347 research outputs found
Consortium study of labile trace elements in some Antarctic carbonaceous chondrites: Antarctic and non-Antarctic meteorite comparisons
We report data for Ag, Au, Bi, Cd, Co, Cs, Ga, In, Rb, Sb, Se, Te, Tl, U and Zn determined by radiochemical neutron activation analysis in consortium samples of Belgica (B)-7904,Yamato (Y)-82042,Yamato-82162 and Yamato-86720 carbonaceous chondrites. These trace elements cover a wide volatility/mobility range and give unique information on thermal histories of meteorites. The results indicate the unique nature of these carbonaceous chondrites. Y-82042 proves to have the volatile element pattern of a C2 (≡CM) chondrite and the petrologic characteristics of a C1 (≡CI) chondrite. These must be primary nebular condensation/accretion features, unaffected by post-accretionary processes. The other three meteorites were thermally metamorphosed in ≥2 parent regions over the 600-700℃ range, at relative temperatures B-7904<Y-82162<Y-86720. Before heating, B-7904 and Y-86720 had C2-levels of volatile elements : Y-82162 had uniquely high volatile element concentrations, at about C1-levels. The data require a new classification scheme for such chondrites. Belgica-7904 and Y-82162 and -86720 seem to be derived from one or more thermally altered carbonaceous asteroids and their spectral characteristics should be compared with those of B-, F-, G-, or T-asteroids. These results indicate substantial differences in the thermal histories of Antarctic and non-Antarctic C1 and C2 chondrite populations. In reviewing all that is known about the Antarctic and non-Antarctic meteorite populations, the overwhelming weight of evidence supports the view that these populations sample different extraterrestrial source materials, differing in thermal histories. It may be that over the extended collecting period of the Antarctic ice sheet, it has sampled a considerable greater proportion of near-Earth asteroids than do current falls
Finite-Dimensional Bicomplex Hilbert Spaces
This paper is a detailed study of finite-dimensional modules defined on
bicomplex numbers. A number of results are proved on bicomplex square matrices,
linear operators, orthogonal bases, self-adjoint operators and Hilbert spaces,
including the spectral decomposition theorem. Applications to concepts relevant
to quantum mechanics, like the evolution operator, are pointed out.Comment: 21 page
Bias, accuracy, and impact of indirect genetic effects in infectious diseases
Selection for improved host response to infectious disease offers a desirable alternative to chemical treatment but has proven difficult in practice, due to low heritability estimates of disease traits. Disease data from field studies is often binary, indicating whether an individual has become infected or not following exposure to an infectious disease. Numerous studies have shown that from this data one can infer genetic variation in individuals’ underlying susceptibility. In a previous study, we showed that with an indirect genetic effect (IGE) model it is possible to capture some genetic variation in infectivity, if present, as well as in susceptibility. Infectivity is the propensity of transmitting infection upon contact with a susceptible individual. It is an important factor determining the severity of an epidemic. However, there are severe shortcomings with the Standard IGE models as they do not accommodate the dynamic nature of disease data. Here we adjust the Standard IGE model to (1) make expression of infectivity dependent on the individuals’ disease status (Case Model) and (2) to include timing of infection (Case-ordered Model). The models are evaluated by comparing impact of selection, bias, and accuracy of each model using simulated binary disease data. These were generated for populations with known variation in susceptibility and infectivity thus allowing comparisons between estimated and true breeding values. Overall the Case Model provided better estimates for host genetic susceptibility and infectivity compared to the Standard Model in terms of bias, impact, and accuracy. Furthermore, these estimates were strongly influenced by epidemiological characteristics. However, surprisingly, the Case-Ordered model performed considerably worse than the Standard and the Case Models, pointing toward limitations in incorporating disease dynamics into conventional variance component estimation methodology and software used in animal breeding
Quasi-local energy-momentum and two-surface characterization of the pp-wave spacetimes
In the present paper the determination of the {\it pp}-wave metric form the
geometry of certain spacelike two-surfaces is considered. It has been shown
that the vanishing of the Dougan--Mason quasi-local mass , associated
with the smooth boundary of a spacelike
hypersurface , is equivalent to the statement that the Cauchy
development is of a {\it pp}-wave type geometry with pure
radiation, provided the ingoing null normals are not diverging on and the
dominant energy condition holds on . The metric on
itself, however, has not been determined. Here, assuming that the matter is a
zero-rest-mass-field, it is shown that both the matter field and the {\it
pp}-wave metric of are completely determined by the value of the
zero-rest-mass-field on and the two dimensional Sen--geometry of
provided a convexity condition, slightly stronger than above, holds. Thus the
{\it pp}-waves can be characterized not only by the usual Cauchy data on a {\it
three} dimensional but by data on its {\it two} dimensional boundary
too. In addition, it is shown that the Ludvigsen--Vickers quasi-local
angular momentum of axially symmetric {\it pp}-wave geometries has the familiar
properties known for pure (matter) radiation.Comment: 15 pages, Plain Tex, no figure
Characterization of the near-Earth Asteroid 2002NY40
In August 2002, the near-Earth asteroid 2002 NY40, made its closest approach
