7 research outputs found

    Transactional distributed 64 bit memory for pc clusters

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    The Rainbow operating system provides 64-Bit software transactional memory operation for PC-clusters. Basic consistency of the distributed objects is guaranteed by an optimistic transactions scheme and weakened consistency models are available for application data structures. The Java-like language environment allows for binary isolation, compiler-based OS security and for clusterwide garbage collection. An optional pageserver will offer orthogonal persistence as well as subsecond restart and recovery. Categories and Subject Descriptor

    Symmetry breaking of tissue mechanics in wound induced hair follicle regeneration of laboratory and spiny mice

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    Tissue regeneration is a process that recapitulates and restores organ structure and function. Although previous studies have demonstrated wound-induced hair neogenesis (WIHN) in laboratory mice (Mus), the regeneration is limited to the center of the wound unlike those observed in African spiny (Acomys) mice. Tissue mechanics have been implicated as an integral part of tissue morphogenesis. Here we use the WIHN model to investigate the mechanical and molecular responses of laboratory and African spiny mice, and report these models demonstrate opposing trends in spatiotemporal morphogenetic field formation with association to wound stiffness landscapes. Transcriptome analysis and K14-Cre-Twist1 transgenic mice show the Twist1 pathway acts as a mediator for both epidermal-dermal interactions and a competence factor for periodic patterning, differing from those used in development. We propose a Turing model based on tissue stiffness which supports a two-scale tissue mechanics process: (1) establishing a morphogenetic field within the wound bed (mm scale) and (2) symmetry breaking of the epidermis and forming periodically arranged hair primordia within the morphogenetic field (ÎĽm scale). Thus, we delineate distinct chemo-mechanical events in building a Turing morphogenesis-competent field during WIHN of laboratory and African spiny mice and identify its evo-devo advantages with perspectives for regenerative medicine

    Tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy - an interlaboratory reproducibility and comparison study

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    Stiftung Stipendien-Fonds des Verbandes der chemischen Industrie e.V.; German National Academic Foundation; Bruker; National Science Foundation (NSF CAREER) [CHE 0748226]; MOST of China [2011YQ03012406]; NSFC [21021120456]; EMRPSince its first experimental realization, tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (TERS) has emerged as a potentially powerful nanochemical analysis tool. However, questions about the comparability and reproducibility of TERS data have emerged. This interlaboratory comparison study addresses these issues by bringing together different TERS groups to perform TERS measurements on nominally identical samples. Based on the spectra obtained, the absolute and relative peak positions, number of bands, peak intensity ratios, and comparability to reference Raman and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) data are discussed. Our general findings are that all research groups obtained similar spectral patterns, irrespective of the setup or tip that was used. The TERS (and SERS) spectra consistently showed fewer bands than the conventional Raman spectrum. When comparing these three methods, the spectral pattern match and substance identification is readily possible. Absolute and relative peak positions of the three major signals of thiophenol scattered by 19 and 9cm(-1), respectively, which can probably be attributed to different spectrometer calibrations. However, within the same group (but between different tips), the signals only scattered by 3cm(-1) on average. This study demonstrated the suitability of TERS as an analytical tool and brings TERS a big step forward to becoming a routine technique. Copyright (c) 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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