583 research outputs found
Lowland river responses to intraplate tectonism and climate forcing quantified with luminescence and cosmogenic 10Be
Intraplate tectonism has produced large-scale folding that steers regional drainage systems, such as the 1600 km-long Cooper Ck, en route to Australia’s continental depocentre at Lake Eyre. We apply cosmogenic 10Be exposure dating in bedrock, and luminescence dating in sediment, to quantify the erosional and depositional response of Cooper Ck where it incises the rising Innamincka Dome. The detachment of bedrock joint-blocks during extreme floods governs the minimum rate of incision (17.4±6.5 mm/ky) estimated using a numerical model of episodic erosion calibrated with our 10Be measurements. The last big-flood phase occurred no earlier than ~112–121ka. Upstream of the Innamincka Dome long-term rates of alluvial deposition, partly reflecting synclinal-basin subsidence, are estimated from 47 luminescence dates in sediments accumulated since ~270 ka. Sequestration of sediment in subsiding basins such as these may account for the lack of Quaternary accumulation in Lake Eyre, and moreover suggests that notions of a single primary depocentre at base-level may poorly represent lowland, arid-zone rivers. Over the period ~75–55 ka Cooper Ck changed from a bedload- dominant, laterally-active meandering river to a muddy anabranching channel network up to 60 km wide. We propose that this shift in river pattern was a product of base-level rise linked with the slowly deforming syncline–anticline structure, coupled with a climate-forced reduction in discharge. The uniform valley slope along this subsiding alluvial and rising bedrock system represents an adjustment between the relative rates of deformation and the ability of greatly enhanced flows at times during the Quaternary to incise the rising anticline. Hence, tectonic and climate controls are balanced in the long term
Occurrence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in surface waters near industrial hog operation spray fields
Industrial hog operations (IHOs) have been identified as a source of antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). However, few studies have investigated the presence of antibiotic-resistant S. aureus in the environment near IHOs, specifically surface waters proximal to spray fields where IHO liquid lagoon waste is sprayed. Surface water samples (n = 179) were collected over the course of approximately one year from nine locations in southeastern North Carolina and analyzed for the presence of presumptive MRSA using CHROMagar MRSA media. Culture-based, biochemical, and molecular tests, as well as matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry were used to confirm that isolates that grew on CHROMagar MRSA media were S. aureus. Confirmed S. aureus isolates were then tested for susceptibility to 16 antibiotics and screened for molecular markers of MRSA (mecA, mecC) and livestock adaptation (absence of scn). A total of 12 confirmed MRSA were detected in 9 distinct water samples. Nine of 12 MRSA isolates were also multidrug-resistant (MDRSA [i.e., resistant to ≥ 3 antibiotic classes]). All MRSA were scn-positive and most (11/12) belonged to a staphylococcal protein A (spa) type t008, which is commonly associated with humans. Additionally, 12 confirmed S. aureus that were methicillin-susceptible (MSSA) were recovered, 7 of which belonged to spa type t021 and were scn-negative (a marker of livestock-adaptation). This study demonstrated the presence of MSSA, MRSA, and MDRSA in surface waters adjacent to IHO lagoon waste spray fields in southeastern North Carolina. To our knowledge, this is the first report of waterborne S. aureus from surface waters proximal to IHOs
Worldsheet correlators in AdS(3)/CFT(2)
The AdS_3/CFT_2 correspondence is checked beyond the supergravity
approximation by comparing correlation functions. To this end we calculate 2-
and 3-point functions on the sphere of certain chiral primary operators for
strings on AdS_3 x S^3 x T^4. These results are then compared with the
corresponding amplitudes in the dual 2-dimensional conformal field theory. In
the limit of small string coupling, where the sphere diagrams dominate the
string perturbation series, beautiful agreement is found.Comment: 23 page
Extremal black holes in D=5: SUSY vs. Gauss-Bonnet corrections
We analyse near-horizon solutions and compare the results for the black hole
entropy of five-dimensional spherically symmetric extremal black holes when the
N=2 SUGRA actions are supplied with two different types of higher-order
corrections: (1) supersymmetric completion of gravitational Chern-Simons term,
and (2) Gauss-Bonnet term. We show that for large BPS black holes lowest order
\alpha' corrections to the entropy are the same, but for non-BPS are generally
different. We pay special attention to the class of prepotentials connected
with K3\times T^2 and T^6 compactifications. For supersymmetric correction we