to the Earth. This provided an opportunity to study a near-Earth asteroid with
a variety of instruments. Several of the telescopes at the Maui Space
Surveillance System were trained at the asteroid and collected adaptive optics
images, photometry and spectroscopy. Analysis of the imagery reveals the
asteroid is triangular shaped with significant self-shadowing. The photometry
reveals a 20-hour period and the spectroscopy shows that the asteroid is a
Q-type
Values and Ethics of Global Civil Society Actors: Insights from a Survey and Content Analyses
This is an author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication following peer review. The publisher version is available on its site.This study examines values, ethics, and principles of conduct that underlie activities
of global civil society organizations. It uses an international web-based survey, and a content
analysis of the codes of conduct for exploring views of global civil society actors active on global
issues and participating in global civil society events. The findings of this analysis highlight many
similarities in the ways global civil society organizations of different forms and origins define
their goals, values, ethical standards, and responsibilities. The normative consensus discerned in
this research is limited in scope, however. It revolves around a particular, liberal, view of civil
society. The study discusses results of the survey and content analyses in light of the current
debates on the nature of global civil society and its relation to the system of states and the global
market
Structural diversity in alkali metal and alkali metal magnesiate chemistry of the bulky 2,6-diisopropyl-N-(trimethylsilyl)anilino ligand
Bulky amido ligands are precious in s-block chemistry since they can implant complementary strong basic and weak nucleophilic properties within compounds. Recent work has shown the pivotal importance of the base structure with enhancement of basicity and extraordinary regioselectivities possible for cyclic alkali metal magnesiates containing mixed n-butyl/amido ligand sets. This work advances alkali metal and alkali metal magnesiate chemistry of the bulky aryl-silyl amido ligand [N(SiMe3)(Dipp)] (Dipp = 2,6-iPr2-C6H3). Infinite chain structures of the parent sodium and potassium amides are disclosed, adding to the few known crystallographically characterised unsolvated s-block metal amides. Solvation by PMDETA or TMEDA gives molecular variants of the lithium and sodium amides; whereas for potassium, PMDETA gives a molecular structure but TMEDA affords a novel, hemi-solvated infinite chain. Crystal structures of the first magnesiate examples of this amide in [MMg{N(SiMe3)(Dipp)}2(μ-nBu)]∞ (M = Na or K), are also revealed though these breakdown to their homometallic components in donor solvent as revealed through NMR and DOSY studies
Compton Scattering from the Deuteron Above Pion-Production Threshold
The electromagnetic polarizabilities of the nucleon are fundamental nucleon-structure observables that characterize its response to external electromagnetic fields. The neutron polarizabilities can be accessed from Compton-scattering data on light nuclear targets. Recent measurements of the differential cross section for Compton scattering on the deuteron below the pion-production threshold have decreased the uncertainties in the neutron polarizabilities, yet the proton polarizabilities remain known substantially more accurately. As the sensitivity of the cross section to the polarizabilities increases with incident photon energy, measurements above the pion threshold may offer a way for an improved determination of the neutron polarizabilities. In this Rapid Communiciation, the first measurement of the cross section for coherent Compton scattering on the deuteron above the pion-production threshold is presented
Serotonin regulates prostate growth through androgen receptor modulation
Serotonin regulates prostate growth through androgen receptor modulationAging and testosterone almost inexorably cause benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) in Human males. However, etiology of BPH is largely unknown. Serotonin (5-HT) is produced by neuroendocrine prostatic cells and presents in high concentration in normal prostatic transition zone, but its function in prostate physiology is unknown. Previous evidence demonstrated that neuroendocrine cells and 5-HT are decreased in BPH compared to normal prostate. Here, we show that 5-HT is a strong negative regulator of prostate growth. In vitro, 5-HT inhibits rat prostate branching through down-regulation of androgen receptor (AR). This 5-HT's inhibitory mechanism is also present in human cells of normal prostate and BPH, namely in cell lines expressing AR when treated with testosterone. In both models, 5-HT's inhibitory mechanism was replicated by specific agonists of 5-Htr1a and 5-Htr1b. Since peripheral 5-HT production is specifically regulated by tryptophan hydroxylase 1(Tph1), we showed that Tph1 knockout mice present higher prostate mass and up-regulation of AR when compared to wild-type, whereas 5-HT treatment restored the prostate weight and AR levels. As 5-HT is decreased in BPH, we present here evidence that links 5-HT depletion to BPH etiology through modulation of AR. Serotoninergic prostate pathway should be explored as a new therapeutic target for BPH.Projects NORTE-01-0246-FEDER-000012, NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000013 and NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000023, supported by the Northern Portugal Regional Operational Program (NORTE 2020), under the Portugal 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) and Bolsa de Investigação GSK Inovação em Urologia 2012info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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