3,871 research outputs found
The Three-Dimensional Circumstellar Environment of SN 1987A
We present the detailed construction and analysis of the most complete map to
date of the circumstellar environment around SN 1987A, using ground and
space-based imaging from the past 16 years. PSF-matched difference-imaging
analyses of data from 1988 through 1997 reveal material between 1 and 28 ly
from the SN. Careful analyses allows the reconstruction of the probable
circumstellar environment, revealing a richly-structured bipolar nebula. An
outer, double-lobed ``Peanut,'' which is believed to be the contact
discontinuity between red supergiant and main sequence winds, is a prolate
shell extending 28 ly along the poles and 11 ly near the equator. Napoleon's
Hat, previously believed to be an independent structure, is the waist of this
Peanut, which is pinched to a radius of 6 ly. Interior to this is a cylindrical
hourglass, 1 ly in radius and 4 ly long, which connects to the Peanut by a
thick equatorial disk. The nebulae are inclined 41\degr south and 8\degr east
of the line of sight, slightly elliptical in cross section, and marginally
offset west of the SN. From the hourglass to the large, bipolar lobes, echo
fluxes suggest that the gas density drops from 1--3 cm^{-3} to >0.03 cm^{-3},
while the maximum dust-grain size increases from ~0.2 micron to 2 micron, and
the Si:C dust ratio decreases. The nebulae have a total mass of ~1.7 Msun. The
geometry of the three rings is studied, suggesting the northern and southern
rings are located 1.3 and 1.0 ly from the SN, while the equatorial ring is
elliptical (b/a < 0.98), and spatially offset in the same direction as the
hourglass.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJ Supplements. 38 pages in
apjemulate format, with 52 figure
Continuous, Semi-discrete, and Fully Discretized Navier-Stokes Equations
The Navier--Stokes equations are commonly used to model and to simulate flow
phenomena. We introduce the basic equations and discuss the standard methods
for the spatial and temporal discretization. We analyse the semi-discrete
equations -- a semi-explicit nonlinear DAE -- in terms of the strangeness index
and quantify the numerical difficulties in the fully discrete schemes, that are
induced by the strangeness of the system. By analyzing the Kronecker index of
the difference-algebraic equations, that represent commonly and successfully
used time stepping schemes for the Navier--Stokes equations, we show that those
time-integration schemes factually remove the strangeness. The theoretical
considerations are backed and illustrated by numerical examples.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figure, code available under DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.998909,
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.99890
Folding of VemP into translation-arresting secondary structure is driven by the ribosome exit tunnel
The ribosome is a fundamental biomolecular complex that synthesizes proteins in cells. Nascent proteins emerge from the ribosome through a tunnel, where they may interact with the tunnel walls or small molecules such as antibiotics. These interactions can cause translational arrest with notable physiological consequences. Here, we studied the arrest caused by the regulatory peptide VemP, which is known to form alpha-helices inside the ribosome tunnel near the peptidyl transferase center under specific conditions. We used all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of the entire ribosome and circular dichroism spectroscopy to study the driving forces of helix formation and how VemP causes the translational arrest. To that aim, we compared VemP dynamics in the ribosome tunnel with its dynamics in solution. We show that the VemP peptide has a low helical propensity in water and that the propensity is higher in mixtures of water and trifluorethanol. We propose that helix formation within the ribosome is driven by the interactions of VemP with the tunnel and that a part of VemP acts as an anchor. This anchor might slow down VemP progression through the tunnel enabling alpha-helix formation, which causes the elongation arrest
Magellanic Cloud Periphery Carbon Stars IV: The SMC
The kinematics of 150 carbon stars observed at moderate dispersion on the
periphery of the Small Magellanic Cloud are compared with the motions of
neutral hydrogen and early type stars in the Inter-Cloud region. The
distribution of radial velocities implies a configuration of these stars as a
sheet inclined at 73+/-4 degrees to the plane of the sky. The near side, to the
South, is dominated by a stellar component; to the North, the far side contains
fewer carbon stars, and is dominated by the neutral gas. The upper velocity
envelope of the stars is closely the same as that of the gas. This
configuration is shown to be consistent with the known extension of the SMC
along the line of sight, and is attributed to a tidally induced disruption of
the SMC that originated in a close encounter with the LMC some 0.3 to 0.4 Gyr
ago. The dearth of gas on the near side of the sheet is attributed to ablation
processes akin to those inferred by Weiner & Williams (1996) to collisional
excitation of the leading edges of Magellanic Stream clouds. Comparison with
pre LMC/SMC encounter kinematic data of Hardy, Suntzeff, & Azzopardi (1989) of
carbon stars, with data of stars formed after the encounter, of Maurice et al.
