2,587 research outputs found
Discovery of seven T Tauri stars and a brown dwarf candidate in the nearby TW Hydrae Association
We report the discovery of five T Tauri star systems, two of which are
resolved binaries, in the vicinity of the nearest known region of recent star
formation, the TW Hydrae Association. The newly discovered systems display the
same signatures of youth (namely high X-ray flux, large Li abundance and strong
chromospheric activity) and the same proper motion as the original five
members. These similarities firmly establish the group as a bona fide T Tauri
association, unique in its proximity to Earth and its complete isolation from
any known molecular clouds.
At an age of ~10 Myr and a distance of ~50 pc, the association members are
excellent candidates for future studies of circumstellar disk dissipation and
the formation of brown dwarfs and planets. Indeed, as an example, our speckle
imaging revealed a faint, very likely companion 2" north of CoD-33 7795 (TWA
5). Its color and brightness suggest a spectral type ~M8.5 which, at an age of
~10^7 years, implies a mass ~20 M(Jupiter).Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures and 1 table. AAS LaTeX aas2pp4.sty. To be
published in Ap
Gas and Dust Emission at the Outer Edge of Protoplanetary Disks
We investigate the apparent discrepancy between gas and dust outer radii
derived from millimeter observations of protoplanetary disks. Using 230 and 345
GHz continuum and CO J=3-2 data from the Submillimeter Array for four nearby
disk systems (HD 163296, TW Hydrae, GM Aurigae, and MWC 480), we examine models
of circumstellar disk structure and the effects of their treatment of the outer
disk edge. We show that for these disks, models described by power laws in
surface density and temperature that are truncated at an outer radius are
incapable of reproducing both the gas and dust emission simultaneously: the
outer radius derived from the dust continuum emission is always significantly
smaller than the extent of the molecular gas disk traced by CO emission.
However, a simple model motivated by similarity solutions of the time evolution
of accretion disks that includes a tapered exponential edge in the surface
density distribution (and the same number of free parameters) does much better
at reproducing both the gas and dust emission. While this analysis does not
rule out the disparate radii implied by the truncated power-law models, a
realistic alternative disk model, grounded in the physics of accretion,
provides a consistent picture for the extent of both the gas and dust.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Gene methylation profiles of normal mucosa, and benign and malignant colorectal tumors identify early onset markers
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Multiple epigenetic and genetic changes have been reported in colorectal tumors, but few of these have clinical impact. This study aims to pinpoint epigenetic markers that can discriminate between non-malignant and malignant tissue from the large bowel, i.e. markers with diagnostic potential.</p> <p>The methylation status of eleven genes (<it>ADAMTS1</it>, <it>CDKN2A</it>, <it>CRABP1</it>, <it>HOXA9</it>, <it>MAL</it>, <it>MGMT</it>, <it>MLH1</it>, <it>NR3C1</it>, <it>PTEN</it>, <it>RUNX3</it>, and <it>SCGB3A1</it>) was determined in 154 tissue samples including normal mucosa, adenomas, and carcinomas of the colorectum. The gene-specific and widespread methylation status among the carcinomas was related to patient gender and age, and microsatellite instability status. Possible CIMP tumors were identified by comparing the methylation profile with microsatellite instability (MSI), <it>BRAF</it>-, <it>KRAS</it>-, and <it>TP53 </it>mutation status.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The mean number of methylated genes per sample was 0.4 in normal colon mucosa from tumor-free individuals, 1.2 in mucosa from cancerous bowels, 2.2 in adenomas, and 3.9 in carcinomas. Widespread methylation was found in both adenomas and carcinomas. The promoters of <it>ADAMTS1</it>, <it>MAL</it>, and <it>MGMT </it>were frequently methylated in benign samples as well as in malignant tumors, independent of microsatellite instability. In contrast, normal mucosa samples taken from bowels without tumor were rarely methylated for the same genes. Hypermethylated <it>CRABP1, MLH1</it>, <it>NR3C1</it>, <it>RUNX3</it>, and <it>SCGB3A1 </it>were shown to be identifiers of carcinomas with microsatellite instability. In agreement with the CIMP concept, MSI and mutated <it>BRAF </it>were associated with samples harboring hypermethylation of several target genes.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Methylated <it>ADAMTS1</it>, <it>MGMT</it>, and <it>MAL </it>are suitable as markers for early tumor detection.</p
Non- symmetric braneworlds in scalar tensorial gravity
We obtain, via the Gauss-Codazzi formalism, the expression of the effective
Einstein-Brans-Dicke projected equations in a non- symmetric
braneworld scenario which presents hybrid compactification. It is shown that
the functional form of such equations resembles the one in the Einstein's case,
except by the fact that they bring extra informations in the context of exotic
compactifications.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX file, no figures. Accepted for publication in the
European Physical Journal
Identification of an epigenetic biomarker panel with high sensitivity and specificity for colorectal cancer and adenomas
Background
The presence of cancer-specific DNA methylation patterns in epithelial colorectal cells in human feces provides the prospect of a simple, non-invasive screening test for colorectal cancer and its precursor, the adenoma. This study investigates a panel of epigenetic markers for the detection of colorectal cancer and adenomas.
