911 research outputs found
What Does an Exemplary Middle School Mathematics Teacher Look Like? The Use of a Professional Development Rubric
A School University Research Network (SURN) committee composed of current mathematics teachers, central ofïŹce math supervisors, building administrators, mathematicians, and mathematics educators researched numerous sources regarding best practices in mathematics instruction. The resulting professional development rubric synthesizes their findings and can serve a professional development role by providing teachers and administrators with a tool to develop clarity and consensus on best mathematics instructional practices, and how these practices are implemented in the classroom. It is also being used as a tool for cooperating teachers in their supervision of student teachers and as a reïŹective method for self-evaluation
Impurity effects in superconducting UPt3
Superconducting UPt3 is characterized by a novel and complex magnetic fieldâtemperature phase diagram, with two superconducting transitions at Tc1 and Tc2 in zero field. We have studied the effects of Pd and Y impurities on the zero field superconducting properties of UPt3. Resistance measurements show that both dopants increase the residual resistivity and decrease the spin fluctuation temperature in the normal state. Tc1 is depressed by both dopants, but more effectively by Pd. âTc1 â Tc2â is essentially unaffected by Y doping, but increases dramatically with Pd doping.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70706/2/JAPIAU-69-8-5487-1.pd
Identification of genes encoding squalestatin S1 biosynthesis and in vitro production of new squalestatin analogues
A gene cluster responsible for the biosynthesis of squalestatin S1 (SQS1, 1) was identified by full genome sequencing of two SQS1-producing ascomycetes: Phoma sp. C2932 and unidentified fungus MF5453. A transformation protocol was established and a subsequent knockout of one PKS gene from the cluster led to loss of SQS1 production and enhanced concentration of an SQS1 precursor. An acyltransferase gene from the cluster was expressed in E. coli and the expressed protein MfM4 shown to be responsible for loading acyl groups from CoA onto the squalestatin core as the final step of biosynthesis. MfM4 appears to have a broad substrate selectivity for its acyl CoA substrate, allowing the in vitro synthesis of novel squalestatins
Intrinsic Properties of AFe2As2 (A = Ba, Sr) Single Crystal under Highly Hydrostatic Pressure Conditions
We measured the electrical resistivity and ac magnetic susceptibility of
BaFe2As2 and SrFe2As2 single crystals under pressure using a cubic anvil
apparatus. For BaFe2As2, the antiferromagnetic (AF) and structural transitions
are suppressed with increasing pressure. Unexpectedly, these transitions
persist up to 8 GPa, and no signature of a superconducting transition was
observed in the pressure range investigated here. On the other hand, the AF and
structural transitions of SrFe2As2 collapse at around the critical pressure Pc
~ 5 GPa, resulting in the appearance of bulk superconductivity. The
superconducting volume fraction abruptly increases above Pc, and shows a dome
centered at approximately 6 GPa. Our results suggest that the bulk
superconducting phase competes with the AF/orthorhombic phase and only appears
in the narrow pressure region of the tetragonal phase.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Non-adiabatic and time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy for molecular systems
We quantify the non-adiabatic contributions to the vibronic sidebands of
equilibrium and explicitly time-resolved non-equilibrium photoelectron spectra
for a vibronic model system of Trans-Polyacetylene. Using exact
diagonalization, we directly evaluate the sum-over-states expressions for the
linear-response photocurrent. We show that spurious peaks appear in the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation for the vibronic spectral function, which are
not present in the exact spectral function of the system. The effect can be
traced back to the factorized nature of the Born-Oppenheimer initial and final
photoemission states and also persists when either only initial, or final
states are replaced by correlated vibronic states. Only when correlated initial
and final vibronic states are taken into account, the spurious spectral weights
of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation are suppressed. In the non-equilibrium
case, we illustrate for an initial Franck-Condon excitation and an explicit
pump-pulse excitation how the vibronic wavepacket motion of the system can be
traced in the time-resolved photoelectron spectra as function of the pump-probe
delay
Aspirin but not ibuprofen use is associated with reduced risk of prostate cancer: A PLCO Study
Background:
Although most epidemiological studies suggest that non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug use is inversely associated with prostate cancer risk, the magnitude and specificity of this association remain unclear. Methods:
