744 research outputs found
Directed Growth of Hydrogen Lines on Graphene: High Throughput Simulations Powered by Evolutionary Algorithm
We set up an evolutionary algorithm combined with density functional
tight-binding (DFTB) calculations to investigate hydrogen adsorption on flat
graphene and graphene monolayers curved over substrate steps. During the
evolution, candidates for the new generations are created by adsorption of an
additional hydrogen atom to the stable configurations of the previous
generation, where a mutation mechanism is also incorporated. Afterwards a
two-stage selection procedure is employed. Selected candidates act as the
parents of the next generation. In curved graphene, the evolution follows a
similar path except for a new mechanism, which aligns hydrogen atoms on the
line of minimum curvature. The mechanism is due to the increased chemical
reactivity of graphene along the minimum radius of curvature line (MRCL) and to
sp bond angles being commensurate with the kinked geometry of hydrogenated
graphene at the substrate edge. As a result, the reaction barrier is reduced
considerably along the MRCL, and hydrogenation continues like a mechanical
chain reaction. This growth mechanism enables lines of hydrogen atoms along the
MRCL, which has the potential to overcome substrate or rippling effects and
could make it possible to define edges or nanoribbons without actually cutting
the material.Comment: 10 pages of main text, 37 pages of supplementary information, 1
supplementary vide
The role of aerodynamic drag in propagation of interplanetary coronal mass ejections
Context. The propagation of interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICMEs) and the forecast of their arrival on Earth is one of the
central issues of space weather studies.
Aims. We investigate to which degree various ICME parameters (mass, size, take-off speed) and the ambient solar-wind parameters (density
and velocity) affect the ICME Sun-Earth transit time.
Methods. We study solutions of a drag-based equation of motion by systematically varying the input parameters. The analysis is focused on ICME
transit times and 1Â AU velocities.
Results. The model results reveal that wide ICMEs of low masses adjust to the solar-wind speed already close to the sun, so the transit time is
determined primarily by the solar-wind speed. The shortest transit times and accordingly the highest 1Â AU velocities are related to
narrow and massive ICMEs (i.e. high-density eruptions) propagating in high-speed solar wind streams. We apply the model to the
Sun-Earth event associated with the CME of 25 July 2004 and compare the results with the outcome of the numerical MHD modeling
osp(1,2)-covariant Lagrangian quantization of irreducible massive gauge theories with generic background configurations
In the framework of osp(1,2)-symmetric quantization of irreducible massive
gauge theories the background field method is studied for the simplest case of
a linear splitting of the gauge field into a background configuration and the
quantum fluctuations. The symmetries of that approach - including three types
of background-dependent gauge transformations - are expressed by Ward
identities. From these identities together with the equations of motion of the
auxiliary field the background dependence of the vertex functions and of the
Greens functions is determined. It is proven that the introduction of a
background field does not change the ultraviolet asymptotics of the theory.Comment: 35 pages, AMSTEX; added are two Appendices with proof that the
presented solutions in Sect. 4 and 5 are the most general ones; partly
rewritten Introduction and Conclusion; change of Reference
Effective Average Action in N=1 Super-Yang-Mills Theory
For N=1 Super-Yang-Mills theory we generalize the effective average action
Gamma_k in a manifest supersymmetric way using the superspace formalism. The
exact evolution equation for Gamma_k is derived and, introducing as an
application a simple truncation, the standard one-loop beta-function of N=1 SYM
theory is obtained.Comment: 17 pages, LaTeX, some remarks added, misprints corrected, to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Mitochondrial transcription termination factor 1 directs polar replication fork pausing
During replication of nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA), clashes with the transcription apparatus can cause replication fork collapse and genomic instability. To avoid this problem, a replication fork barrier protein is situated downstream of rDNA, there preventing replication in the direction opposite rDNA transcription. A potential candidate for a similar function in mitochondria is the mitochondrial transcription termination factor 1 (MTERF1, also denoted mTERF), which binds to a sequence just downstream of the ribosomal transcription unit. Previous studies have shown that MTERF1 prevents antisense transcription over the ribosomal RNA genes, a process which we here show to be independent of the transcription elongation factor TEFM. Importantly, we now demonstrate that MTERF1 arrests mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication with distinct polarity. The effect is explained by the ability of MTERF1 to act as a directional contrahelicase, blocking mtDNA unwinding by the mitochondrial helicase TWINKLE. This conclusion is also supported by in vivo evidence that MTERF1 stimulates TWINKLE pausing. We conclude that MTERF1 can direct polar replication fork arrest in mammalian mitochondria.Peer reviewe
Mental health priorities in Vietnam: a mixed-methods analysis
