962 research outputs found

    Relativistic Meson Spectroscopy and In-Medium Effects

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    We extend our earlier model of qqˉq\bar q mesons using relativistic quasipotential (QP) wave equations to include open-flavor states and running quark-gluon coupling effects. Global fits to meson spectra are achieved with rms deviations from experiment of 43-50 MeV. We examine in-medium effects through their influence on the confining interaction and predict the confining strength at which the masses of certain mesons fall below the threshold of their dominant decay channel.Comment: 12 Pages, 2 Postscript figures (appended at the end with instructions, available also from [email protected]

    On partitions of finite vector spaces of low dimension over GF(2)

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    AbstractLet Vn(q) denote a vector space of dimension n over the field with q elements. A set P of subspaces of Vn(q) is a partition of Vn(q) if every nonzero vector in Vn(q) is contained in exactly one subspace of P. If there exists a partition of Vn(q) containing ai subspaces of dimension ni for 1≤i≤k, then (ak,ak−1,…,a1) must satisfy the Diophantine equation ∑i=1kai(qni−1)=qn−1. In general, however, not every solution of this Diophantine equation corresponds to a partition of Vn(q). In this article, we determine all solutions of the Diophantine equation for which there is a corresponding partition of Vn(2) for n≤7 and provide a construction of each of the partitions that exist

    Fine-tuning polyoxometalate non-linear optical chromophores: a molecular electronic “Goldilocks” effect

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    A new aryl-imido polyoxometalate non-linear optical chromophore (POMophore) with a diphenylamino donor group attains the highest βzzz, 0 value (196 × 10−30 esu by Hyper-Rayleigh Scattering, HRS), and best transparency/non-linearity trade off yet for such materials. Stark spectroscopic and DFT investigation of this compound, plus NMe2 and carbazole analogues, show that its high performance results from a combination of strongly dipolar electronic transitions, and strong electronic communication across the π-system

    Decay constants, semi-leptonic and non-leptonic decays in a Bethe-Salpeter Model

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    We evaluate the decay constants for the B and DD mesons and the form factors for the semileptonic decays of the B meson to DD and DD^* mesons in a Bethe-Salpeter model. From data we extract Vcb=0.039±0.002V_{cb}=0.039 \pm 0.002 from BˉDlνˉ{\bar B} \to D^* l {\bar{\nu}} and Vcb=0.037±0.004V_{cb}=0.037 \pm 0.004 from BˉDlνˉ{\bar B} \to D l {\bar{\nu}} decays. The form factors are then used to obtain non-leptonic decay partial widths for BDπ(K) B\to D \pi (K) and BDD(Ds)B \to D D (D_s) in the factorization approximation.Comment: 15 Pages, 3 Postscript figures (available also from [email protected]

    Centromere-associated topoisomerase activity in bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei

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    Topoisomerase-II accumulates at centromeres during prometaphase, where it resolves the DNA catenations that represent the last link between sister chromatids. Previously, using approaches including etoposide-mediated topoisomerase-II cleavage, we mapped centromeric domains in trypanosomes, early branching eukaryotes in which chromosome segregation is poorly understood. Here, we show that in bloodstream form Trypanosoma brucei, RNAi-mediated depletion of topoisomerase-IIα, but not topoisomerase-IIβ, results in the abolition of centromere-localized activity and is lethal. Both phenotypes can be rescued by expression of the corresponding enzyme from T. cruzi. Therefore, processes which govern centromere-specific topoisomerase-II accumulation/activation have been functionally conserved within trypanosomes, despite the long evolutionary separation of these species and differences in centromeric DNA organization. The variable carboxyl terminal region of topoisomerase-II has a major role in regulating biological function. We therefore generated T. brucei lines expressing T. cruzi topoisomerase-II truncated at the carboxyl terminus and examined activity at centromeres after the RNAi-mediated depletion of the endogenous enzyme. A region necessary for nuclear localization was delineated to six residues. In other organisms, sumoylation of topoisomerase-II has been shown to be necessary for regulated chromosome segregation. Evidence that we present here suggests that sumoylation of the T. brucei enzyme is not required for centromere-specific cleavage activity

    The Impact of Adolescent Chronic Pain on Functioning: Disentangling the Complex Role of Anxiety

