18,846 research outputs found
Social cost considerations and legal constraints in implementing modular integrated utility systems
Social costs associated with the design, demonstration, and implementation of the Modular Integrated Utility System are considered including the social climate of communities, leadership patterns, conflicts and cleavages, specific developmental values, MIUS utility goal assessment, and the suitability of certian alternative options for use in a program of implementation. General considerations are discussed in the field of socio-technological planning. These include guidelines for understanding the conflict and diversity; some relevant goal choices and ideas useful to planners of the MIUS facility
On a Site of X-ray Emission in AE Aquarii
An analysis of recently reported results of XMM-Newton observations of AE Aqr
within a hypothesis that the detected X-ray source is located inside the Roche
lobe of the white dwarf is presented. I show this hypothesis to be inconsistent
with the currently adopted model of mass-transfer in the system. Possible
solutions of this problem are briefly discussed.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Cosmological neutrino bounds for non-cosmologists
I briefly review cosmological bounds on neutrino masses and the underlying
gravitational physics at a level appropriate for readers outside the field of
cosmology. For the case of three massive neutrinos with standard model
freezeout, the current 95% upper limit on the sum of their masses is 0.42 eV. I
summarize the basic physical mechanism making matter clustering such a
sensitive probe of massive neutrinos. I discuss the prospects of doing still
better in coming years using tools such as lensing tomography, approaching a
sensitivity around 0.03 eV. Since the lower bound from atmospheric neutrino
oscillations is around 0.05 eV, upcoming cosmological measurements should
detect neutrino mass if the technical and fiscal challenges can be met.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figs, in "Neutrino Physics", Proceedings of Nobel
Symposium 129, eds., L Bergstrom, O. Botner, P. Carlson, P. O. Hulth, and T.
Ohlsso
Hemotoxicity Induced by Chronic Chlorpyrifos Exposure in Wistar Rats: Mitigating Effect of Vitamin C
The study evaluated the ameliorative effect of vitamin C on chronic chlorpyrifos-induced hematological alterations in Wistar rats. Twenty adult male rats divided into 4 groups of 5 animals each were exposed to the following regimens: group I (S/oil) was administered soya oil (2 mL/kg b.w.), while group II (VC) was given vitamin C (100 mg/kg b.w.); group III was dosed with CPF (10.6 mg/kg b.w.); group IV was pretreated with vitamin C (100 mg/kg) and then exposed to CPF (10.6 mg/kg b.w.), 30 minutes later. The regimens were administered by oral gavage once daily for a period of 17 weeks. Blood samples collected at the end of the study revealed reduction in the levels of pack cell volume, hemoglobin, red blood cells, leukocytes (attributed to neutropenia, lymphopenia, and monocytopenia), and platelets in the CPF group, which were ameliorated in the vitamin C- pretreated group. The elevated values of malonaldehyde, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, and neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio in the CPF group were restored in those pretreated with vitamin C. The study has shown that chronic CPF-induced adversity on hematological parameters of Wistar rats was mitigated by pretreatment with vitamin C
Syndecan-3 is selectively pro-inflammatory in the joint and contributes to antigen-induced arthritis in mice
INTRODUCTION: Syndecans are heparan sulphate proteoglycans expressed by endothelial cells. Syndecan-3 is expressed by synovial endothelial cells of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients where it binds chemokines, suggesting a role in leukocyte trafficking. The objective of the current study was to examine the function of syndecan-3 in joint inflammation by genetic deletion in mice and compare with other tissues. METHODS: Chemokine C-X-C ligand 1 (CXCL1) was injected in the joints of syndecan-3-/-and wild-type mice and antigen-induced arthritis performed. For comparison chemokine was administered in the skin and cremaster muscle. Intravital microscopy was performed in the cremaster muscle. RESULTS: Administration of CXCL1 in knee joints of syndecan-3-/-mice resulted in reduced neutrophil accumulation compared to wild type. This was associated with diminished presence of CXCL1 at the luminal surface of synovial endothelial cells where this chemokine clustered and bound to heparan sulphate. Furthermore, in the arthritis model syndecan-3 deletion led to reduced joint swelling, leukocyte accumulation, cartilage degradation and overall disease severity. Conversely, CXCL1 administration in the skin of syndecan-3 null mice provoked increased neutrophil recruitment and was associated with elevated luminal expression of E-selectin by dermal endothelial cells. Similarly in the cremaster, intravital microscopy showed increased numbers of leukocytes adhering and rolling in venules in syndecan-3-/-mice in response to CXCL1 or tumour necrosis factor alpha. