8,834 research outputs found
Coulomb Drag between One-Dimensional Wigner Crystal Rings
We consider the Coulomb drag between two metal rings in which the long range
Coulomb interaction leads to the formation of a Wigner crystal. The first ring
is threaded by an Ahranov Bohm flux creating a persistent current J_0. The
second ring is brought in close proximity to the second and due to the Coulomb
interaction between the two rings a drag current J_D is produced in the second.
We investigate this system at zero temperature for perfect rings as well as the
effects of impurities. We show that the Wigner crystal state can in principle
lead to a higher ratio of drag current to drive current J_D/J_0 than in weakly
interacting electron systems.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Detection limits of organic compounds achievable with intense, short-pulse lasers
Many organic molecules have strong absorption bands which can be accessed by ultraviolet short pulse lasers to produce efficient ionization. This resonant multiphoton ionization scheme has already been exploited as an ionization source in time-of-flight mass spectrometers used for environmental trace analysis. In the present work we quantify the ultimate potential of this technique by measuring absolute ion yields produced from the interaction of 267 nm femtosecond laser pulses with the organic molecules indole and toluene, and gases Xe, N2 and O2. Using multiphoton ionization cross sections extracted from these results, we show that the laser pulse parameters required for real-time detection of aromatic molecules at concentrations of one part per trillion in air and a limit of detection of a few attomoles are achievable with presently available commercial laser systems. The potential applications for the analysis of human breath, blood and tissue samples are discussed
Weight gain among treatment-naïve persons with HIV starting integrase inhibitors compared to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors or protease inhibitors in a large observational cohort in the United States and Canada.
IntroductionWeight gain following antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation is common, potentially predisposing some persons with HIV (PWH) to cardio-metabolic disease. We assessed relationships between ART drug class and weight change among treatment-naïve PWH initiating ART in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD).MethodsAdult, treatment-naïve PWH in NA-ACCORD initiating integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI), protease inhibitor (PI) or non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based ART on/after 1 January 2007 were followed through 31 December 2016. Multivariate linear mixed effects models estimated weight up to five years after ART initiation, adjusting for age, sex, race, cohort site, HIV acquisition mode, treatment year, and baseline weight, plasma HIV-1 RNA level and CD4+ cell count. Due to shorter follow-up for PWH receiving newer INSTI drugs, weights for specific INSTIs were estimated at two years. Secondary analyses using logistic regression and all covariates from primary analyses assessed factors associated with >10% weight gain at two and five years.ResultsAmong 22,972 participants, 87% were male, and 41% were white. 49% started NNRTI-, 31% started PI- and 20% started INSTI-based regimens (1624 raltegravir (RAL), 2085 elvitegravir (EVG) and 929 dolutegravir (DTG)). PWH starting INSTI-based regimens had mean estimated five-year weight change of +5.9kg, compared to +3.7kg for NNRTI and +5.5kg for PI. Among PWH starting INSTI drugs, mean estimated two-year weight change was +7.2kg for DTG, +5.8kg for RAL and +4.1kg for EVG. Women, persons with lower baseline CD4+ cell counts, and those initiating INSTI-based regimens had higher odds of >10% body weight increase at two years (adjusted odds ratio = 1.37, 95% confidence interval: 1.20 to 1.56 vs. NNRTI).ConclusionsPWH initiating INSTI-based regimens gained, on average, more weight compared to NNRTI-based regimens. This phenomenon may reflect heterogeneous effects of ART agents on body weight regulation that require further exploration
Primary Beam and Dish Surface Characterization at the Allen Telescope Array by Radio Holography
The Allen Telescope Array (ATA) is a cm-wave interferometer in California,
comprising 42 antenna elements with 6-m diameter dishes. We characterize the
antenna optical accuracy using two-antenna interferometry and radio holography.
The distortion of each telescope relative to the average is small, with RMS
differences of 1 percent of beam peak value. Holography provides images of dish
illumination pattern, allowing characterization of as-built mirror surfaces.
The ATA dishes can experience mm-scale distortions across -2 meter lengths due
to mounting stresses or solar radiation. Experimental RMS errors are 0.7 mm at
night and 3 mm under worst case solar illumination. For frequencies 4, 10, and
15 GHz, the nighttime values indicate sensitivity losses of 1, 10 and 20
percent, respectively. The ATA.s exceptional wide-bandwidth permits
observations over a continuous range 0.5 to 11.2 GHz, and future retrofits may
increase this range to 15 GHz. Beam patterns show a slowly varying focus
frequency dependence. We probe the antenna optical gain and beam pattern
stability as a function of focus and observation frequency, concluding that ATA
can produce high fidelity images over a decade of simultaneous observation
frequencies. In the day, the antenna sensitivity and pointing accuracy are
affected. We find that at frequencies greater than 5 GHz, daytime observations
greater than 5 GHz will suffer some sensitivity loss and it may be necessary to
make antenna pointing corrections on a 1 to 2 hourly basis.Comment: 19 pages, 23 figures, 3 tables, Authors indicated by an double dagger
({\ddag}) are affiliated with the SETI Institute, Mountain View, CA 95070.
