682 research outputs found
Cosmic Dust Collection Facility: Scientific objectives and programmatic relations
The science objectives are summarized for the Cosmic Dust Collection Facility (CDCF) on Space Station Freedom and these objectives are related to ongoing science programs and mission planning within NASA. The purpose is to illustrate the potential of the CDCF project within the broad context of early solar system sciences that emphasize the study of primitive objects in state-of-the-art analytical and experimental laboratories on Earth. Current knowledge about the sources of cosmic dust and their associated orbital dynamics is examined, and the results are reviewed of modern microanalytical investigations of extraterrestrial dust particles collected on Earth. Major areas of scientific inquiry and uncertainty are identified and it is shown how CDCF will contribute to their solution. General facility and instrument concepts that need to be pursued are introduced, and the major development tasks that are needed to attain the scientific objectives of the CDCF project are identified
Measurement of air and nitrogen fluorescence light yields induced by electron beam for UHECR experiments
Most of the Ultra High Energy Cosmic Ray (UHECR) experiments and projects
(HiRes, AUGER, TA, EUSO, TUS,...) use air fluorescence to detect and measure
extensive air showers (EAS). The precise knowledge of the Fluorescence Light
Yield (FLY) is of paramount importance for the reconstruction of UHECR. The
MACFLY - Measurement of Air Cherenkov and Fluorescence Light Yield - experiment
has been designed to perform such FLY measurements. In this paper we will
present the results of FLY in the 290-440 nm wavelength range for dry air and
pure nitrogen, both excited by electrons with energy of 1.5 MeV, 20 GeV and 50
GeV. The experiment uses a 90Sr radioactive source for low energy measurement
and a CERN SPS electron beam for high energy. We find that the FLY is
proportional to the deposited energy (E_d) in the gas and we show that the air
fluorescence properties remain constant independently of the electron energy.
At the reference point: atmospheric dry air at 1013 hPa and 23C, the ratio
FLY/E_d=17.6 photon/MeV with a systematic error of 13.2%.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Integrable atomtronic interferometry
High sensitivity quantum interferometry requires more than just access to
entangled states. It is achieved through deep understanding of quantum
correlations in a system. Integrable models offer the framework to develop this
understanding. We communicate the design of interferometric protocols for an
integrable model that describes the interaction of bosons in a four-site
configuration. Analytic formulae for the quantum dynamics of certain
observables are computed. These expose the system's functionality as both an
interferometric identifier, and producer, of NOON states. Being equivalent to a
controlled-phase gate acting on two hybrid qudits, this system also highlights
an equivalence between Heisenberg-limited interferometry and quantum
information. These results are expected to open new avenues for
integrability-enhanced atomtronic technologies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Superresolution microscopy reveals a dynamic picture of cell polarity maintenance during directional growth
Polar (directional) cell growth, a key cellular mechanism shared among a wide range of species, relies on targeted insertion of new material at specific locations of the plasma membrane. How these cell polarity sites are stably maintained during massive membrane insertion has remained elusive. Conventional live-cell optical microscopy fails to visualize polarity site formation in the crowded cell membrane environment because of its limited resolution. We have used advanced live-cell imaging techniques to directly observe the localization, assembly, and disassembly processes of cell polarity sites with high spatiotemporal resolution in a rapidly growing filamentous fungus, Aspergillus nidulans. We show that the membrane-associated polarity site marker TeaR is transported on microtubules along with secretory vesicles and forms a protein cluster at that point of the apical membrane where the plus end of the microtubule touches. There, a small patch of membrane is added through exocytosis, and the TeaR cluster gets quickly dispersed over the membrane. There is an incessant disassembly and reassembly of polarity sites at the growth zone, and each new polarity site locus is slightly offset from preceding ones. On the basis of our imaging results and computational modeling, we propose a transient polarity model that explains how cell polarity is stably maintained during highly active directional growth
Wolf-Rayet and LBV Nebulae as the Result of Variable and Non-Spherical Stellar Winds
The physical basis for interpreting observations of nebular morphology around
massive stars in terms of the evolution of the central stars is reviewed, and