We examined self-reported aspirin and ibuprofen use in relation to prostate cancer risk among 29â450 men ages 55â74 who were initially screened for prostate cancer from 1993 to 2001 in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial. Men were followed from their first screening exam until 31 December 2009, during which 3575 cases of prostate cancer were identified. Results:
After adjusting for potential confounders, the hazard ratios (HRs) of prostate cancer associated with \u3c1 and 1 pill of aspirin daily were 0.98 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.90â1.07) and 0.92 (95% CI: 0.85â0.99), respectively, compared with never use (P for trend 0.04). The effect of taking at least one aspirin daily was more pronounced when restricting the analyses to men older than age 65 or men who had a history of cardiovascular-related diseases or arthritis (HR (95% CI); 0.87 (0.78â0.97), 0.89 (0.80â0.99), and 0.88 (0.78â1.00), respectively). The data did not support an association between ibuprofen use and prostate cancer risk. Conclusion:
Daily aspirin use, but not ibuprofen use, was associated with lower risk of prostate cancer risk
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Smart Libraries: Best SQE Practices for Libraries with an Emphasis on Scientific Computing
As scientific computing applications grow in complexity, more and more functionality is being packaged in independently developed libraries. Worse, as the computing environments in which these applications run grow in complexity, it gets easier to make mistakes in building, installing and using libraries as well as the applications that depend on them. Unfortunately, SQA standards so far developed focus primarily on applications, not libraries. We show that SQA standards for libraries differ from applications in many respects. We introduce and describe a variety of practices aimed at minimizing the likelihood of making mistakes in using libraries and at maximizing users' ability to diagnose and correct them when they occur. We introduce the term Smart Library to refer to a library that is developed with these basic principles in mind. We draw upon specific examples from existing products we believe incorporate smart features: MPI, a parallel message passing library, and HDF5 and SAF, both of which are parallel I/O libraries supporting scientific computing applications. We conclude with a narrative of some real-world experiences in using smart libraries with Ale3d, VisIt and SAF
A Large Intergenic Noncoding RNA Induced by p53 Mediates Global Gene Repression in the p53 Response
Recently, more than 1000 large intergenic noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs) have been reported. These RNAs are evolutionarily conserved in mammalian genomes and thus presumably function in diverse biological processes. Here, we report the identification of lincRNAs that are regulated by p53. One of these lincRNAs (lincRNA-p21) serves as a repressor in p53-dependent transcriptional responses. Inhibition of lincRNA-p21 affects the expression of hundreds of gene targets enriched for genes normally repressed by p53. The observed transcriptional repression by lincRNA-p21 is mediated through the physical association with hnRNP-K. This interaction is required for proper genomic localization of hnRNP-K at repressed genes and regulation of p53 mediates apoptosis. We propose a model whereby transcription factors activate lincRNAs that serve as key repressors by physically associating with repressive complexes and modulate their localization to sets of previously active genes.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (New Innovator Award)Smith Family FoundationDamon Runyon Cancer Research FoundationSearle Scholars ProgramNational Institutes of Health (U.S.) (1R01CA119176-01
Conversion of the PS complex as LHC proton pre-injector
CERNs Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1][2] will be supplied with protons from the injector chain Linac2-PS Booster (PSB)-PS-SPS (Fig. 1). The required transverse beam brilliance (intensity/emittance) is almost twice that of current PS beams and the LHC bunch spacing of 25 ns must be impressed on the beam before its transfer to the SPS. The scheme involves new RF harmonics in the PSB and the PS, an increase of the PSB energy, and two-batch filling of the PS. After a successful test of the main ingredients, a project for converting the PS complex was launched in 1994. Major additions are (i) h=1 RF systems in the PSB, (ii) upgrading of the PSB main magnet supply from 1 to 1.4 GeV operation, (iii) new magnets, septa, power supplies, kicker pulsers for the PSB-PS beam transfer, (iv) 40 and 80 MHz systems in the PS, (v) beam profile measurement devices with improved resolution. A significant part of the effort is being provided by TRIUMF under the Canada-CERN co-operation agreement on the LHC
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