Authors indicated by a section break ({\S}) are affiliated with the Hat Creek
Radio Observatory and/or the Radio Astronomy Laboratory, both affiliated with
the University of California Berkeley, Berkeley C
Sedimentation and subsidence history of the Lomonosov Ridge
During the first scientific ocean drilling expedition to the Arctic Ocean (Arctic Coring Expedition [ACEX]; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 302), four sites were drilled and cored atop the central part of the Lomonosov Ridge in the Arctic Ocean at ~88°N, 140°E (see Fig. F18 in the "Sites M0001–M0004" chapter). The ridge was rifted from the Eurasian continental margin at ~57 Ma (Fig. F1) (Jokat et al., 1992, 1995). Since the rifting event and the concurrent tilting and erosion of this sliver of the outer continental margin, the Lomonosov Ridge subsided while hemipelagic and pelagic sediments were deposited above the angular rifting unconformity (see Fig. F7A in the "Sites M0001–M0004" chapter).The sections recovered from the four sites drilled during Expedition 302 can be correlated using their seismic signature, physical properties (porosity, magnetic susceptibility, resistivity, and P-wave velocity), chemostratigraphy (ammonia content of pore waters), lithostratigraphy, and biostratigraphy. The lithostratigraphy of the composite section combined with biostratigraphy provides an insight into the complex history of deposition, erosion, and preservation of the biogenic fraction. Eventually, the ridge subsided to its present water depth as it drifted from the Eurasian margin. In this chapter, we compare a simple model of subsidence history with the sedimentary record recovered from atop the ridge
The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey. VI. The Kinematics of Ultra-compact Dwarfs and Globular Clusters in M87
The origin of ultra-compact dwarfs (UCDs)--objects larger and more massive
than typical globular clusters (GCs), but more compact than typical dwarf
galaxies--has been hotly debated in the 15 years since their discovery. Even
whether UCDs should be considered galactic in origin, or simply the most
extreme GCs, is not yet settled. We present the dynamical properties of 97
spectroscopically confirmed UCDs (rh >~10 pc) and 911 GCs associated with
central cD galaxy of the Virgo cluster, M87. Our UCDs, of which 89% have M_star
> ~2X10^6 M_sun and 92% are as blue as the classic blue GCs, nearly triple the
sample of previous confirmed Virgo UCDs, providing by far the best opportunity
for studying the global dynamics of a UCD system. We found that (1) UCDs have a
surface number density profile that is shallower than that of the blue GCs in
the inner ~ 70 kpc and as steep as that of the red GCs at larger radii; (2)
UCDs exhibit a significantly stronger rotation than the GCs, and the blue GCs
seem to have a velocity field that is more consistent with that of the
surrounding dwarf ellipticals than with that of UCDs; (3) UCDs have a radially
increasing orbital anisotropy profile, and are tangentially-biased at radii < ~
40 kpc and radially-biased further out. In contrast, the blue GCs become more
tangentially-biased at larger radii beyond ~ 40 kpc; (4) GCs with M_star >
2X10^6 M_sun have rotational properties indistinguishable from the less massive
ones, suggesting that it is the size, instead of mass, that differentiates UCDs
from GCs as kinematically distinct populations. We conclude that most UCDs in
M87 are not consistent with being merely the most luminous and extended
examples of otherwise normal GCs. The radially-biased orbital structure of UCDs
at large radii is in general agreement with the "tidally threshed dwarf galaxy"
scenario.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures. To appear in The Astrophysical Journa
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Fecal microbiota transplant rescues mice from human pathogen mediated sepsis by restoring systemic immunity.
Death due to sepsis remains a persistent threat to critically ill patients confined to the intensive care unit and is characterized by colonization with multi-drug-resistant healthcare-associated pathogens. Here we report that sepsis in mice caused by a defined four-member pathogen community isolated from a patient with lethal sepsis is associated with the systemic suppression of key elements of the host transcriptome required for pathogen clearance and decreased butyrate expression. More specifically, these pathogens directly suppress interferon regulatory factor 3. Fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) reverses the course of otherwise lethal sepsis by enhancing pathogen clearance via the restoration of host immunity in an interferon regulatory factor 3-dependent manner. This protective effect is linked to the expansion of butyrate-producing Bacteroidetes. Taken together these results suggest that fecal microbiota transplantation may be a treatment option in sepsis associated with immunosuppression
A computationally engineered RAS rheostat reveals RAS-ERK signaling dynamics.
Synthetic protein switches controlled with user-defined inputs are powerful tools for studying and controlling dynamic cellular processes. To date, these approaches have relied primarily on intermolecular regulation. Here we report a computationally guided framework for engineering intramolecular regulation of protein function. We utilize this framework to develop chemically inducible activator of RAS (CIAR), a single-component RAS rheostat that directly activates endogenous RAS in response to a small molecule. Using CIAR, we show that direct RAS activation elicits markedly different RAS-ERK signaling dynamics from growth factor stimulation, and that these dynamics differ among cell types. We also found that the clinically approved RAF inhibitor vemurafenib potently primes cells to respond to direct wild-type RAS activation. These results demonstrate the utility of CIAR for quantitatively interrogating RAS signaling. Finally, we demonstrate the general utility of our approach in design of intramolecularly regulated protein tools by applying it to the Rho family of guanine nucleotide exchange factors
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