12,091 research outputs found

    Transplacental transmission of field and rescued strains of BTV-2 and BTV-8 in experimentally infected sheep

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    Transplacental transmission of bluetongue virus has been shown previously for the North European strain of serotype 8 (BTV-8) and for tissue culture or chicken egg-adapted vaccine strains but not for field strains of other serotypes. In this study, pregnant ewes (6 per group) were inoculated with either field or rescued strains of BTV-2 and BTV-8 in order to determine the ability of these viruses to cross the placental barrier. The field BTV-2 and BTV-8 strains was passaged once in Culicoides KC cells and once in mammalian cells. All virus inoculated sheep became infected and seroconverted against the different BTV strains used in this study. BTV RNA was detectable in the blood of all but two ewes for over 28 days but infectious virus could only be detected in the blood for a much shorter period. Interestingly, transplacental transmission of BTV-2 (both field and rescued strains) was demonstrated at high efficiency (6 out of 13 lambs born to BTV-2 infected ewes) while only 1 lamb of 12 born to BTV-8 infected ewes showed evidence of in utero infection. In addition, evidence for horizontal transmission of BTV-2 between ewes was observed. As expected, the parental BTV-2 and BTV-8 viruses and the viruses rescued by reverse genetics showed very similar properties to each other. This study showed, for the first time, that transplacental transmission of BTV-2, which had been minimally passaged in cell culture, can occur; hence such transmission might be more frequent than previously thought

    Stochastic evolutions in superspace and superconformal field theory

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    Some stochastic evolutions of conformal maps can be described by SLE and may be linked to conformal field theory via stochastic differential equations and singular vectors in highest-weight modules of the Virasoro algebra. Here we discuss how this may be extended to superconformal maps of N=1 superspace with links to superconformal field theory and singular vectors of the N=1 superconformal algebra in the Neveu-Schwarz sector.Comment: 13 pages, LaTe

    Research study of some RAM antennas Final report, 18 Nov. 1964 - 18 Jun. 1965

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    Input impedance and radiation pattern determinations for cylindrical gap, waveguide excited and circular waveguide slot antenna array

    Quantum transport in carbon nanotubes

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    Carbon nanotubes are a versatile material in which many aspects of condensed matter physics come together. Recent discoveries, enabled by sophisticated fabrication, have uncovered new phenomena that completely change our understanding of transport in these devices, especially the role of the spin and valley degrees of freedom. This review describes the modern understanding of transport through nanotube devices. Unlike conventional semiconductors, electrons in nanotubes have two angular momentum quantum numbers, arising from spin and from valley freedom. We focus on the interplay between the two. In single quantum dots defined in short lengths of nanotube, the energy levels associated with each degree of freedom, and the spin-orbit coupling between them, are revealed by Coulomb blockade spectroscopy. In double quantum dots, the combination of quantum numbers modifies the selection rules of Pauli blockade. This can be exploited to read out spin and valley qubits, and to measure the decay of these states through coupling to nuclear spins and phonons. A second unique property of carbon nanotubes is that the combination of valley freedom and electron-electron interactions in one dimension strongly modifies their transport behaviour. Interaction between electrons inside and outside a quantum dot is manifested in SU(4) Kondo behavior and level renormalization. Interaction within a dot leads to Wigner molecules and more complex correlated states. This review takes an experimental perspective informed by recent advances in theory. As well as the well-understood overall picture, we also state clearly open questions for the field. These advances position nanotubes as a leading system for the study of spin and valley physics in one dimension where electronic disorder and hyperfine interaction can both be reduced to a very low level.Comment: In press at Reviews of Modern Physics. 68 pages, 55 figure

    Plant Biology and Biogeochemistry Department annual report 1998

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    The annual report from the Plant Biology and Biogeochemistry Department aims to provide a summary of our research and achievements and to give an idea of the research directions in the Department. The Department is engaged in research to establish the scientific basis for new methods in industrial and agricultural production. Through basic and applied experimental research, the Department aspires to develop methods and technology for industrial and agricultural production, exerting less stress and strain on the environment. The research approach in the Department is mainly experimental. In the autumn of 1997 it was decided to reorganize and expand the Department and in 1998 the Department includes six research programmes and special facilities. Selected departmental research activities during 1998 are introduced and reviewed in seven chapters: 1. Introduction, 2. Plant-Microbe Symbioses, 3. Plant Products and Recycling of Biomass, 4. DLF-Risø Biotechnology, 5. Plant Genetics and Epidemiology, 6. Biogeochemistry, 7. Plant Ecosystems and Nutrient Cycling. The Department’s contribution to education and training are presented. Lists of publications, papers accepted for publications, guest lectures, exchange of scientists, lectures and poster presentations at international meetings are included in the report. Names of the scientific and technical staff members, visiting scientists, Postdoctoral fellows, Ph.D. students, M.Sc. students and apprentices are also listed

    Aspects of Discrete Breathers and New Directions

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    We describe results concerning the existence proofs of Discrete Breathers (DBs) in the two classes of dynamical systems with optical linear phonons and with acoustic linear phonons. A standard approach is by continuation of DBs from an anticontinuous limit. A new approach, which is purely variational, is presented. We also review some numerical results on intraband DBs in random nonlinear systems. Some non-conventional physical applications of DBs are suggested. One of them is understanding slow relaxation properties of glassy materials. Another one concerns energy focusing and transport in biomolecules by targeted energy transfer of DBs. A similar theory could be used for describing targeted charge transfer of nonlinear electrons (polarons) and, more generally, for targeted transfer of several excitations (e.g. Davydov soliton).Comment: to appear in the Proceedings of NATO Advanced Research Workshop "Nonlinearity and Disorder: Theory and Applications", Tashkent,Uzbekistan,October 1-6, 200

    Structurally specific thermal fluctuations identify functional sites for DNA transcription

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    We report results showing that thermally-induced openings of double stranded DNA coincide with the location of functionally relevant sites for transcription. Investigating both viral and bacterial DNA gene promoter segments, we found that the most probable opening occurs at the transcription start site. Minor openings appear to be related to other regulatory sites. Our results suggest that coherent thermal fluctuations play an important role in the initiation of transcription. Essential elements of the dynamics, in addition to sequence specificity, are nonlinearity and entropy, provided by local base-pair constraints
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