2,153 research outputs found
Finite-Temperature Quasicontinuum: Molecular Dynamics without All the Atoms
Using a combination of statistical mechanics and finite-element interpolation, we develop a coarse-grained (CG) alternative to molecular dynamics (MD) for crystalline solids at constant temperature. The new approach is significantly more efficient than MD and generalizes earlier work on the quasicontinuum method. The method is validated by recovering equilibrium properties of single crystal Ni as a function of temperature. CG dynamical simulations of nanoindentation reveal a strong dependence on temperature of the critical stress to nucleate dislocations under the indenter
Tempering Transnational Advocacy?:The Effect of Repression and Regulatory Restriction on Transnational NGO Collaborations
This paper examines through qualitative study the effect of government regulatory restriction and repression on non-governmental organizations (NGOs) engaging in transnational advocacy. The focus is on NGOâs advocacy activities, in the realm of human rights, environment, labor and development in particular, using illustrations from Bangladesh and Zambia. It finds that next to some NGOs disbanding and moving towards service activities, many NGOs shift in terms of substantive advocacy and form of organizational collaboration. To continue cross-border interactions with their foreign partners, many NGOs adjust to circumvent or compensate for restrictions and repression. Because of this, transnational advocacy can be said to continue, but repression and restrictions have significant substantive and organizational effects for the collaborations studied, and cross-border NGO collaborations in our sample are increasingly fragile and their advocacy more tempered
Visible Discrimination of Broadband Infrared Light by Dye-Enhanced Upconversion in Lanthanide-Doped Nanocrystals
Optical upconversion of near infrared light to visible light is an attractive way to capture the optical energy or optical information contained in low-energy photons that is otherwise lost to the human eye or to certain photodetectors and solar cells. Until the recent application of broadband absorbing optical antennas, upconversion efficiency in lanthanide-doped nanocrystals was limited by the weak, narrow atomic absorption of a handful of sensitizer elements. In this work, we extend the role of the optical antenna to provide false-color, visible discrimination between bands of infrared radiation. By pairing different optical antenna dyes to specific nanoparticle compositions, unique visible emission is associated with different bands of infrared excitation. In one material set, the peak emission was increased 10-fold, and the width of the spectral response was increased more than 10-fold
Human rights and ethical reasoning : capabilities, conventions and spheres of public action
This interdisciplinary article argues that human rights must be understood in terms of opportunities for social participation and that social and economic rights are integral to any discussion of the subject. We offer both a social constructionist and a normative framework for a sociology of human rights which reaches beyond liberal individualism, combining insights from the work of Amartya Sen and from French convention theory. Following Sen, we argue that human rights are founded on the promotion of human capabilities as ethical demands shaped by public reasoning. Using French convention theory, we show how the terms of such deliberation are shaped by different constructions of collectively held values and the compromises reached between them. We conclude by demonstrating how our approach offers a new perspective on spheres of public action and the role these should play in promoting social cohesion, individual capabilities and human rights
Rotational Velocities of Individual Components in Very Low Mass Binaries
We present rotational velocities for individual components of 11 very low mass (VLM) binaries with spectral types between M7 and L7.5. These results are based on observations taken with the near-infrared spectrograph, NIRSPEC, and the Keck II laser guide star adaptive optics system. We find that the observed sources tend to be rapid rotators (v sin i > 10 km s^(â1)), consistent with previous seeing-limited measurements of VLM objects. The two sources with the largest v sin i, LP 349â25B and HD 130948C, are rotating at ~30% of their break-up speed, and are among the most rapidly rotating VLM objects known. Furthermore, five binary systems, all with orbital semimajor axes âŸ3.5 AU, have component v sin i values that differ by greater than 3Ï. To bring the binary components with discrepant rotational velocities into agreement would require the rotational axes to be inclined with respect to each other, and that at least one component is inclined with respect to the orbital plane. Alternatively, each component could be rotating at a different rate, even though they have similar spectral types. Both differing rotational velocities and inclinations have implications for binary star formation and evolution. We also investigate possible dynamical evolution in the triple system HD 130948AâBC. The close binary brown dwarfs B and C have significantly different v sin i values. We demonstrate that components B and C could have been torqued into misalignment by the primary star, A, via orbital precession. Such a scenario can also be applied to another triple system in our sample, GJ 569AâBab. Interactions such as these may play an important role in the dynamical evolution of VLM binaries. Finally, we note that two of the binaries with large differences in component v sin i, LP 349â25AB and 2MASS 0746+20AB, are also known radio sources