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The Mental Health Country Profile is a tool that was generated by the International Mental Health Policy and Services Project to inform policy makers, professionals and other key stakeholders about important issues which need to be considered in mental health policy development. The Mental Health Country Profile contains four domains, which include the mental health context, resources, provision and outcomes. We have aimed to generate a Mental Health Country Profile for Vietnam, in order to highlight the strengths and weaknesses of the Vietnamese mental health situation, in order to inform future reform efforts and decision-making.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This study used snowball sampling to identify informants for generating a Mental Health Country Profile for Vietnam, and the data gathering was done through semi-structured interviews and collection of relevant reports and documents. The material from the interviews and documents was analysed according to qualitative content analysis.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Marked strengths of the Vietnam mental health system are the aims to move toward community management and detection of mental illness, and the active involvement of several multilateral organizations and NGOs. However, there are a number of shortages still found, including the lack of treatment interventions apart from medications, the high proportion of treatments to be paid out-of-pocket, prominence of large tertiary psychiatric hospitals, and a lack of preventative measures or mental health information to the public.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>At the end of this decade, mental health care in Vietnam is still characterised by unclear policy and poor critical mass especially within the governmental sector. This initial attempt to map the mental health situation of Vietnam suffers from a number of limitations and should be seen as a first step towards a comprehensive profile.</p
Dimensionally reduced gravity theories are asymptotically safe
4D Einstein gravity coupled to scalars and abelian gauge fields in its
2-Killing vector reduction is shown to be quasi-renormalizable to all loop
orders at the expense of introducing infinitely many essential couplings. The
latter can be combined into one or two functions of the `area radius'
associated with the two Killing vectors. The renormalization flow of these
couplings is governed by beta functionals expressible in closed form in terms
of the (one coupling) beta function of a symmetric space sigma-model.
Generically the matter coupled systems are asymptotically safe, that is the
flow possesses a non-trivial UV stable fixed point at which the trace anomaly
vanishes. The main exception is a minimal coupling of 4D Einstein gravity to
massless free scalars, in which case the scalars decouple from gravity at the
fixed point.Comment: 47 pages, Latex, 1 figur
Lifespan psychomotor behaviour profiles of multigenerational prenatal stress and artificial food dye effects in rats
Sherpa Romeo green journal, open accessThe consumption of artificial food dye (AFD) during childhood and adolescence has been linked to behavioural changes,
such as hyperactivity. It is possible that the vulnerability to AFDs is modified by prenatal stress. Common consequences of
prenatal stress include hyperactivity, thus potentially leading to synergistic actions with AFDs. Here, we investigated the
compounding effect of multigenerational prenatal stress (MPS) and AFD consumption on the development of hyperactivity
and anxiety-related behaviours across the lifespan in male rats. MPS treatment involved a family history of four consecutive
generations of prenatal stress (F4 generation). AFD treatment included a 4%-concentration of FD&C Red 40, FD&C Yellow 5,
FD&C Yellow 6, and FD&C Blue 1 in the drinking water from postnatal days 22 to 50 to resemble juvenile and adolescent
dietary exposure. Using several exploration tasks, animals were tested in motor activity and anxiety-like behaviours from
adolescence to 13 months of age. MPS resulted in hyperactivity both early (50 days) and later in life (13 months), with
normalized activity patterns at reproductive age. AFD consumption resulted in hyperactivity during consumption, which
subsided following termination of treatment. Notably, both MPS and AFD promoted risk-taking behaviour in young adults
(3 months). There were few synergistic effects between MPS and AFD in this study. The findings suggest that AFDs exert the
most noticeable effects at the time of exposure. MPS, however, results in a characteristic lifespan profile of behavioural
changes, indicating that development and aging represent particularly vulnerable periods in life during which a family
history of prenatal stress may precipitate.Ye
Is Quantum Einstein Gravity Nonperturbatively Renormalizable?
We find considerable evidence supporting the conjecture that four-dimensional
Quantum Einstein Gravity is ``asymptotically safe'' in Weinberg's sense. This
would mean that the theory is likely to be nonperturbatively renormalizable and
thus could be considered a fundamental (rather than merely effective) theory
which is mathematically consistent and predictive down to arbitrarily small
length scales. For a truncated version of the exact flow equation of the
effective average action we establish the existence of a non-Gaussian
renormalization group fixed point which is suitable for the construction of a
nonperturbative infinite cutoff-limit. The truncation ansatz includes the
Einstein-Hilbert action and a higher derivative term.Comment: 18 pages, latex, 3 figure
- …