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    A number of adolescents with chronic pain have clinically significant disability across physical, social, and academic activities, and pain severity only explains a portion of the variance in functioning. Thus, it is important to identify therapeutic options to improve adolescents’ functioning. In contrast to studies with adults with chronic pain, research in pediatric pain has not consistently found anxiety to be a good predictor of pain-related disability. The present study evaluated pain, anxiety, and functioning in 222 adolescents with chronic pain. Results indicated that pain was consistently and linearly related to disability across measures of physical and social functioning, school attendance, and physician visits. The relation between anxiety and functioning was complex; increased anxiety was related to poorer physical and social functioning and was related to fewer physician visits, although it was not associated with school attendance. Additional analyses revealed that anxiety serves to moderate the relation between pain and functioning. Specifically, at high anxiety, pain was not related to functioning, but at low anxiety pain consistently predicted disability. In other words, highly anxious adolescents were functioning poorly regardless of the level of pain. The moderating role of anxiety highlights a number of research and clinical possibilities to explore with adolescents with chronic pain-related disability. Data suggest that high anxiety is associated with poor functioning irrespective of pain intensity. At low anxiety, higher pain predicted greater disability. Anxiety is important to assess when investigating potential reasons for pain-related disability

    Measurement of geologic nitrogen using mass spectrometry, colorimetry, and a newly adapted fluorometry technique

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    Long viewed as a mostly noble, atmospheric species, recent work demonstrates that nitrogen in fact cycles throughout the Earth system, including the atmosphere, biosphere, oceans, and solid Earth. Despite this new-found behaviour, more thorough investigation of N in geologic materials is limited due to its low concentration (one to tens of parts per million) and difficulty in analysis. In addition, N can exist in multiple species (NO3−, NH4+, N2, organic N), and determining which species is actually quantified can be difficult. In rocks and minerals, NH4+ is the most stable form of N over geologic timescales. As such, techniques designed to measure NH4+ can be particularly useful.We measured a number of geochemical rock standards using three different techniques: elemental analyzer (EA) mass spectrometry, colorimetry, and fluorometry. The fluorometry approach is a novel adaptation of a technique commonly used in biologic science, applied herein to geologic NH4+. Briefly, NH4+ can be quantified by HF dissolution, neutralization, addition of a fluorescing reagent, and analysis on a standard fluorometer. We reproduce published values for several rock standards (BCR-2, BHVO-2, and G-2), especially if an additional distillation step is performed. While it is difficult to assess the quality of each method, due to lack of international geologic N standards, fluorometry appears better suited to analyzing mineral-bound NH4+ than EA mass spectrometry and is a simpler, quicker alternative to colorimetry.To demonstrate a potential application of fluorometry, we calculated a continental crust N budget based on new measurements. We used glacial tills as a proxy for upper crust and analyzed several poorly constrained rock types (volcanics, mid-crustal xenoliths) to determine that the continental crust contains  ∼  2  ×  1018 kg N. This estimate is consistent with recent budget estimates and shows that fluorometry is appropriate for large-scale questions where high sample throughput is helpful.Lastly, we report the first δ15N values of six rock standards: BCR-2 (1. 05  ±  0. 4 ‰), BHVO-2 (−0. 3  ±  0. 2 ‰), G-2 (1. 23  ±  1. 32 ‰), LKSD-4 (3. 59  ±  0. 1 ‰), Till-4 (6. 33  ±  0. 1 ‰), and SY-4 (2. 13  ±  0. 5 ‰). The need for international geologic N standards is crucial for further investigation of the Earth system N cycle, and we suggest that existing rock standards may be suited to this need

    Patient perception of pain versus observed pain behavior during a standardized electrodiagnostic test

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    Introduction: Clinicians often assume that observations of pain behavior are adequate for assessment of patient pain perception during procedures. This has not been tested during a standardized electrodiagnostic experience. Methods: During a prospective trial including extensive, standardized electrodiagnostic testing on persons with lumbar stenosis, vascular claudication, and asymptomatic volunteers, the subjects and an observer rated levels of pain. Results: In 60 subjects, observers significantly under‐rated pain (Visual Analog Scale 3.17 ± 2.23 vs. 4.38 ± 2.01, t = −4.577, df = 59, P < 0.001). Perceived pain during testing related to bodily pain as measured by the visual analog, McGill, Pain Disability, and Quebec scales, but not age, duration of symptoms, Tampa kinesiphobia, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale, or SF‐36 health quality of life. Conclusions: Persons with worse pain syndromes may perceive more pain during testing than others. Clinicians and researchers should understand that patients may have more pain than they recognize. Muscle Nerve 51: 185–191, 2015Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110539/1/mus24308.pd
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