12 research outputs found
Matter under Mind
The artist discusses the work for his Masters of Fine Arts exhibition, Mind under Matter, held at the Tipton Gallery in downtown Johnson City, Tennessee. Exhibition dates are from March 27th through April 5th 2017. ‘Matter under Mind’ explores the balance of control and non-control within the art-making process. This technique creates an automatic dialogue resulting in abstraction guided by the subconscious. The title ‘Matter under Mind’ is a slight play on the phrase ‘mind over matter’ emphasizing how matter/material is manipulated by the mind through the making of artwork, and within the mind’s eye or imagination.
The video installation featuring the work is accompanied by a soundscape to bring the viewer deeper into the creative process. The video symbolizes the idea of ‘solve et coagula’ or, dissolve and coagulate, destroy to recreate by revealing how the process of cleaning paint off of a surface creates artwork in itself
Radial Velocity Studies of Close Binary Stars. IX
Radial-velocity measurements and sine-curve fits to the orbital velocity
variations are presented for the eighth set of ten close binary systems: AB
And, V402 Aur, V445 Cep, V2082 Cyg, BX Dra, V918 Her, V502 Oph, V1363 Ori, KP
Peg, V335 Peg. Half of the systems (V445 Cep, V2082 Cyg, V918 Her, V1363 Ori,
V335 Peg) were discovered photometrically by the Hipparcos mission and all
systems are double-lined (SB2) contact binaries. The broadening function method
permitted improvement of the orbital elements for AB And and V502 Oph. The
other systems have been observed for radial velocity variations for the first
time; in this group are five bright (V<7.5) binaries: V445 Cep, V2082 Cyg, V918
Her, KP Peg and V335 Peg. Several of the studied systems are prime candidates
for combined light and radial-velocity synthesis solutions.Comment: 17+ pages, 2 tables, 4 figure
CoRoT photometry and high-resolution spectroscopy of the interacting eclipsing binary AU Mon
Analyses of very accurate CoRoT space photometry, past Johnson V
photoelectric photometry and high-resolution \'echelle spectra led to the
determination of improved and consistent fundamental stellar properties of both
components of AU Mon. We derived new, accurate ephemerides for both the orbital
motion (with a period of 11.113d) and the long-term, overall brightness
variation (with a period of 416.9d) of this strongly interacting Be + G
semi-detached binary. It is shown that this long-term variation must be due to
attenuation of the total light by some variable circumbinary material. We
derived the binary mass ratio = 0.17\p0.03 based on the
assumption that the G-type secondary fills its Roche lobe and rotates
synchronously. Using this value of the mass ratio as well as the radial
velocities of the G-star, we obtained a consistent light curve model and
improved estimates of the stellar masses, radii, luminosities and effective
temperatures. We demonstrate that the observed lines of the B-type primary may
not be of photospheric origin. We also discover rapid and periodic light
changes visible in the high-quality residual CoRoT light curves. AU Mon is put
into perspective by a comparison with known binaries exhibiting long-term
cyclic light changes.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Retinal horizontal cells use different synaptic sites for global feedforward and local feedback signaling
In the outer plexiform layer (OPL) of the mammalian retina, cone photoreceptors (cones) provide input to more than a dozen types of cone bipolar cells (CBCs). In the mouse, this transmission is modulated by a single horizontal cell (HC) type. HCs perform global signaling within their laterally coupled network but also provide local, cone-specific feedback. However, it is unknown how HCs provide local feedback to cones at the same time as global forward signaling to CBCs and where the underlying synapses are located. To assess how HCs simultaneously perform different modes of signaling, we reconstructed the dendritic trees of five HCs as well as cone axon terminals and CBC dendrites in a serial block-face electron microscopy volume and analyzed their connectivity. In addition to the fine HC dendritic tips invaginating cone axon terminals, we also identified “bulbs,” short segments of increased dendritic diameter on the primary dendrites of HCs. These bulbs are in an OPL stratum well below the cone axon terminal base and make contacts with other HCs and CBCs. Our results from immunolabeling, electron microscopy, and glutamate imaging suggest that HC bulbs represent GABAergic synapses that do not receive any direct photoreceptor input. Together, our data suggest the existence of two synaptic strata in the mouse OPL, spatially separating cone-specific feedback and feedforward signaling to CBCs. A biophysical model of a HC dendritic branch and voltage imaging support the hypothesis that this spatial arrangement of synaptic contacts allows for simultaneous local feedback and global feedforward signaling by HCs