405 research outputs found
Bred Heifer Price Determinants in the Southeast
Price determinants for bulls, cows, and feeder cattle are well established in the literature but there has been little research on bred heifer price determinants and specifically the impact of feeder cattle prices on the purchase price of bred heifers. We estimated the impact of reproductive characteristics and feeder cattle prices on bred heifer prices for beef production. Data were obtained from a May and November bred heifer sale located in Kentucky and hedonic pricing models were estimated for bred heifers for each sale month. Prices for fall- calving heifers were influenced by number of months bred or expected calving date with longer bred heifers priced the highest. Purchase price of spring- calving heifers did not vary from five to seven months bred, but heifers four months bred were priced lower. Pregnancies resulting from artificial insemination did increase the value of fall-calving heifers but did not impact spring-calving heifer prices. Heifer feeder cattle prices the day of the sale positively influenced the price of spring- and fall-calving bred heifers. This extends previous research by considering the impact of feeder cattle prices on the price of bred heifers. The results can help cow-calf producers in making a more informed purchasing decision of replacement breeding animals
Effects of Noisy Oracle on Search Algorithm Complexity
Grover's algorithm provides a quadratic speed-up over classical algorithms
for unstructured database or library searches. This paper examines the
robustness of Grover's search algorithm to a random phase error in the oracle
and analyzes the complexity of the search process as a function of the scaling
of the oracle error with database or library size. Both the discrete- and
continuous-time implementations of the search algorithm are investigated. It is
shown that unless the oracle phase error scales as O(N^(-1/4)), neither the
discrete- nor the continuous-time implementation of Grover's algorithm is
scalably robust to this error in the absence of error correction.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Repulsive Casimir forces
We discuss repulsive Casimir forces between dielectric materials with non
trivial magnetic susceptibility. It is shown that considerations based on naive
pair-wise summation of Van der Waals and Casimir Polder forces may not only
give an incorrect estimate of the magnitude of the total Casimir force, but
even the wrong sign of the force when materials with high dielectric and
magnetic response are involved. Indeed repulsive Casimir forces may be found in
a large range of parameters, and we suggest that the effect may be realized in
known materials. The phenomenon of repulsive Casimir forces may be of
importance both for experimental study and for nanomachinery applications
Thermofield Dynamics and Casimir Effect for Fermions
A generalization of the Bogoliubov transformation is developed to describe a
space compactified fermionic field. The method is the fermionic counterpart of
the formalism introduced earlier for bosons (J. C. da Silva, A. Matos Neto, F.
C. Khanna and A. E. Santana, Phys. Rev. A 66 (2002) 052101), and is based on
the thermofield dynamics approach. We analyse the energy-momentum tensor for
the Casimir effect of a free massless fermion field in a -dimensional box at
finite temperature. As a particular case the Casimir energy and pressure for
the field confined in a 3-dimensional parallelepiped box are calculated. It is
found that the attractive or repulsive nature of the Casimir pressure on
opposite faces changes depending on the relative magnitude of the edges. We
also determine the temperature at which the Casimir pressure in a cubic boc
changes sign and estimate its value when the edge of the cybe is of the order
of confining lengths for baryons.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Annals of Physic
Bi-cultural dynamics for risk and protective factors for cardiometabolic health in an Alaska Native (Yup\u27ik) population
Alaska Native people experience disparities in mortality from heart disease and stroke. This work attempts to better understand the relationships between socioeconomic, behavioral, and cardiometabolic risk factors among Yup\u27ik people of southwestern Alaska, with a focus on the role of the socioeconomic, and cultural components. Using a cross-sectional sample of 486 Yup\u27ik adults, we fitted a Partial Least Squares Path Model (PLS-PM) to assess the associations between components, including demographic factors [age and gender], socioeconomic factors [education, economic status, Yup\u27ik culture, and Western culture], behavioral factors [diet, cigarette smoking and smokeless tobacco use, and physical activity], and cardiometabolic risk factors [adiposity, triglyceride-HDL and LDL lipids, glycemia, and blood pressure]. We found relatively mild associations of education and economic status with cardiometabolic risk factors, in contrast with studies in other populations. The socioeconomic factor and participation in Yup\u27ik culture had potentially protective associations with adiposity, triglyceride-HDL lipids, and blood pressure, whereas participation in Western culture had a protective association with blood pressure. We also found a moderating effect of participation in Western culture on the relationships between Yup\u27ik culture participation and both blood pressure and LDL lipids, indicating a potentially beneficial additional effect of biculturalism. Our results suggest that reinforcing protective effects of both Yup\u27ik and Western cultures could be useful for interventions aimed at reducing cardiometabolic health disparities
Normal and Lateral Casimir Forces between Deformed Plates
The Casimir force between macroscopic bodies depends strongly on their shape
and orientation. To study this geometry dependence in the case of two deformed
metal plates, we use a path integral quantization of the electromagnetic field
which properly treats the many-body nature of the interaction, going beyond the
commonly used pairwise summation (PWS) of van der Waals forces. For arbitrary
deformations we provide an analytical result for the deformation induced change
in Casimir energy, which is exact to second order in the deformation amplitude.
