intensity.</p
A Statistical Mechanical Problem in Schwarzschild Spacetime
We use Fermi coordinates to calculate the canonical partition function for an
ideal gas in a circular geodesic orbit in Schwarzschild spacetime. To test the
validity of the results we prove theorems for limiting cases. We recover the
Newtonian gas law subject only to tidal forces in the Newtonian limit.
Additionally we recover the special relativistic gas law as the radius of the
orbit increases to infinity. We also discuss how the method can be extended to
the non ideal gas case.Comment: Corrected an equation misprint, added four references, and brief
comments on the system's center of mass and the thermodynamic limi
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