197 research outputs found

    Hybrid resonance of Maxwell's equations in slab geometry

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    Hybrid resonance is a physical mechanism for the heating of a magnetic plasma. In our context hybrid resonance is a solution of the time harmonic Maxwell's equations with smooth coefficients, where the dielectric tensor is a non diagonal hermitian matrix. The main part of this work is dedicated to the construction and analysis of a mathematical solution of the hybrid resonance with the limit absorption principle. We prove that the limit solution is singular: it is constituted of a Dirac mass at the origin plus a principle value and a smooth square integrable function. The formula obtained for the plasma heating is directly related to the singularity.Comment: This published version has been edited to improve the presentation of the result

    Mise en place d'un packaging 3D collectif de composants de puissance à structure verticale

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    International audienceNous présentons dans ce papier l'état d'avancement d'une approche d'assemblage collectif en 3D de modules électroniques de puissance, basée sur des étapes technologiques de fabrication à l'échelle de la plaque (200 mm de diamètre dans notre cas). Le concept repose sur l'intégration des étapes de packaging dans la fabrication front-end des composants. C'est une démarche globale de conception couplée composant-package. Cela inclut la conception des composants, les interconnexions, la fabrication et l'assemblage de toutes les parties. Les étapes spécifiques de fabrication de composants fonctionnels ainsi que celles conduisant à la réalisation d'un leadframe métallique sont décrites ici, comme des éléments clés de l'approche de packaging collectif de modules de puissance

    In Vitro Reconstitution of SARS-Coronavirus mRNA Cap Methylation

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    SARS-coronavirus (SARS-CoV) genome expression depends on the synthesis of a set of mRNAs, which presumably are capped at their 5′ end and direct the synthesis of all viral proteins in the infected cell. Sixteen viral non-structural proteins (nsp1 to nsp16) constitute an unusually large replicase complex, which includes two methyltransferases putatively involved in viral mRNA cap formation. The S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet)-dependent (guanine-N7)-methyltransferase (N7-MTase) activity was recently attributed to nsp14, whereas nsp16 has been predicted to be the AdoMet-dependent (nucleoside-2′O)-methyltransferase. Here, we have reconstituted complete SARS-CoV mRNA cap methylation in vitro. We show that mRNA cap methylation requires a third viral protein, nsp10, which acts as an essential trigger to complete RNA cap-1 formation. The obligate sequence of methylation events is initiated by nsp14, which first methylates capped RNA transcripts to generate cap-0 7MeGpppA-RNAs. The latter are then selectively 2′O-methylated by the 2′O-MTase nsp16 in complex with its activator nsp10 to give rise to cap-1 7MeGpppA2′OMe-RNAs. Furthermore, sensitive in vitro inhibition assays of both activities show that aurintricarboxylic acid, active in SARS-CoV infected cells, targets both MTases with IC50 values in the micromolar range, providing a validated basis for anti-coronavirus drug design

    Cognitive fatigue assessment in operational settings: a review and UAS implications

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    Recent technological improvements allow UAS (Unmanned Aircraft System) operators to carry out increasingly long missions. Shift work was introduced during long-endurance missions to reduce the risk of fatigue. However, despite these short work periods and the creation of a fatigue risk management system (FRMS), the occurrence of intense and monotonous phases remains a factor of cognitive fatigue. This fatigue can have an impact on vigilance, attention, and operator performance, leading to reduce mission safety. This paper aims at presenting different ways to characterize the cognitive fatigue of UAS operators. The use of machine learning to estimate cognitive fatigue based on physiological measures is also presented as a promising venue to mitigate these issues

    Utilisation des données Google Street View pour cartographier la distribution géographique des espèces. Une étude préliminaire de la processionnaire du pin (Thaumetopoea pityocampa)

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    Article publié suite à l'événement : MEDINSECT 3 ; Hammamet-Tunis (Tunisie) - (2012-05-08 - 2012-05-11).Mapping species distribution is an important and useful task to monitor invasive species spread or native species expansion under climate change. Unfortunately it requires a lot of occurrence data that are not easily available from literature and that are very time-consuming to collect in the field. For that reason, we designed a survey with the aim to explore to which extent large-scale databases such as Google Street View could be used to derive valid occurrence data. We worked with an insect species, the Pine Processionary Moth (PPM) Thaumetopoea pityocampa because the larvae of that moth build silk nests on its host tree that are easily visible. The presence of the species at one location can therefore be inferred from visual records derived from the panoramic views available from Google Street View. We designed a standardized procedure allowing the evaluation of the presence of the PPM on a large sampling grid (covering 46 848 km2) located in France. Field sampling has been conducted in parallel, which allowed a straightforward comparison between field and Google-derived datasets. Data derived from Google Street View were highly similar to field data as we found an accuracy (percentage of field values correctly predicted using Google Street View) of 92.9%. We conclude that Google database might provide useful occurrence data for mapping the distribution of species which presence can be visually evaluated such as the PPM. More data are needed, however, to assess the range of spatial scales at which Google Street View actually provides reliable occurrence data.La cartographie de la distribution géographique des espèces est importante pour suivre l’évolution des aires de distribution d’espèces invasives ou d’espèces natives en expansion géographique. Malheureusement, les données nécessaires sont parfois difficilement accessibles à partir de la littérature et sont coûteuses à collecter sur le terrain. Pour cette raison, nous avons conçu une étude dans le but d'explorer dans quelle mesure il est possible d’utiliser les bases de données telles que Google Street View (GSV) pour obtenir des données d’occurrence valides. Nous avons choisi de travailler avec une espèce d’insecte, la chenille processionnaire du pin (PP) Thaumetopoea pityocampa car les larves de cette espèce se développent dans le feuillage des arbres hôtes et tissent un nid blanc aisément visible. La présence de l'espèce dans un site donné peut donc être facilement renseignée en examinant les vues panoramiques disponibles pour de nombreuses localités dans la base de données de Google Street View. Nous avons conçu une procédure standardisée permettant d'évaluer la présence de la PP à partir des données GSV et nous l’avons mise en oeuvre sur une aire d’étude couvrant 46 848 km2dans la région Centre en France. La distribution de l’espèce a également été décrite à l’aide d’échantillonnages réalisés sur le terrain. Les données issues de l’examen des images Google Street View ont été comparées aux données de terrain et se sont révélées de bons estimateurs de la présence de la processionnaire du pin avec une précision (proportion de valeurs correctement estimées) de 92.9% sur notre zone d’étude pour un maillage de 16 km x 16 km. Ces résultats suggèrent que l’exploitation des bases de données de GSV pourrait permettre de produire des données écologiques intéressantes pour les espèces dont la présence peut être estimée visuellement à partir de photographies. Des études complémentaires sont cependant nécessaires pour mieux cerner la gamme d’échelles spatiales auxquelles GSV fournit des données d’occurrence fiables

