7,384 research outputs found

    Nitrogen-rich transition metal nitrides

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    The solid state chemistry leading to the synthesis and characterization of metal nitrides with N:M ratios >1 is summarized. Studies of these compounds represent an emerging area of research. Most transition metal nitrides have much lower nitrogen contents, and they often form with non- or sub-stoichiometric compositions. These materials are typically metallic with often superconducting properties, and they provide highly refractory, high hardness materials with many technological applications. The higher metal nitrides should achieve formal oxidation states (OS) attaining those found among corresponding oxides, and they are expected to have useful semiconducting properties. Only a very few examples of such high OS nitrogen-rich compounds are known at present. The main group elements typically form covalently bonded nitride ceramics such as Si3N4, Ge3N4 and Sn3N4, and the early transition metals Zr and Hf produce Zr3N4 and Hf3N4. However, the only main example of a highly nitrided transition metal compound known to date is Ta3N5 that has a formal oxidation state +5 and is a semiconductor with visible light absorption leading to applications as a pigment and in photocatalysis. New synthesis routes are being explored to study the possible formation of other N-rich materials that are predicted to exist by ab initio calculations. There is a useful interplay between theoretical predictions and experimental synthesis studies at ambient and high pressure conditions, as we explore and establish the existence and structure–property relations of these new nitride compounds and polymorphs. Here we review the state of current investigations and indicate possible new directions for further work

    Gene expression profiling reveals effects of Cimicifuga racemosa (L.) NUTT. (black cohosh) on the estrogen receptor positive human breast cancer cell line MCF-7

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    BACKGROUND: Extracts from the rhizome of Cimicifuga racemosa (black cohosh) are increasingly popular as herbal alternative to hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for the alleviation of postmenopausal disorders. However, the molecular mode of action and the active principles are presently not clear. Previously published data have been largely contradictory. We, therefore, investigated the effects of a lipophilic black cohosh rhizome extract and cycloartane-type triterpenoids on the estrogen receptor positive human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. RESULTS: Both extract and purified compounds clearly inhibited cellular proliferation. Gene expression profiling with the extract allowed us to identify 431 regulated genes with high significance. The extract induced expression pattern differed from those of 17beta-estradiol or the estrogen receptor antagonist tamoxifen. We observed a significant enrichment of genes in an anti-proliferative and apoptosis-sensitizing manner, as well as an increase of mRNAs coding for gene products involved in several stress response pathways. These functional groups were highly overrepresented among all regulated genes. Also several transcripts coding for oxidoreductases were induced, as for example the cytochrome P450 family members 1A1 and 1B1. In addition, some transcripts associated with antitumor but also tumor-promoting activity were regulated. Real-Time RT-PCR analysis of 13 selected genes was conducted after treatment with purified compounds - the cycloartane-type triterpene glycoside actein and triterpene aglycons - showing similar expression levels compared to the extract. CONCLUSION: No estrogenic but antiproliferative and proapoptotic gene expression was shown for black cohosh in MCF-7 cells at the transcriptional level. The effects may be results of the activation of different pathways. The cycloartane glycosides and - for the first time - their aglycons could be identified as an active principle in black cohosh

    Incorporating interactive 3-dimensional graphics in astronomy research papers

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    Most research data collections created or used by astronomers are intrinsically multi-dimensional. In contrast, all visual representations of data presented within research papers are exclusively 2-dimensional. We present a resolution of this dichotomy that uses a novel technique for embedding 3-dimensional (3-d) visualisations of astronomy data sets in electronic-format research papers. Our technique uses the latest Adobe Portable Document Format extensions together with a new version of the S2PLOT programming library. The 3-d models can be easily rotated and explored by the reader and, in some cases, modified. We demonstrate example applications of this technique including: 3-d figures exhibiting subtle structure in redshift catalogues, colour-magnitude diagrams and halo merger trees; 3-d isosurface and volume renderings of cosmological simulations; and 3-d models of instructional diagrams and instrument designs.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, submitted to New Astronomy. For paper with 3-dimensional embedded figures, see http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/s2plot/3dpd

    Post-transcriptional regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase gene expression by oxygen in PC12 Cells

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    Post-transcriptional regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase gene expression by oxygen in PC12 cells. Reduced oxygen tension (hypoxia) leads to increased stability of mRNA for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate limiting enzyme in biosynthesis of catecholamine neurotransmitters. Hypoxia increases the half life of TH mRNA from 10 to 30 hours. The increased stability of TH mRNA during hypoxia results from fast enhanced binding of a cytoplasmic protein (hypoxia inducible protein, HIP) to a pyrimidine-rich sequence within the 3′ untranslated region (3′UTR) of TH mRNA. This novel cis-element is referred to as hypoxia-inducible protein binding site (HIPBS) and is located between bases 1551 and 1578 of the 3′UTR of TH mRNA. We identified that the (U/C)(C/U)CCCU motif within the HIPBS represents the optimum protein-binding site. Mutations within this region that abolish protein binding prevent also regulation of TH mRNA stability during hypoxia. UV-crosslinking and SDS-PAGE analysis of the HIPBS-protein complexes showed the presence of a major 50kDa complex. The formation of the complex was augmented when protein extracts were obtained from PC12 cells exposed to 5% O2. Importantly, formation of the 50kDa complex was also increased when protein extracts were obtained from carotid bodies or superior cervical ganglia from rats exposed to 10% hypoxia for twenty-four hours

    Hygroscopicity of secondary organic aerosols formed by oxidation of cycloalkenes, monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and related compounds

