638 research outputs found
Developmental expression of esophageal gland antigens and their detection in stylet secretions of Meloidogyne incognita
La microscopie en immunofluorescence a Ă©tĂ© utilisĂ©e avec des anticorps monoclonaux pour montrer que la production d'antigĂšnes dans les glandes oesophagiennes de #Meloidogyne incognita est rĂ©gulĂ©e par le dĂ©veloppement durant la phase parasite et que quelques-uns de ces antigĂšnes peuvent ĂȘtre excrĂ©tĂ©s au travers du stylet. Plusieurs antigĂšnes des glandes oesophagiennes sont temporairement exprimĂ©s dans les glandes subventrales et dorsale des juvĂ©niles prĂ©parasites de deuxiĂšme stade (J2), des juvĂ©niles parasites (J2) et des femelles adultes. Deux anticorps monoclonaux reconnaissant les glandes subventrales de J2 et un anticorps monoclonal reconnaissant la glande dorsale et les glandes subventrales de J2, reconnaissent Ă©galement les sĂ©crĂ©tions passant au travers du stylet des J2. Deux anticorps monoclonaux reconnaissant la glande dorsale des femelles adultes, et un anticorps monoclonal reconnaissant leurs glandes subventrales, reconnaissent aussi les sĂ©crĂ©tions passant au travers du stylet des femelles adultes. Ces rĂ©sultats montrent que les sĂ©crĂ©tions des glandes dorsale et subventrales peuvent passer au travers du stylet de #M. incognita et que leur expression est rĂ©gulĂ©e par le dĂ©veloppement. (RĂ©sumĂ© d'auteur
Larval cloning in the crown-of-thorns sea star, a keystone coral predator
The crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS), Acanthaster cf. solaris, is an iconic keystone predator whose population outbreaks have devastating consequences for Indo-Pacific coral reefs. We tested the effects of algal food supply and larval density on the frequency of larval cloning by culturing the early bipinnaria larvae of COTS under variable conditions. Here we show that larval COTS are able to clone themselves in both low and high food conditions, and that the frequency of larval cloning increases with levels of food, but is unaffected by larval density. Across all density treatments (0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 larvae ml-1), the per-capita rate of cloning increased from 4.3% in low, oligotrophic conditions (0.17 ”g chl a l-1) to 7.9% in high food conditions (1.7 ”g chl a l-1). Larval cloning has the potential to increase both COTS larval supply and the dispersal distance of planktonic larval stages, both of which are critical factors in predicting the timing and location of outbreaks of this species. In addition, the relationship between algal food supply and larval cloning frequency lends support to bottom-up hypotheses (e.g. nutrient enrichment) as predictors of COTS outbreaks. However, cloning was observed even under the oligotrophic conditions characteristic of coral reefs
Large Angle CMB Fluctuations from Cosmic Strings with a Comological Constant
In this paper, we present results for large-angle CMB anisotropies generated
from high resolution simulations of cosmic string networks in a range of flat
FRW universes with a cosmological constant. Using an ensemble of all-sky maps,
we compare with the COBE data to infer a normalization (or upper bound) on the
string linear energy density . For a flat matter-dominated model
() we find , which is lower
than previous constraints probably because of the more accurate inclusion of
string small-scale structure. For a cosmological constant within an
observationally acceptable range, we find a relatively weak dependence with
less than 10% higher.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; replaced with version to appear in Physical
Review
`Hath charms to soothe . . .': An exploratory study of how high-functioning adults with ASD experience music
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 12 highfunctioning adults on the autism spectrum, in order to examine the nature of their personal experiences of music. Consistent with the literature on typically developing peopleâs engagement with music, the
analysis showed that most participants exploit music for a wide range of purposes in the cognitive, emotional and social domains, including mood management, personal development and social inclusion. However, in contrast to typically developing people, the ASD groupâs descriptions
of mood states reflected a greater reliance on internally focused (arousal) rather than externally focused (emotive) language
Fast Diffusion Process in Quenched hcp Dilute Solid He-He Mixture
The study of phase structure of dilute He - He solid mixture of
different quality is performed by spin echo NMR technique. The diffusion
coefficient is determined for each coexistent phase. Two diffusion processes
are observed in rapidly quenched (non-equilibrium) hcp samples: the first
process has a diffusion coefficient corresponding to hcp phase, the second one
has huge diffusion coefficient corresponding to liquid phase. That is evidence
of liquid-like inclusions formation during fast crystal growing. It is
established that these inclusions disappear in equilibrium crystals after