examples are discussed, including NGC 6888, OMC-1, and eta Carinae.Comment: To be published in the Proceedings of IAU Colloquium 169 on Variable
and Non-Spherical Stellar Winds in Luminous Hot Stars, ed. B. Wolf
(Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg). 7 pages, including 5 figures. A
full-resolution version of fig 4 is available in the version at
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/theory/preprints.html#maclo
The COBE Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment Search for the Cosmic Infrared Background: IV. Cosmological Implications
In this paper we examine the cosmological constraints of the recent DIRBE and
FIRAS detection of the extragalactic background light between 125-5000 microns
on the metal and star formation histories of the universe.Comment: 38 pages and 9 figures. Accepted for publications in The
Astrophysical Journa
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Combined transcriptomic-(1)H NMR metabonomic study reveals yhat monoethylhexyl phthalate stimulates adipogenesis and glyceroneogenesis in human adipocytes
Adipose tissue is a major storage site for lipophilic environmental contaminants. The environmental metabolic disruptor hypothesis postulates that some pollutants can promote obesity or metabolic disorders by activating nuclear receptors involved in the control of energetic homeostasis. In this context, monoethylhexyl phthalate (MEHP) is of particular concern since it was shown to activate the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) in 3T3-L1 murine preadipocytes. In the present work, we used an untargeted, combined transcriptomic-(1)H NMR-based metabonomic approach to describe the overall effect of MEHP on primary cultures of human subcutaneous adipocytes differentiated in vitro. MEHP stimulated rapidly and selectively the expression of genes involved in glyceroneogenesis, enhanced the expression of the cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and reduced fatty acid release. These results demonstrate that MEHP increased glyceroneogenesis and fatty acid reesterification in human adipocytes. A longer treatment with MEHP induced the expression of genes involved in triglycerides uptake, synthesis, and storage; decreased intracellular lactate, glutamine, and other amino acids; increased aspartate and NAD, and resulted in a global increase in triglycerides. Altogether, these results indicate that MEHP promoted the differentiation of human preadipocytes to adipocytes. These mechanisms might contribute to the suspected obesogenic effect of MEHP
Free induction signal from biexcitons and bound excitons
A theory of the free induction signal from biexcitons and bound excitons is
presented. The simultaneous existence of the exciton continuum and a bound
state is shown to result in a new type of time dependence of the free
induction. The optically detected signal increases in time and oscillates with
increasing amplitude until damped by radiative or dephasing processes.
Radiative decay is anomalously fast and can result in strong picosecond pulses.
The expanding area of a coherent exciton polarization (inflating antenna),
produced by the exciting pulse, is the underlying physical mechanism. The
developed formalism can be applied to different biexciton transients.Comment: RevTeX, 20 p. + 2 ps fig. To appear in Phys. Rev. B1
On the Dynamical Overstability of Radiative Blast Waves: The Atomic Physics of Shock Stability
Atomic physics calculations of radiative cooling are used to calculate
criteria for the overstability of radiating shocks. Our calculations explain
the measurement of shock overstability by Grun et al. and explain why the
overstability was not observed in other experiments. The methodology described
here can be especially useful in astrophysical situations where the relevant
properties leading to an overstability can be measured spectroscopically, but
the effective adiabatic index is harder to determine.Comment: 11 pages including 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical
Review Letter
Experimental Limit to Interstellar 244Pu Abundance
Short-lived nuclides, now extinct in the solar system, are expected to be
present in the interstellar medium (ISM). Grains of ISM origin were recently
discovered in the inner solar system and at Earth orbit and may accrete onto
Earth after ablation in the atmosphere. A favorable matrix for detection of
such extraterrestrial material is presented by deep open-sea sediments with
very low sedimentation rates (0.8-3 mm/kyr). We report here on the measurement
of Pu isotopic abundances in a 1-kg deep-sea dry sediment collected in 1992 in
the North Pacific. Our measured value of (3+-3)x10^5 244Pu atoms in the
Pu-separated fraction of the sample shows no excess over the expected
stratospheric nuclear fallout content and under reasonable assumptions we
derive a limit of 2x10^-11 g-244Pu/g-ISM for the abundance of 244Pu in ISM.Comment: 10 p, 1 fig, LateX(AASTeX) Accepted for publication in ApJL, aug 2,
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