24 research outputs found
On cosmic rotation
We overview our recent studies of cosmological models with expansion and
global rotation. Problems of the early rotating models are discussed, and the
class of new viable cosmologies is described in detail. Particular attention is
paid to the observational effects of the cosmic rotation.Comment: 22 pages, Revte
Spacetime Splitting, Admissible Coordinates and Causality
To confront relativity theory with observation, it is necessary to split
spacetime into its temporal and spatial components. The (1+3) timelike
threading approach involves restrictions on the gravitational potentials
, while the (3+1) spacelike slicing approach involves
restrictions on . These latter coordinate conditions protect
chronology within any such coordinate patch. While the threading coordinate
conditions can be naturally integrated into the structure of Lorentzian
geometry and constitute the standard coordinate conditions in general
relativity, this circumstance does not extend to the slicing coordinate
conditions. We explore the influence of chronology violation on wave motion. In
particular, we consider the propagation of radiation parallel to the rotation
axis of stationary G\"odel-type universes characterized by parameters and such that for ) chronology is
protected (violated). We show that in the WKB approximation such waves can
freely propagate only when chronology is protected.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures; v2: minor typos corrected, accepted for
publication in Phys. Rev.
Vorticity production and survival in viscous and magnetized cosmologies
We study the role of viscosity and the effects of a magnetic field on a
rotating, self-gravitating fluid, using Newtonian theory and adopting the ideal
magnetohydrodynamic approximation. Our results confirm that viscosity can
generate vorticity in inhomogeneous environments, while the magnetic tension
can produce vorticity even in the absence of fluid pressure and density
gradients. Linearizing our equations around an Einstein-de Sitter cosmology, we
find that viscosity adds to the diluting effect of the universal expansion.
Typically, however, the dissipative viscous effects are confined to relatively
small scales. We also identify the characteristic length bellow which the
viscous dissipation is strong and beyond which viscosity is essentially
negligible. In contrast, magnetism seems to favor cosmic rotation. The magnetic
presence is found to slow down the standard decay-rate of linear vortices, thus
leading to universes with more residual rotation than generally anticipated.Comment: Minor changes. References added and updated. Published versio
A point mutation in cpsE renders Streptococcus pneumoniae nonencapsulated and enhances its growth, adherence and competence.
BACKGROUND: The polysaccharide capsule is a major virulence factor of the important human pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae. However, S. pneumoniae strains lacking capsule do occur.
RESULTS: Here, we report a nasopharyngeal isolate of Streptococcus pneumoniae composed of a mixture of two phenotypes; one encapsulated (serotype 18C) and the other nonencapsulated, determined by serotyping, electron microscopy and fluorescence isothiocyanate dextran exclusion assay.By whole genome sequencing, we demonstrated that the phenotypes differ by a single nucleotide base pair in capsular gene cpsE (C to G change at gene position 1135) predicted to result in amino acid change from arginine to glycine at position 379, located in the cytoplasmic, enzymatically active, region of this transmembrane protein. This SNP is responsible for loss of capsule production as the phenotype is transferred with the capsule operon. The nonencapsulated variant is superior in growth in vitro and is also 117-fold more adherent to and more invasive into Detroit 562 human epithelial cells than the encapsulated variant.Expression of six competence pathway genes and one competence-associated gene was 11 to 34-fold higher in the nonencapsulated variant than the encapsulated and transformation frequency was 3.7-fold greater.
CONCLUSIONS: We identified a new single point mutation in capsule gene cpsE of a clinical S. pneumoniae serotype 18C isolate sufficient to cause loss of capsule expression resulting in the co-existence of the encapsulated and nonencapsulated phenotype. The mutation caused phenotypic changes in growth, adherence to epithelial cells and transformability. Mutation in capsule gene cpsE may be a way for S. pneumoniae to lose its capsule and increase its colonization potential
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14C Dating of Late Pleistocene-Holocene Events on Kunashir Island, Kuril Islands
From the 16th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Gronigen, Netherlands, June 16-20, 1997.Kunashir Island is a very important site for paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Until recently, very little information on Quaternary deposits was available. We studied the environmental evolution of this oceanic island under the influence of geomorphological processes, volcanism and strong marine currents. This paper presents new data that allow a detailed reconstruction of the environmental development of Kunashir Island during the Late Pleistocene-Holocene, based on ca. 80 radiocarbon dates and diatom, pollen and sedimentological data. The vegetation development reflects climate changes and warm/cold current migrations.This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between Radiocarbon and the University of Arizona Libraries.The Radiocarbon archives are made available by Radiocarbon and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact [email protected] for further information.Migrated from OJS platform February 202
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14C Ages of Tephra Layers from the Holocene Deposits of Kunashir Island (Russian Far East)
From the 16th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Gronigen, Netherlands, June 16-20, 1997.Holocene deposits from the central and southern regions of the Kunashir Island contain tephra from 12 volcanic eruptions (Kn1-12). We studied radiocarbon data, mineralogical composition, and distribution of the tephra layers in different Holocene facies. The main sources of the Holocene tephra samples were the volcanoes of Hokkaido Island. The distribution of ash layers on Kunashir Island allows us to estimate their direction. Ash layers can be reliable markers for age determination of different coastal landforms on open oceanic shores. We propose here a tephrastratigraphical scheme for different Middle-Late Holocene facies.This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between Radiocarbon and the University of Arizona Libraries.The Radiocarbon archives are made available by Radiocarbon and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact [email protected] for further information.Migrated from OJS platform February 202