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows a novel role for syndecan-3 in inflammation. In the joint it is selectively pro-inflammatory, functioning in endothelial chemokine presentation and leukocyte recruitment and cartilage damage in an RA model. Conversely, in skin and cremaster it is anti-inflammatory
The integral monodromy of hyperelliptic and trielliptic curves
We compute the \integ/\ell and \integ_\ell monodromy of every irreducible
component of the moduli spaces of hyperelliptic and trielliptic curves. In
particular, we provide a proof that the \integ/\ell monodromy of the moduli
space of hyperelliptic curves of genus is the symplectic group
\sp_{2g}(\integ/\ell). We prove that the \integ/\ell monodromy of the
moduli space of trielliptic curves with signature is the special
unitary group \su_{(r,s)}(\integ/\ell\tensor\integ[\zeta_3])
Pauli Diagonal Channels Constant on Axes
We define and study the properties of channels which are analogous to unital
qubit channels in several ways. A full treatment can be given only when the
dimension d is a prime power, in which case each of the (d+1) mutually unbiased
bases (MUB) defines an axis. Along each axis the channel looks like a
depolarizing channel, but the degree of depolarization depends on the axis.
When d is not a prime power, some of our results still hold, particularly in
the case of channels with one symmetry axis. We describe the convex structure
of this class of channels and the subclass of entanglement breaking channels.
We find new bound entangled states for d = 3.
For these channels, we show that the multiplicativity conjecture for maximal
output p-norm holds for p=2. We also find channels with behavior not exhibited
by unital qubit channels, including two pairs of orthogonal bases with equal
output entropy in the absence of symmetry. This provides new numerical evidence
for the additivity of minimal output entropy
Solar cycle effects in planetary geomagnetic activity: Analysis of 36‐year long OMNI dataset
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94796/1/grl13462.pd
Recommended from our members
Visuo-spatial cognition in Williams syndrome: Reviewing and accounting for the strengths and weaknesses in performance
Individuals with Williams syndrome typically show relatively poor visuo-spatial abilities in comparison to stronger verbal skills. However, individuals' level of performance is not consistent across all visuo-spatial tasks. The studies assessing visuo-spatial functioning in Williams syndrome are critically reviewed, in order to provide a clear pattern of the relative difficulty of these tasks. This prompts a possible explanation of the variability in performance seen which focuses on the processing demands of some of these tasks. Individuals with Williams syndrome show an atypical processing style on tests of construction, which does not affect tests of perception
The structural and dynamic responses of Stange Ice Shelf to recent environmental change
Stange Ice Shelf is the most south-westerly ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula, a region where positive trends in atmospheric and oceanic temperatures have been recently documented. In this paper, we use a range of remotely sensed datasets to evaluate the structural and dynamic responses of Stange Ice Shelf to these environmental changes. Ice shelf extent and surface structures were examined at regular intervals from optical and radar satellite imagery between 1973 and 2011. Surface speeds were estimated in 1989, 2004 and 2010 by tracking surface features in successive satellite images. Surface elevation change was estimated using radar altimetry data acquired between 1992 and 2008 by the European Remote Sensing Satellite (ERS) -1, -2 and Envisat. The mean number of surface melt days was estimated using the intensity of backscatter from Envisat’s Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar instrument between 2006 and 2012. These results show significant shear fracturing in the southern portion of the ice shelf linked to enhanced flow speed as a consequence of measured thinning. However, we conclude that, despite the observed changes, Stange Ice Shelf is currently stable
- …