2,067 research outputs found
Quantum Geometry and Diffusion
We study the diffusion equation in two-dimensional quantum gravity, and show
that the spectral dimension is two despite the fact that the intrinsic
Hausdorff dimension of the ensemble of two-dimensional geometries is very
different from two. We determine the scaling properties of the quantum gravity
averaged diffusion kernel.Comment: latex2e, 10 pages, 4 figure
Involvement of (pro)renin receptor in the glomerular filtration barrier
(Pro)renin receptor-bound prorenin not only causes the generation of angiotensin II via the nonproteolytic activation of prorenin, it also activates the receptor’s own intracellular signaling pathways independent of the generated angiotensin II. Within the kidneys, the (pro)renin receptor is not only present in the glomerular mesangium, it is also abundant in podocytes, which play an important role in the maintenance of the glomerular filtration barrier. Recent in vivo studies have demonstrated that the overexpression of the (pro)renin receptor to a degree similar to that observed in hypertensive rat kidneys leads to slowly progressive nephropathy with proteinuria. In addition, the handle region peptide, which acts as a decoy peptide and competitively inhibits the binding of prorenin to the receptor, is more beneficial than an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor with regard to alleviating proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis in experimental animal models of diabetes and essential hypertension. Thus, the (pro)renin receptor may be upregulated in podocytes under hypertensive conditions and may contribute to the breakdown of the glomerular filtration barrier
On the Large Time Behavior of Solutions of Hamilton-Jacobi Equations Associated with Nonlinear Boundary Conditions
In this article, we study the large time behavior of solutions of first-order
Hamilton-Jacobi Equations, set in a bounded domain with nonlinear Neumann
boundary conditions, including the case of dynamical boundary conditions. We
establish general convergence results for viscosity solutions of these
Cauchy-Neumann problems by using two fairly different methods : the first one
relies only on partial differential equations methods, which provides results
even when the Hamiltonians are not convex, and the second one is an optimal
control/dynamical system approach, named the "weak KAM approach" which requires
the convexity of Hamiltonians and gives formulas for asymptotic solutions based
on Aubry-Mather sets
BactMAP:An R package for integrating, analyzing and visualizing bacterial microscopy data
High-throughput analyses of single-cell microscopy data are a critical tool within the field of bacterial cell biology. Several programs have been developed to specifically segment bacterial cells from phase-contrast images. Together with spot and object detection algorithms, these programs offer powerful approaches to quantify observations from microscopy data, ranging from cell-to-cell genealogy to localization and movement of proteins. Most segmentation programs contain specific post-processing and plotting options, but these options vary between programs and possibilities to optimize or alter the outputs are often limited. Therefore, we developed BactMAP (Bacterial toolbox for Microscopy Analysis & Plotting), a command-line based R package that allows researchers to transform cell segmentation and spot detection data generated by different programs into various plots. Furthermore, BactMAP makes it possible to perform custom analyses and change the layout of the output. Because BactMAP works independently of segmentation and detection programs, inputs from different sources can be compared within the same analysis pipeline. BactMAP complies with standard practice in R which enables the use of advanced statistical analysis tools, and its graphic output is compatible with ggplot2, enabling adjustable plot graphics in every operating system. User feedback will be used to create a fully automated Graphical User Interface version of BactMAP in the future. Using BactMAP, we visualize key cell cycle parameters in Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus, and demonstrate that the DNA replication forks in Streptococcus pneumoniae dissociate and associate before splitting of the cell, after the Z-ring is formed at the new quarter positions. BactMAP is available from https://veeninglab.com/bactmap
Complete Set of Polarization Transfer Observables for the Reaction at 296 MeV and 0
A complete set of polarization transfer observables has been measured for the
reaction at and . The total spin transfer and the observable
deduced from the measured polarization transfer observables indicate that
the spin--dipole resonance at has greater
strength than strength, which is consistent with recent experimental and
theoretical studies. The results also indicate a predominance of the spin-flip
and unnatural-parity transition strength in the continuum. The exchange tensor
interaction at a large momentum transfer of is
discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Three-body dN interaction in the analysis of the 12C(pol_d,d') reaction at 270 MeV
We have measured the cross sections and analyzing powers Ay and Ayy for the
elastic and inelastic scattering of deuterons from the 0+(g.s.), 2+(4.44 MeV),
3-(9.64 MeV), 1+(12.71 MeV), and 2-(18.3 MeV) states in 12C at an incident
energy of 270 MeV. The data are compared with microscopic distorted-wave
impulse approximation calculations where the projectile-nucleon effective
interactionis taken from the three-nucleon t-matrix given by rigorous Faddeev
calculations presently available at intermediate energies. The agreement
between theory and data compares well with that for the (p,p') reactions at
comparable incident energies/nucleon.Comment: 17 pages, 3 Postscript figure
Design and fabrication of module coil as an R&D program for Large Helical Device
A twisted solenoid coil (TOKI-MC) has been designed and fabricated in order to study the mechanical properties of the Large Helical Device (LHD). One of the most important R&D items of the LHD is the mechanical behavior of the helical coils under a large electromagnetic force. The TOKI-MC was wound obliquely on the 3D-machined elliptical bobbin with a maximum torsional rate of 36deg/m at the innermost conductor. The maximum field in the coil is 7.7 T with an operating current of 20 kA, an average current density of 40 A/mm^2, and a stored energy of 11 MJ. The TOKI-MC can simulate the electromagnetic force, conductor torsional rate, magnetic field, operating current, and current density of the LHD superconducting helical coils. The design and test results of the conductor and the design and fabrication of the coil are describe
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