6,245 research outputs found

    Solar cycle variation in solar f-mode frequencies and radius

    Get PDF
    Using data from the Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) covering the period from 1995 to 1998, we study the change with solar activity in solar f-mode frequencies. The results are compared with similar changes detected from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) data. We find variations in f-mode frequencies which are correlated with solar activity indices. If these changes are due to variation in solar radius then the implications are that the solar radius decreases by about 5 km from minimum to maximum activity.Comment: To appear in Solar Physic

    The tip of the iceberg: a giant pelvic atypical lipoma presenting as a sciatic hernia

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: This case report highlights two unusual surgical phenomena: lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcomas and sciatic hernias. It illustrates the need to be aware that hernias may not always simply contain intra-abdominal viscera. CASE PRESENTATION: A 36 year old woman presented with an expanding, yet reducible, right gluteal mass, indicative of a sciatic hernia. However, magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a large intra- and extra-pelvic fatty mass traversing the greater sciatic foramen. The tumour was surgically removed through an abdomino-perineal approach. Subsequent pathological examination revealed an atypical lipomatous tumour (synonym: lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcoma). The patient remains free from recurrence two years following her surgery. CONCLUSION: The presence of a gluteal mass should always suggest the possibility of a sciatic hernia. However, in this case, the hernia consisted of an atypical lipoma spanning the greater sciatic foramen. Although lipoma-like well-differentiated liposarcomas have only a low potential for recurrence, the variable nature of fatty tumours demands that patients require regular clinical and radiological review

    A radiographic study of pulp crown dimensions of the mandibular deciduous second molar

    Get PDF
    Aim The aim of this study was to assess the difference in crown and pulp area and dimensions of the mandibular deciduous second molar in males and female children using digitized images of bitewing radiographs and image JÂź. Materials and Methods Bitewing radiographs of 48 children (24 males and 24 females) aged 3.69 to 9.46 years were assessed in a retrospective cross sectional study. Bitewings were photographed and Image JÂź was used to measure crown and pulp area and some linear measurements. A t-test was used to compare the difference between mean dimensions in males and females. Results There were no statistically significant(p < 0.5) differences in the area (hard tissue with pulp and without pulp area) or in the horizontal (mesial distal crown width, pulp and crown width at cervix) or vertical (mesial and distal pulp horn height to occlusal surface) dimensions of this tooth between boys and girls. Conclusions There were no difference found in the area and linear measurements of the lower second molar between boys and girls

    Functional Locomotor Consequences of Uneven Forefeet for Trot Symmetry in Individual Riding Horses

    Get PDF
    ABSTRACT: Left-right symmetrical distal limb conformation can be an important prerequisite for a successful performance, and it is often hypothesized that asymmetric or uneven feet are important enhancing factors for the development of lameness. On a population level, it has been demonstrated that uneven footed horses are retiring earlier from elite level competition, but the biomechanical consequences are not yet known. The objectives of this study were to compare the functional locomotor asymmetries of horses with uneven to those with even feet. Hoof kinetics and distal limb kinematics were collected from horses (n = 34) at trot. Dorsal hoof wall angle was used to classify horses as even or uneven (1.5° difference between forefeet respectively) and individual feet as flat (55°). Functional kinetic parameters were compared between even and uneven forefeet using MANOVA followed by ANOVA. The relative influences of differences in hoof angle between the forefeet and of absolute hoof angle on functional parameters were analysed using multiple regression analysis (P<0.05). In horses with uneven feet, the side with the flatter foot showed a significantly larger maximal horizontal braking and vertical ground reaction force, a larger vertical fetlock displacement and a suppler fetlock spring. The foot with a steeper hoof angle was linearly correlated with an earlier braking-propulsion transition. The conformational differences between both forefeet were more important for loading characteristics than the individual foot conformation of each individual horse. The differences in vertical force and braking force between uneven forefeet could imply either an asymmetrical loading pattern without a pathological component or a subclinical lameness as a result of a pathological development in the steeper foot

