7,640 research outputs found
Study of Instrumentation for Direct Torque Measurements
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96625/1/39015087358456.pd
Multiple-satellite studies of magnetospheric substorms: Plasma sheet recovery and the poleward leap of auroral-zone activity
Particle observations from pairs of satellites (Ogo 5, Vela 4A and 5B, Imp 3) during the recovery of plasma sheet thickness late in substorms were examined. Six of the nine events occurred within about 5 min in locations near the estimated position of the neutral sheet, but over wide ranges of east-west and radial separations. The time of occurrence and spatial extent of the recovery were related to the onset (defined by ground Pi 2 pulsations) and approximate location (estimated from ground mid-latitude magnetic signatures) of substorm expansions. It was found that the plasma sheet recovery occurred 10 - 30 min after the last in a series of Pi bursts, which were interpreted to indicate that the recovery was not due directly to a late, high latitude substorm expansion. The recovery was also observed to occur after the substorm current wedge had moved into the evening sector and to extend far to the east of the center of the last preceding substorm expansion
Effect of abdominal binding on respiratory mechanics during exercise in athletes with cervical spinal cord injury
West CR, Goosey-Tolfrey VL, Campbell IG, Romer LM. Effect of
abdominal binding on respiratory mechanics during exercise in athletes
with cervical spinal cord injury. J Appl Physiol 117: 36–45, 2014. First
published May 22, 2014; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00218.2014.—We
asked whether elastic binding of the abdomen influences respiratory
mechanics during wheelchair propulsion in athletes with cervical
spinal cord injury (SCI). Eight Paralympic wheelchair rugby players
with motor-complete SCI (C5-C7) performed submaximal and maximal
incremental exercise tests on a treadmill, both with and without
abdominal binding. Measurements included pulmonary function,
pressure-derived indices of respiratory mechanics, operating lung
volumes, tidal flow-volume data, gas exchange, blood lactate, and
symptoms. Residual volume and functional residual capacity were
reduced with binding (77 18 and 81 11% of unbound, P 0.05),
vital capacity was increased (114 9%, P 0.05), whereas total lung
capacity was relatively well preserved (99 5%). During exercise,
binding introduced a passive increase in transdiaphragmatic pressure,
due primarily to an increase in gastric pressure. Active pressures
during inspiration were similar across conditions. A sudden, sustained
rise in operating lung volumes was evident in the unbound condition,
and these volumes were shifted downward with binding.
Expiratory flow limitation did not occur in any subject and there
was substantial reserve to increase flow and volume in both
conditions. V ˙ O2 was elevated with binding during the final stages
of exercise (8 –12%, P 0.05), whereas blood lactate concentration
was reduced (16 –19%, P 0.05). V ˙ O2/heart rate slopes were
less steep with binding (62 35 vs. 47 24 ml/beat, P 0.05).
Ventilation, symptoms, and work rates were similar across conditions.
The results suggest that abdominal binding shifts tidal
breathing to lower lung volumes without influencing flow limitation,
symptoms, or exercise tolerance. Changes in respiratory
mechanics with binding may benefit O2 transport capacity by an
improvement in central circulatory function.This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund
Strongly Enhanced Hole-Phonon Coupling in the Metallic State of the Dilute Two-Dimensional Hole Gas
We have studied the temperature dependent phonon emission rate () of a
strongly interacting (22) dilute 2D GaAs hole system using a standard
carrier heating technique. In the still poorly understood metallic state, we
observe that () changes from () to ()
above 100mK, indicating a crossover from screened piezoelectric(PZ) coupling to
screened deformation potential(DP) coupling for hole-phonon scattering.
Quantitative comparison with theory shows that the long range PZ coupling
between holes and phonons has the expected magnitude; however, in the metallic
state, the short range DP coupling between holes and phonons is {\it almost
twenty times stronger} than expected from theory. The density dependence of
() shows that it is {\it easier} to cool low density 2D holes in GaAs
than higher density 2D hole systems.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Suppression of weak localization effects in low-density metallic 2D holes
We have measured the conductivity in a gated high-mobility GaAs two
dimensional hole sample with densities in the range (7-17)x10^9 cm^-2 and at
hole temperatures down to 5x10^-3 E_F. We measure the weak localization
corrections to the conductivity g=G/(e^2/h) as a function of magnetic field
(Delta g=0.019 +/- 0.006 at g=1.5 and T=9 mK) and temperature (d ln g/dT<0.0058
and 0.0084 at g=1.56 and 2.8). These values are less than a few percent of the
value 1/pi predicted by standard weak localization theory for a disordered 2D
Fermi liqui
Human Ubc9 Contributes to Production of Fully Infectious Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Virions
Ubc9 was identified as a cellular protein that interacts with the Gag protein of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus. We show here that Ubc9 also interacts with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag protein and that their interaction is important for virus replication. Gag was found to colocalize with Ubc9 predominantly at perinuclear puncta. While cells in which Ubc9 expression was suppressed with RNA interference produced normal numbers of virions, these particles were 8- to 10-fold less infectious than those produced in the presence of Ubc9. The nature of this defect was assayed for dependence on Ubc9 during viral assembly, trafficking, and Env incorporation. The Gag-mediated assembly of virus particles and protease-mediated processing of Gag and Gag-Pol were unchanged in the absence of Ubc9. However, the stability of the cell-associated Env glycoprotein was decreased and Env incorporation into released virions was altered. Interestingly, overexpression of the Ubc9 trans-dominant-negative mutant C93A, which is a defective E2-SUMO-1 conjugase, suggests that this activity may not be required for interaction with Gag, virion assembly, or infectivity. This finding demonstrates that Ubc9 plays an important role in the production of infectious HIV-1 virions
Ariel - Volume 4 Number 6
Editors
David A. Jacoby
Eugenia Miller
Tom Williams
Associate Editors
Paul Bialas
Terry Burt
Michael Leo
Gail Tenikat
Editor Emeritus and Business Manager
Richard J. Bonnano
Movie Editor
Robert Breckenridge
Staff
Richard Blutstein
Mary F. Buechler
J.D. Kanofsky
Rocket Weber
David Maye
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