(1989), and Mathewson et al. (a986, 1988) leaves little doubt that forces other
than gravity play a role in the dynamics of the H I.Comment: 30 pages; 7 figures, latex compiled, 1 table; to appear in AJ (June
2000
Cell‐to‐cell and cell‐to‐matrix interactions mediate chemokine expression: an important component of the inflammatory lesion
Although many studies have characterized soluble factors that stimulate or inhibit chemokine secretion, in this review we focus on the event of cellular adhesion as a novel mechanism for stimulating chemokine expression. Recent work has demonstrated chemokine expression following cell‐to‐cell and cell‐to‐matrix adhesion. The specificity of this finding was demonstrated utilizing various techniques that illustrate that adhesion, and not a soluble stimulus, is in some cases responsible for initiating or augmenting chemokine expression. For example, co‐cultures of peripheral blood monocytes and endothelial cells secreted elevated levels of IL‐8 and MCP‐1 compared with either cell type alone. When co‐cultured in transwells, this effect was significantly attenuated. In other experiments, neutralizing monoclonal antibodies to various adhesion molecules inhibited chemokine expression. The effects of adhesion were not limited to leukocytes. Both immune and non‐immune cell types were evaluated as potential sources of adhesion‐mediated chemokine expression. Not suprisingly, expression of some chemokines was associated with adhesion, whereas others were not, supporting the notion that adhesion differentially signals chemokine secretion during the inflammatory response. We hypothesize that as a recruited leukocyte encounters different adhesion substrates such as endothelial cells, basement membrane, extracellular matrix, and fibroblasts, the expression of chemokines from both the leukocyte and the substrate may be initiated, inhibited, or augmented. Careful characterization of the contribution of adhesion to regulation of chemokine expression will provide insight into the pathogenesis of many human diseases where chemokines have a central role. J. Leukoc. Biol.62: 612–619; 1997.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142209/1/jlb0612.pd
Interferon-γ Stimulates Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 Expression by Monocytes
Monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP-1) is a specific monocyte
chemoattractant and activating factor produced by both immune cells
(mononuclear phagocytes and lymphocytes) and non-immune cells
(parenchymal and stromal cells). In order to define the conditions
under which human monocytes express MCP-1, monocytes were exposed to
IFN-γ, IL- lβ, TNF-α, IL-4 or PHA under serum free
conditions. There was no significant MCP-1 production by monocytes
following exposure to IL-lβ, TNF-α or IL-4. In contrast,
stimulation with IFN-γ resulted in a dose dependent increase
in MCP-1 protein and mRNA expression. Simultaneous stimulation with
IFN-γ and IL-1β or TNF-α resulted in no further
increase in MCP-1 production. It is concluded that IFN-γ,
primarily a product of TH1 T lymphocytes, stimulates the expression
of MCP-1 by monocytes
Differential regulation of C-C chemokines during fibroblast-monocyte interactions: adhesion vs. inflammatory cytokine pathways.
The cell-to-cell interactions during chronic inflammatory diseases likely contribute to leukocyte accumulation leading to increased pathology and organ dysfunction. In particular, there is a paucity of information relating to the maintenance of chronic fibrotic diseases. Using a lung fibroblast line and enriched monocyte populations, we have investigated the activational events which contribute to the production of two C-C chemokines, macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (MIP-1alpha) and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), during fibroblast-monocyte interactions. Neither the fibroblast cell line (16lu) nor isolated monocytes alone produced significant levels of MIP-1alpha or MCP-1. However, when isolated monocytes were layered onto 16 lu fibroblast monolayers a significant increase in MIP-1alpha and MCP-1 production was observed. The use of fixed cell populations indicated that the MIP-1alpha was derived from monocytes and MCP-1 from both cell populations. To examine the molecules which were required for chemokine production during the interaction, specific antibodies were used in the co-cultures. Blocking beta3-integrin interactions significantly inhibited MIP-1alpha production. In contrast, beta-integrin interactions had no effect on the MCP-1 production, while, neutralization of TNF significantly decreased MCP-1 production during the co-culture. These data indicate that fibroblast-monocyte interactions induce chemokine production through different mechanisms and a combination of these responses may contribute to the maintenance of the mononuclear cell accumulation during disease progression
Dark Matter and the Chemical Evolution of Irregular Galaxies
We present three types of chemical evolution models for irregular galaxies:
closed-box with continuous star formation rates (SFRs), closed-box with
bursting SFRs, and O-rich outflow with continuous SFRs. We discuss the chemical
evolution of the irregular galaxies NGC 1560 and II Zw 33, and a ``typical''
irregular galaxy. The fraction of low-mass stars needed by our models is larger
than that derived for the solar vicinity, but similar to that found in globular
clusters. For our typical irregular galaxy we need a mass fraction of about 40%
in the form of substellar objects plus non baryonic dark matter inside the
Holmberg radius, in good agreement with the results derived for NGC 1560 and II
Zw 33 where we do have an independent estimate of the mass fraction in non
baryonic dark matter. Closed-box models are better than O-rich outflow models
in explaining the C/O and Z/O observed values for our typical irregular galaxy.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure, uses emulateapj.sty package. ApJ in press. New
models were added. The order of Tables has been correcte
A New View of the Circumstellar Environment of SN 1987A
We summarize the analysis of a uniform set of both previously-known and
newly-discovered scattered-light echoes, detected within 30" of SN 1987A in ten
years of optical imaging, and with which we have constructed the most complete
three-dimensional model of the progenitor's circumstellar environment.
Surrounding the SN is a richly-structured bipolar nebula. An outer,
double-lobed ``peanut,'' which we believe is the contact discontinuity between
the red supergiant and main sequence winds, is a prolate shell extending 28 ly
along the poles and 11 ly near the equator. Napoleon's Hat, previously believed
to be an independent structure, is the waist of this peanut, which is pinched
to a radius of 6 ly. Interior, the innermost circumstellar material lies along
a cylindrical hourglass, 1 ly in radius and 4 ly long, which connects to the
peanut by a thick equatorial disk. The nebulae are inclined 41o south and 8o
east of the line of sight, slightly elliptical in cross section, and marginally
offset west of the SN. The 3-D geometry of the three circumstellar rings is
studied, suggesting the equatorial ring is elliptical (b/a<0.98), and spatially
offset in the same direction as the hourglass. Dust-scattering models suggest
that between the hourglass and bipolar lobes: the gas density drops from 1--3
cm^{-3} to >0.03 cm^{-3}; the maximum dust-grain size increases from ~0.2
micron to 2 micron; and the Si:C dust ratio decreases. The nebulae have a total
mass of ~1.7 Msun, yielding a red-supergiant mass loss around 5*10^{-6} Msun
yr^{-1}.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ 2/14/05. 16 pages in emualteapj
forma
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