    Isolation and expression of the human gametocyte-specific factor 1 gene (GTSF1) in fetal ovary, oocytes, and preimplantation embryos

    Get PDF
    Purpose: Gametocyte-specific factor 1 has been shown in other species to be required for the silencing of retrotransposons via the Piwi-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway. In this study, we aimed to isolate and assess expression of transcripts of the gametocyte-specific factor 1 (GTSF1) gene in the human female germline and in preimplantation embryos. Methods: Complementary DNA (cDNA) libraries from human fetal ovaries and testes, human oocytes and preimplantation embryos and ovarian follicles isolated from an adult ovarian cortex biopsy were used to as templates for PCR, cloning and sequencing, and real time PCR experiments of GTSF1 expression. Results: GTSF1 cDNA clones that covered the entire coding region were isolated from human oocytes and preimplantation embryos. GTSF1 mRNA expression was detected in archived cDNAs from staged human ovarian follicles, germinal vesicle (GV) stage oocytes, metaphase II oocytes, and morula and blastocyst stage preimplantation embryos. Within the adult female germline, expression was highest in GV oocytes. GTSF1 mRNA expression was also assessed in human fetal ovary and was observed to increase during gestation, from 8 to 21 weeks, during which time oogonia enter meiosis and primordial follicle formation first occurs. In human fetal testis, GTSF1 expression also increased from 8 to 19 weeks. Conclusions: To our knowledge, this report is the first to describe the expression of the human GTSF1 gene in human gametes and preimplantation embryos

    Spectrum and Thermodynamics of the one-dimensional supersymmetric t-J model with 1/r21/r^2 exchange and hopping

    Get PDF
    We derive the spectrum and the thermodynamics of the one-dimensional supersymmetric t-J model with long range hopping and spin exchange using a set of maximal-spin eigenstates. This spectrum confirms the recent conjecture that the asymptotic Bethe-ansatz spectrum is exact. By empirical determining the spinon degeneracies of each state, we are able to explicitly construct the free energy.Comment: 13 pages, Latex, (published in PRB46, 6639 (1992)

    A Global SU(5) F-theory model with Wilson line breaking

    Full text link
    We engineer compact SU(5) Grand Unified Theories in F-theory in which GUT-breaking is achieved by a discrete Wilson line. Because the internal gauge field is flat, these models avoid the high scale threshold corrections associated with hypercharge flux. Along the way, we exemplify the `local-to-global' approach in F-theory model building and demonstrate how the Tate divisor formalism can be used to address several challenges of extending local models to global ones. These include in particular the construction of G-fluxes that extend non-inherited bundles and the engineering of U(1) symmetries. We go beyond chirality computations and determine the precise (charged) massless spectrum, finding exactly three families of quarks and leptons but excessive doublet and/or triplet pairs in the Higgs sector (depending on the example) and vector-like exotics descending from the adjoint of SU(5)_{GUT}. Understanding why vector-like pairs persist in the Higgs sector without an obvious symmetry to protect them may shed light on new solutions to the mu problem in F-theory GUTs.Comment: 95 pages (71 pages + 1 Appendix); v2 references added, minor correction

    Initial/boundary-value problems of tumor growth within a host tissue

    Full text link
    This paper concerns multiphase models of tumor growth in interaction with a surrounding tissue, taking into account also the interplay with diffusible nutrients feeding the cells. Models specialize in nonlinear systems of possibly degenerate parabolic equations, which include phenomenological terms related to specific cell functions. The paper discusses general modeling guidelines for such terms, as well as for initial and boundary conditions, aiming at both biological consistency and mathematical robustness of the resulting problems. Particularly, it addresses some qualitative properties such as a priori nonnegativity, boundedness, and uniqueness of the solutions. Existence of the solutions is studied in the one-dimensional time-independent case.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figure
    • 

    corecore