Methods
Candidate biomarkers were subjected to quantitative methylation analysis in test sets of tissue samples from colorectal cancers, adenomas, and normal colonic mucosa. All findings were verified in independent clinical validation series. A total of 523 human samples were included in the study. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was used to evaluate the performance of the biomarker panel.
Results
Promoter hypermethylation of the genes CNRIP1, FBN1, INA, MAL, SNCA, and SPG20 was frequent in both colorectal cancers (65-94%) and adenomas (35-91%), whereas normal mucosa samples were rarely (0-5%) methylated. The combined sensitivity of at least two positives among the six markers was 94% for colorectal cancers and 93% for adenoma samples, with a specificity of 98%. The resulting areas under the ROC curve were 0.984 for cancers and 0.968 for adenomas versus normal mucosa.
Conclusions
The novel epigenetic marker panel shows very high sensitivity and specificity for both colorectal cancers and adenomas. Our findings suggest this biomarker panel to be highly suitable for early tumor detection
From Dirac spinor fields to ELKO
Dual-helicity eigenspinors of the charge conjugation operator (ELKO spinor
fields) belong, together with Majorana spinor fields, to a wider class of
spinor fields, the so-called flagpole spinor fields, corresponding to the class
(5), according to Lounesto spinor field classification based on the relations
and values taken by their associated bilinear covariants. There exists only six
such disjoint classes: the first three corresponding to Dirac spinor fields,
and the other three respectively corresponding to flagpole, flag-dipole and
Weyl spinor fields. This paper is devoted to investigate and provide the
necessary and sufficient conditions to map Dirac spinor fields to ELKO, in
order to naturally extend the Standard Model to spinor fields possessing mass
dimension one. As ELKO is a prime candidate to describe dark matter, an
adequate and necessary formalism is introduced and developed here, to better
understand the algebraic, geometric and physical properties of ELKO spinor
fields, and their underlying relationship to Dirac spinor fields.Comment: 10 page
Monte Belo: caracterÃsticas da identidade regional para uma indicação geográfica de vinhos.
bitstream/CNPUV/9754/1/cir076.pdfDisponÃvel também no formato online
Reliability and Comparison of Some GEANT4-DNA Processes and Models for Proton Transportation: An Ultra-Thin Layer Study
This chapter presents a specific reliability study of some GEANT4-DNA (version 10.02.p01) processes and models for proton transportation considering ultra-thin layers (UTL). The Monte Carlo radiation transport validation is fundamental to guarantee the simulation results accuracy. However, sometimes this is impossible due to the lack of experimental data and, it is then that the reliability evaluation takes an important role. Geant4-DNA runs in an energy range that makes impossible, nowadays, to perform a proper microscopic validation (cross-sections and dynamic diffusion parameters) and allows very limited macroscopic reliability. The chemical damage cross-sections reliability (experiment versus simulation) is a way to verify the consistency of the simulation results which is presented for 2Â MeV incident protons beam on PMMA and PVC UTL. A comparison among different Geant4-DNA physics lists for incident protons beams from 2 to 20Â MeV, interacting with homogeneous water UTL (2 to 200Â nm) was performed. This comparison was evaluated for standard and five other optional physics lists considering radial and depth profiles of deposited energy as well as number of interactions and stopping power of the incident particle
First Observation of the Rare Decay Mode K-long -> e+ e-
In an experiment designed to search for and study very rare two-body decay
modes of the K-long, we have observed four examples of the decay K-long -> e+
e-, where the expected background is 0.17+-0.10 events. This observation
translates into a branching fraction of 8.7^{+5.7}_{-4.1} X 10^{-12},
consistent with recent theoretical predictions. This result represents by far
the smallest branching fraction yet measured in particle physics.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
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