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    A series of experiments has been conducted in the Caltech indoor smog chamber facility to investigate the water uptake properties of aerosol formed by oxidation of various organic precursors. Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) from simple and substituted cycloalkenes (C5-C8) is produced in dark ozonolysis experiments in a dry chamber (RH~5%). Biogenic SOA from monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and oxygenated terpenes is formed by photooxidation in a humid chamber (~50% RH). Using the hygroscopicity tandem differential mobility analyzer (HTDMA), we measure the diameter-based hygroscopic growth factor (GF) of the SOA as a function of time and relative humidity. All SOA studied is found to be slightly hygroscopic, with smaller water uptake than that of typical inorganic aerosol substances. The aerosol water uptake increases with time early in the experiments for the cycloalkene SOA, but decreases with time for the biogenic SOA. This behavior could indicate competing effects between the formation of more highly oxidized polar compounds (more hygroscopic), and formation of longer-chained oligomers (less hygroscopic). All SOA also exhibit a smooth water uptake with RH with no deliquescence or efflorescence. The water uptake curves are found to be fitted well with an empirical three-parameter functional form. The measured pure organic GF values at 85% RH are between 1.09–1.16 for SOA from ozonolysis of cycloalkenes, 1.01–1.04 for sesquiterpene photooxidation SOA, and 1.06–1.11 for the monoterpene and oxygenated terpene SOA. The GF of pure SOA (GForg) in experiments in which inorganic seed aerosol is used is determined by assuming volume-weighted water uptake (Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson or ''ZSR'' approach) and using the size-resolved organic mass fraction measured by the Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer. Knowing the water content associated with the inorganic fraction yields GForg values. However, for each precursor, the GForg values computed from different HTDMA-classified diameters agree with each other to varying degrees. Lack of complete agreement may be a result of the non-idealities of the solutions that are not captured by the ZSR method. Comparing growth factors from different precursors, we find that GForg is inversely proportional to the precursor molecular weight and SOA yield, which is likely a result of the fact that higher-molecular weight precursors tend to produce larger and less hygroscopic oxidation products

    Thermodynamic instabilities in one dimensional particle lattices: a finite-size scaling approach

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    One-dimensional thermodynamic instabilities are phase transitions not prohibited by Landau's argument, because the energy of the domain wall (DW) which separates the two phases is infinite. Whether they actually occur in a given system of particles must be demonstrated on a case-by-case basis by examining the (non-) analyticity properties of the corresponding transfer integral (TI) equation. The present note deals with the generic Peyrard-Bishop model of DNA denaturation. In the absence of exact statements about the spectrum of the singular TI equation, I use Gauss-Hermite quadratures to achieve a single-parameter-controlled approach to rounding effects; this allows me to employ finite-size scaling concepts in order to demonstrate that a phase transition occurs and to derive the critical exponents.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, subm. to Phys. Rev.

    Exclusive Photoproduction of Large Momentum-Transfer K and K* Mesons

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    The reactions gamma p -> K+ Lambda and gamma p -> K* Lambda are analyzed within perturbative QCD, allowing for diquarks as quasi-elementary constituents of baryons. The diquark-model parameters and the quark-diquark distribution amplitudes of proton and Lambda are taken from previous investigations of electromagnetic baryon form factors and Compton-scattering off protons. Unpolarized differential cross sections and polarization observables are computed for different choices of the K and K* distribution amplitudes. The asymptotic form of the K distribution amplitude (proportional to x1 x2) is found to provide a satisfactory description of the K photoproduction data.Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures available as tared, compressed and uuencoded PS-file

    The Threshold Pion-Photoproduction of Nucleons In The Chiral Quark Model

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    In this paper, we show that the low energy theorem (LET) of the threshold pion-photoproduction can be fully recovered in the quark model. An essential result of this investigation is that the quark-pion operators are obtained from the effective chiral Lagrangian, and the low energy theorem does not require the constraints on the internal structures of the nucleon. The pseudoscalar quark-pion coupling generates an additional term at order μ=mπ/M\mu=m_{\pi}/M only in the isospin amplitude A(−)A^{(-)}. The role of the transitions between the nucleon and the resonance P33(1232)P_{33}(1232) and P-wave baryons are also discussed, we find that the leading contributions to the isospin amplitudes at O(μ2)O(\mu^2) are from the transition between the P-wave baryons and the nucleon and the charge radius of the nucleon. The leading contribution from the P-wave baryons only affects the neutral pion production, and improve the agreement with data significantly. The transition between the resonance P33(1232)P_{33}(1232) and the nucleon only gives an order μ3\mu^3 corrections to A(−)A^{(-)}

    Surface critical behavior of bcc binary alloys

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    The surface critical behavior of bcc binary alloys undergoing a continuous B2-A2 order-disorder transition is investigated in the mean-field (MF) approximation. Our main aim is to provide clear evidence for the fact that surfaces which break the two-sublattice symmetry generically display the critical behavior of the NORMAL transition, whereas symmetry-preserving surfaces exhibit ORDINARY surface critical behavior. To this end we analyze the lattice MF equations for both types of surfaces in terms of nonlinear symplectic maps and derive a Ginzburg-Landau model for the symmetry-breaking (100) surface. The crucial feature of the continuum model is the emergence of an EFFECTIVE ORDERING (``staggered'') SURFACE FIELD, which depends on temperature and the other lattice model parameters, and which explains the appearance of NORMAL critical behavior for symmetry-breaking surfaces.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 13 EPSF figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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