    Splenic infarction during Plasmodium ovale acute malaria: first case reported

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    The splenic complications of acute malaria include two different prognostic and treatment entities: splenic infarction and splenic rupture. This is the first case of splenic infarction during an acute malaria due to Plasmodium ovale in a 34-year-old man. As in the majority other described cases of splenic infarction, the course was spontaneously favourable, suggesting that this complication was relatively benign compared to splenic rupture, which is life-threatening and usually necessitating surgery

    PetaFlow: a global computing-networking-visualisation unitwith social impact

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    International audienceThe PetaFlow application aims to contribute to the use of high performance computational resources forthe benefit of society. To this goal the emergence of adequate information and communication technologies withrespect to high performance computing-networking-visualisation and their mutual awareness is required. Thedeveloped technology and algorithms are presented and applied to a real global peta-scale data intensive scientificproblem with social and medical importance, i.e. human upper airflow modelling

    Crystal Structure and Functional Analysis of the SARS-Coronavirus RNA Cap 2′-O-Methyltransferase nsp10/nsp16 Complex

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    Cellular and viral S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferases are involved in many regulated processes such as metabolism, detoxification, signal transduction, chromatin remodeling, nucleic acid processing, and mRNA capping. The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus nsp16 protein is a S-adenosylmethionine-dependent (nucleoside-2′-O)-methyltransferase only active in the presence of its activating partner nsp10. We report the nsp10/nsp16 complex structure at 2.0 Å resolution, which shows nsp10 bound to nsp16 through a ∼930 Å2 surface area in nsp10. Functional assays identify key residues involved in nsp10/nsp16 association, and in RNA binding or catalysis, the latter likely through a SN2-like mechanism. We present two other crystal structures, the inhibitor Sinefungin bound in the S-adenosylmethionine binding pocket and the tighter complex nsp10(Y96F)/nsp16, providing the first structural insight into the regulation of RNA capping enzymes in (+)RNA viruses

    The French national prospective cohort of patients co-infected with HIV and HCV (ANRS CO13 HEPAVIH): Early findings, 2006-2010

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In France, it is estimated that 24% of HIV-infected patients are also infected with HCV. Longitudinal studies addressing clinical and public health questions related to HIV-HCV co-infection (HIV-HCV clinical progression and its determinants including genetic dimension, patients' experience with these two diseases and their treatments) are limited. The ANRS CO 13 HEPAVIH cohort was set up to explore these critical questions.</p> <p>To describe the cohort aims and organization, monitoring and data collection procedures, baseline characteristics, as well as follow-up findings to date.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Inclusion criteria in the cohort were: age > 18 years, HIV-1 infection, chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection or sustained response to HCV treatment. A standardized medical questionnaire collecting socio-demographic, clinical, biological, therapeutic, histological, ultrasound and endoscopic data is administered at enrolment, then every six months for cirrhotic patients or yearly for non-cirrhotic patients. Also, a self-administered questionnaire documenting socio-behavioral data and adherence to HIV and/or HCV treatments is administered at enrolment and yearly thereafter.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 1,175 patients were included from January 2006 to December 2008. Their median age at enrolment was 45 years and 70.2% were male. The median CD4 cell count was 442 (IQR: 304-633) cells/μl and HIV RNA plasma viral load was undetectable in 68.8%. Most participants (71.6%) were on HAART. Among the 1,048 HIV-HCV chronically co-infected patients, HCV genotype 1 was predominant (56%) and cirrhosis was present in 25%. As of January, 2010, after a median follow-up of 16.7 months (IQR: 11.3-25.3), 13 new cases of decompensated cirrhosis, nine hepatocellular carcinomas and 20 HCV-related deaths were reported, resulting in a cumulative HCV-related severe event rate of 1.9/100 person-years (95% CI: 1.3-2.5). The rate of HCV-related severe events was higher in cirrhotic patients and those with a low CD4 cells count, but did not differ according to sex, age, alcohol consumption, CDC clinical stage or HCV status.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The ANRS CO 13 HEPAVIH is a nation-wide cohort using a large network of HIV treatment, infectious diseases and internal medicine clinics in France, and thus is highly representative of the French population living with these two viruses and in care.</p
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