3,001 research outputs found
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Variations in the oxygen three-isotope terrestrial fractionation line revealed by an inter-laboratory comparison of silicate mineral analyses
An inter-laboratory comparison of analytical results for the slopes of Terrestrial Fractionation Lines (TFL) measured on a group of quartz and a separate group of garnet samples shows good agreement between laboratories. However, the slopes of the TFL’s for each mineral group differ slightly
Basic properties of nonsmooth Hormander's vector fields and Poincare's inequality
We consider a family of vector fields defined in some bounded domain of R^p,
and we assume that they satisfy Hormander's rank condition of some step r, and
that their coefficients have r-1 continuous derivatives. We extend to this
nonsmooth context some results which are well-known for smooth Hormander's
vector fields, namely: some basic properties of the distance induced by the
vector fields, the doubling condition, Chow's connectivity theorem, and, under
the stronger assumption that the coefficients belong to C^{r-1,1}, Poincare's
inequality. By known results, these facts also imply a Sobolev embedding. All
these tools allow to draw some consequences about second order differential
operators modeled on these nonsmooth Hormander's vector fields.Comment: 60 pages, LaTeX; Section 6 added and Section 7 (6 in the previous
version) changed. Some references adde
Harnack inequality for fractional sub-Laplacians in Carnot groups
In this paper we prove an invariant Harnack inequality on
Carnot-Carath\'eodory balls for fractional powers of sub-Laplacians in Carnot
groups. The proof relies on an "abstract" formulation of a technique recently
introduced by Caffarelli and Silvestre. In addition, we write explicitly the
Poisson kernel for a class of degenerate subelliptic equations in product-type
Carnot groups
Approximations of Sobolev norms in Carnot groups
This paper deals with a notion of Sobolev space introduced by
J.Bourgain, H.Brezis and P.Mironescu by means of a seminorm involving local
averages of finite differences. This seminorm was subsequently used by A.Ponce
to obtain a Poincar\'e-type inequality. The main results that we present are a
generalization of these two works to a non-Euclidean setting, namely that of
Carnot groups. We show that the seminorm expressd in terms of the intrinsic
distance is equivalent to the norm of the intrinsic gradient, and provide
a Poincar\'e-type inequality on Carnot groups by means of a constructive
approach which relies on one-dimensional estimates. Self-improving properties
are also studied for some cases of interest
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Iron Oxide Grains in Stardust Track 121 Grains as Evidence of Comet Wild 2 Hydrothermal Alteration
Stardust Track 121 terminal grains contain Fe-oxide. These are consistent with the presence of hydrothermal alteration on the Comet Wild 2 parent body
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Oxygen isotopic constraints on the origin and parent bodies of eucrites, howardites, and diogenites
Harnack inequality and regularity for degenerate quasilinear elliptic equations
We prove Harnack inequality and local regularity results for weak solutions
of a quasilinear degenerate equation in divergence form under natural growth
conditions. The degeneracy is given by a suitable power of a strong
weight. Regularity results are achieved under minimal assumptions on the
coefficients and, as an application, we prove local estimates
for solutions of a degenerate equation in non divergence form
Skeletal muscle remodeling in response to eccentric vs. concentric loading: morphological, molecular, and metabolic adaptations
Skeletal muscle contracts either by shortening or lengthening (concentrically or eccentrically, respectively); however, the two contractions substantially differ from one another in terms of mechanisms of force generation, maximum force production and energy cost. It is generally known that eccentric action s generate greater force than isometric and concentric contractions and at a lower metabolic cost. Hence, by virtue of the greater mechanical loading involved in active lengthening, eccentric resistance training (ECC RT) is assumed to produce greater hypertrophy than concentric resistance training (CON RT). Nonetheless, prevalence of either ECC RT or CON RT in inducing gains in muscle mass is still an open issue, with some studies reporting greater hypertrophy with eccentric, some with concentric and some with similar hypertrophy within both training modes. Recent observations suggest that such hypertrophic responses to lengthening vs. shortening contractions are achieved by different adaptations in muscle architecture. Whilst the changes in muscle protein synthesis in response to acute and chronic concentric and eccentric exercise bouts seem very similar, the molecular mechanisms regulating the myogenic adaptations to the two distinct loading stimuli are still incompletely understood. Thus, the present review aims to, (a) critically discuss the literature on the contribution of eccentric vs. concentric loading to muscular hypertrophy and structural remodeling, and, (b) clarify the molecular mechanisms that may regulate such adaptations. We conclude that, when matched for either maximum load or work, similar increase in muscle size is found between ECC and CON RT. However, such hypertrophic changes appear to be achieved through distinct structural adaptations, which may be regulated by different myogenic and molecular responses observed between lengthening and shortening contractions
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Oxygen isotopic and petrological constraints on the origin and relationship of IIE iron meteorites and H chondrites
New oxygen isotopic measurements of IIEs and H chondrites are indistinguishable — strengthening a possible common origin for these groups. Combining oxygen results with mineralogy, the nature of their parent body or bodies can be explored
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