careful annealing.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, QFS200
Comparison of structural transformations and superconductivity in compressed Sulfur and Selenium
Density-functional calculations are presented for high-pressure structural
phases of S and Se. The structural phase diagrams, phonon spectra,
electron-phonon coupling, and superconducting properties of the isovalent
elements are compared. We find that with increasing pressure, Se adopts a
sequence of ever more closely packed structures (beta-Po, bcc, fcc), while S
favors more open structures (beta-Po, simple cubic, bcc). These differences are
shown to be attributable to differences in the S and Se core states. All the
compressed phases of S and Se considered are calculated to have weak to
moderate electron-phonon coupling strengths consistent with superconducting
transition temperatures in the range of 1 to 20 K. Our results compare well
with experimental data on the beta-Po --> bcc transition pressure in Se and on
the superconducting transition temperature in beta-Po S. Further experiments
are suggested to search for the other structural phases predicted at higher
pressures and to test theoretical results on the electron-phonon interaction
and superconducting properties
Boost-Invariant Running Couplings in Effective Hamiltonians
We apply a boost-invariant similarity renormalization group procedure to a
light-front Hamiltonian of a scalar field phi of bare mass mu and interaction
term g phi^3 in 6 dimensions using 3rd order perturbative expansion in powers
of the coupling constant g. The initial Hamiltonian is regulated using momentum
dependent factors that approach 1 when a cutoff parameter Delta tends to
infinity. The similarity flow of corresponding effective Hamiltonians is
integrated analytically and two counterterms depending on Delta are obtained in
the initial Hamiltonian: a change in mu and a change of g. In addition, the
interaction vertex requires a Delta-independent counterterm that contains a
boost invariant function of momenta of particles participating in the
interaction. The resulting effective Hamiltonians contain a running coupling
constant that exhibits asymptotic freedom. The evolution of the coupling with
changing width of effective Hamiltonians agrees with results obtained using
Feynman diagrams and dimensional regularization when one identifies the
renormalization scale with the width. The effective light-front Schroedinger
equation is equally valid in a whole class of moving frames of reference
including the infinite momentum frame. Therefore, the calculation described
here provides an interesting pattern one can attempt to follow in the case of
Hamiltonians applicable in particle physics.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, included discussion of finite x-dependent
counterterm
Electronic properties of metal induced gap states at insulator/metal interfaces -- dependence on the alkali halide and the possibility of excitonic mechanism of superconductivity
Motivated from the experimental observation of metal induced gap states
(MIGS) at insulator/metal interfaces by Kiguchi {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf 90}, 196803 (2003)], we have theoretically investigated the electronic
properties of MIGS at interfaces between various alkali halides and a metal
represented by a jellium with the first-principles density functional method.
We have found that, on top of the usual evanescent state, MIGS generally have a
long tail on halogen sites with a -like character, whose penetration depth
() is as large as half the lattice constant of bulk alkali halides.
This implies that , while little dependent on the carrier density in
the jellium, is dominated by the lattice constant (hence by energy gap) of the
alkali halide, where . We also propose a possibility of the MIGS working favorably for the
exciton-mediated superconductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Mass generation for abelian spin-1 particles via a symmetric tensor
In the topologically massive BF model (TMBF) the photon becomes massive via
coupling to an antisymmetric tensor, without breaking the U(1) gauge symmetry .
There is no need of a Higgs field. The TMBF model is dual to a first-order (in
derivatives) formulation of the Maxwell-Proca theory where the antisymmetric
field plays the role of an auxiliary field. Since the Maxwell-Proca theory also
admits a first-order version which makes use of an auxiliary symmetric tensor,
we investigate here a possible generalization of the TMBF model where the
photon acquires mass via coupling to a symmetric tensor. We show that it is
indeed possible to build up dual models to the Maxwell-Proca theory where the
U(1) gauge symmetry is manifest without Higgs field, but after a local field
redefinition the vector field eats up the trace of the symmetric tensor and
becomes massive. So the explicit U(1) symmetry can be removed unlike the TMBF
model.Comment: 15 pages, no figures, one reference added, two typos on page 3 fixe
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