Mapping the Shores of the Brown Dwarf Desert III: Young Moving Groups
We present the results of an aperture masking interferometry survey for
substellar companions around 67 members of the young (~8-200Myr) nearby
(~5-86pc) AB Doradus, Beta Pictoris, Hercules-Lyra, TW Hya, and
Tucana-Horologium stellar associations. Observations were made at near infrared
wavelengths between 1.2-3.8 microns using the adaptive optics facilities of the
Keck II, VLT UT4, and Palomar Hale Telescopes. Typical contrast ratios of
~100-200 were achieved at angular separations between ~40-320mas, with our
survey being 100% complete for companions with masses below 0.25\msolar across
this range. We report the discovery of a \msolar companion to
HIP14807, as well as the detections and orbits of previously known stellar
companions to HD16760, HD113449, and HD160934. We show that the companion to
HD16760 is in a face-on orbit, resulting in an upward revision of its mass from
\mjupiter to \msolar. No substellar
companions were detected around any of our sample members, despite our ability
to detect companions with masses below 80\mjupiter for 50 of our targets: of
these, our sensitivity extended down to 40\mjupiter around 30 targets, with a
subset of 22 subject to the still more stringent limit of 20\mjupiter. A
statistical analysis of our non-detection of substellar companions allows us to
place constraints on their frequency around ~0.2-1.5\msolar stars. In
particular, considering companion mass distributions that have been proposed in
the literature, we obtain an upper limit estimate of ~9-11% for the frequency
of 20-80\mjupiter companions between 3-30AU at 95% confidence, assuming that
their semimajor axes are distributed according to in this range.Comment: Accepted by Ap
Deep search for companions to probable young brown dwarfs
We have obtained high contrast images of four nearby, faint, and very low
mass objects 2MASSJ04351455-1414468, SDSSJ044337.61+000205.1,
2MASSJ06085283-2753583 and 2MASSJ06524851-5741376 (here after 2MASS0435-14,
SDSS0443+00, 2MASS0608-27 and 2MASS0652-57), identified in the field as
probable isolated young brown dwarfs. Our goal was to search for binary
companions down to the planetary mass regime. We used the NAOS-CONICA adaptive
optics instrument (NACO) and its unique capability to sense the wavefront in
the near-infrared to acquire sharp images of the four systems in Ks, with a
field of view of 28"*28". Additional J and L' imaging and follow-up
observations at a second epoch were obtained for 2MASS0652-57. With a typical
contrast DKs= 4.0-7.0 mag, our observations are sensitive down to the planetary
mass regime considering a minimum age of 10 to 120 Myr for these systems. No
additional point sources are detected in the environment of 2MASS0435-14,
SDSS0443+00 and 2MASS0608-27 between 0.1-12" (i.e about 2 to 250 AU at 20 pc).
2MASS0652-57 is resolved as a \sim230 mas binary. Follow-up observations reject
a background contaminate, resolve the orbital motion of the pair, and confirm
with high confidence that the system is physically bound. The J, Ks and L'
photometry suggest a q\sim0.7-0.8 mass ratio binary with a probable semi-major
axis of 5-6 AU. Among the four systems, 2MASS0652-57 is probably the less
constrained in terms of age determination. Further analysis would be necessary
to confirm its youth. It would then be interesting to determine its orbital and
physical properties to derive the system's dynamical mass and to test
evolutionary model predictions.Comment: Research note, 5 pages, 2 tables and 3 figures, accepted to A&
Risk-based inspection as a cost-effective strategy to reduce human exposure to cysticerci of Taenia saginata in low-prevalence settings
Taenia saginata cysticercus is the larval stage of the zoonotic parasite Taenia saginata, with a life-cycle involving both cattle and humans. The public health impact is considered low. The current surveillance system, based on post-mortem inspection of carcasses has low sensitivity and leads to considerable economic burden. Therefore, in the interests of public health and food production efficiency, this study aims to explore the potential of risk-based and cost-effective meat inspection activities for the detection and control of T. saginata cysticercus in low prevalence settings
Ectopic Expression of Zmiz1 Induces Cutaneous Squamous Cell Malignancies in a Mouse Model of Cancer
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is the second most common form of cancer in the human population, yet the underlying genetic mechanisms contributing to the disease are not well understood. We recently identified Zmiz1 as a candidate oncogene in nonmelanoma skin cancer through a transposon mutagenesis screen. Here we show that transposon-induced mutations in Zmiz1 drive expression of a truncated transcript that is similar to an alternative endogenous ZMIZ1 transcript found to be overexpressed in human SCCs relative to normal skin. We also describe an original mouse model of invasive keratoacanthoma driven by skin-specific expression of the truncated Zmiz1 transcript. Unlike most mouse models, Zmiz1-induced skin tumors develop rapidly and in the absence of promoting agents such as phorbol esters. In addition, we found that the alternative Zmiz1 isoform has greater protein stability than its full-length counterpart. Finally, we provide evidence that ZMIZ1 is overexpressed in a significant percentage of human breast, ovarian, and colon cancers in addition to human SCCs, suggesting that ZMIZ1 may play a broader role in epithelial cancers
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