For the specific case of sinusoidally corrugated plates, we calculate both the
normal and the lateral Casimir forces. The deformation induced change in the
Casimir interaction of a flat and a corrugated plate shows an interesting
crossover as a function of the ratio of the mean platedistance H to the
corrugation length \lambda: For \lambda \ll H we find a slower decay \sim
H^{-4}, compared to the H^{-5} behavior predicted by PWS which we show to be
valid only for \lambda \gg H. The amplitude of the lateral force between two
corrugated plates which are out of registry is shown to have a maximum at an
optimal wavelength of \lambda \approx 2.5 H. With increasing H/\lambda \gtrsim
0.3 the PWS approach becomes a progressively worse description of the lateral
force due to many-body effects. These results may be of relevance for the
design and operation of novel microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and other
nanoscale devices.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
The Casimir force and the quantum theory of lossy optical cavities
We present a new derivation of the Casimir force between two parallel plane
mirrors at zero temperature. The two mirrors and the cavity they enclose are
treated as quantum optical networks. They are in general lossy and
characterized by frequency dependent reflection amplitudes. The additional
fluctuations accompanying losses are deduced from expressions of the optical
theorem. A general proof is given for the theorem relating the spectral density
inside the cavity to the reflection amplitudes seen by the inner fields. This
density determines the vacuum radiation pressure and, therefore, the Casimir
force. The force is obtained as an integral over the real frequencies,
including the contribution of evanescent waves besides that of ordinary waves,
and, then, as an integral over imaginary frequencies. The demonstration relies
only on general properties obeyed by real mirrors which also enforce general
constraints for the variation of the Casimir force.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, minor amendment
The pancreas anatomy conditions the origin and properties of resident macrophages
We examine the features, origin, turnover, and gene expression of pancreatic macrophages under steady state. The data distinguish macrophages within distinct intrapancreatic microenvironments and suggest how macrophage phenotype is imprinted by the local milieu. Macrophages in islets of Langerhans and in the interacinar stroma are distinct in origin and phenotypic properties. In islets, macrophages are the only myeloid cells: they derive from definitive hematopoiesis, exchange to a minimum with blood cells, have a low level of self-replication, and depend on CSF-1. They express Il1b and Tnfa transcripts, indicating classical activation, M1, under steady state. The interacinar stroma contains two macrophage subsets. One is derived from primitive hematopoiesis, with no interchange by blood cells and alternative, M2, activation profile, whereas the second is derived from definitive hematopoiesis and exchanges with circulating myeloid cells but also shows an alternative activation profile. Complete replacement of islet and stromal macrophages by donor stem cells occurred after lethal irradiation with identical profiles as observed under steady state. The extraordinary plasticity of macrophages within the pancreatic organ and the distinct features imprinted by their anatomical localization sets the base for examining these cells in pathological conditions
Differential responses to lithium in hyperexcitable neurons from patients with bipolar disorder.
Bipolar disorder is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder that is characterized by intermittent episodes of mania and depression; without treatment, 15% of patients commit suicide. Hence, it has been ranked by the World Health Organization as a top disorder of morbidity and lost productivity. Previous neuropathological studies have revealed a series of alterations in the brains of patients with bipolar disorder or animal models, such as reduced glial cell number in the prefrontal cortex of patients, upregulated activities of the protein kinase A and C pathways and changes in neurotransmission. However, the roles and causation of these changes in bipolar disorder have been too complex to exactly determine the pathology of the disease. Furthermore, although some patients show remarkable improvement with lithium treatment for yet unknown reasons, others are refractory to lithium treatment. Therefore, developing an accurate and powerful biological model for bipolar disorder has been a challenge. The introduction of induced pluripotent stem-cell (iPSC) technology has provided a new approach. Here we have developed an iPSC model for human bipolar disorder and investigated the cellular phenotypes of hippocampal dentate gyrus-like neurons derived from iPSCs of patients with bipolar disorder. Guided by RNA sequencing expression profiling, we have detected mitochondrial abnormalities in young neurons from patients with bipolar disorder by using mitochondrial assays; in addition, using both patch-clamp recording and somatic Ca2+ imaging, we have observed hyperactive action-potential firing. This hyperexcitability phenotype of young neurons in bipolar disorder was selectively reversed by lithium treatment only in neurons derived from patients who also responded to lithium treatment. Therefore, hyperexcitability is one early endophenotype of bipolar disorder, and our model of iPSCs in this disease might be useful in developing new therapies and drugs aimed at its clinical treatment
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