find beside BPS also a set of non-BPS solutions. In the particular case of T^6
compactification (equivalent to the heterotic string on ) we
find the (almost) complete set of solutions (with exception of some non-BPS
small black holes), and show that entropy of small black holes is different
from statistical entropy obtained by counting of microstates of heterotic
string theory. We also find complete set of solutions for K3\times T^2 and T^6
case when correction is given by Gauss-Bonnet term. Contrary to
four-dimensional case, obtained entropy is different from the one with
supersymmetric correction. We show that in Gauss-Bonnet case entropy of small
``BPS'' black holes agrees with microscopic entropy in the known cases.Comment: 28 pages; minor changes, version to appear in JHE
Selective Visualization of Fluorescent Sterols in Caenorhabditis elegans by Bleach-Rate-Based Image Segmentation
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a genetically tractable model organism to investigate sterol transport. In vivo imaging of the fluorescent sterol, dehydroergosterol (DHE), is challenged by C. elegans' high autofluorescence in the same spectral region as emission of DHE. We present a method to detect DHE selectively, based on its rapid bleaching kinetics compared to cellular autofluorescence. Worms were repeatedly imaged on an ultraviolet-sensitive wide field (UV-WF) microscope, and bleaching kinetics of DHE were fitted on a pixel-basis to mathematical models describing the intensity decay. Bleach-rate constants were determined for DHE in vivo and confirmed in model membranes. Using this method, we could detect enrichment of DHE in specific tissues like the nerve ring, the spermateca and oocytes. We confirm these results in C. elegans gut-granule-loss (glo) mutants with reduced autofluorescence and compare our method with three-photon excitation microscopy of sterol in selected tissues. Bleach-rate-based UV-WF imaging is a useful tool for genetic screening experiments on sterol transport, as exemplified by RNA interference against the rme-2 gene coding for the yolk receptor and for worm homologues of Niemann-Pick C disease proteins. Our approach is generally useful for identifying fluorescent probes in the presence of high cellular autofluorescence
Kaluza-Klein supergravity on AdS_3 x S^3
We construct a Chern-Simons type gauged N=8 supergravity in three spacetime
dimensions with gauge group SO(4) x T_\infty over the infinite dimensional
coset space SO(8,\infty)/(SO(8) x SO(\infty)), where T_\infty is an infinite
dimensional translation subgroup of SO(8,\infty). This theory describes the
effective interactions of the (infinitely many) supermultiplets contained in
the two spin-1 Kaluza-Klein towers arising in the compactification of N=(2,0)
supergravity in six dimensions on AdS_3 x S^3 with the massless supergravity
multiplet. After the elimination of the gauge fields associated with T_\infty,
one is left with a Yang Mills type gauged supergravity with gauge group SO(4),
and in the vacuum the symmetry is broken to the (super-)isometry group of AdS_3
x S^3, with infinitely many fields acquiring masses by a variant of the
Brout-Englert-Higgs effect.Comment: LaTeX2e, 24 pages; v2: references update
Direct observation by resonant tunneling of the B^+ level in a delta-doped silicon barrier
We observe a resonance in the conductance of silicon tunneling devices with a
delta-doped barrier. The position of the resonance indicates that it arises
from tunneling through the B^+ state of the boron atoms of the delta-layer.
Since the emitter Fermi level in our devices is a field-independent reference
energy, we are able to directly observe the diamagnetic shift of the B^+ level.
This is contrary to the situation in magneto-optical spectroscopy, where the
shift is absorbed in the measured ionization energy.Comment: submitted to PR
All Vacuum Near-Horizon Geometries in -dimensions with Commuting Rotational Symmetries
We explicitly construct all stationary, non-static, extremal near horizon
geometries in dimensions that satisfy the vacuum Einstein equations, and
that have commuting rotational symmetries. Our work generalizes
[arXiv:0806.2051] by Kunduri and Lucietti, where such a classification had been
given in . But our method is different from theirs and relies on a
matrix formulation of the Einstein equations. Unlike their method, this matrix
formulation works for any dimension. The metrics that we find come in three
families, with horizon topology , or ,
or quotients thereof. Our metrics depend on two discrete parameters specifying
the topology type, as well as continuous parameters. Not all of
our metrics in seem to arise as the near horizon limits of known
black hole solutions.Comment: 22 pages, Latex, no figures, title changed, references added,
discussion of the parameters specifying solutions corrected, amended to match
published versio
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