60 research outputs found

    Beating quantum limits in interferometers with quantum locking of mirrors

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    The sensitivity in interferometric measurements such as gravitational-wave detectors is ultimately limited by quantum noise of light. We discuss the use of feedback mechanisms to reduce the quantum effects of radiation pressure. Recent experiments have shown that it is possible to reduce the thermal motion of a mirror by cold damping. The mirror motion is measured with an optomechanical sensor based on a high-finesse cavity, and reduced by a feedback loop. We show that this technique can be extended to lock the mirror at the quantum level. In gravitational-waves interferometers with Fabry-Perot cavities in each arms, it is even possible to use a single feedback mechanism to lock one cavity mirror on the other. This quantum locking greatly improves the sensitivity of the interferometric measurement. It is furthermore insensitive to imperfections such as losses in the interferometer

    Noise reduction in gravitational wave interferometers using feedback

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    We show that the quantum locking scheme recently proposed by Courty {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 90}, 083601 (2003)] for the reduction of back action noise is able to significantly improve the sensitivity of the next generation of gravitational wave interferometers.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, in print in the Special Issue of J. Opt. B on Fluctuations and Noise in Photonics and Quantum Optic

    Whip Use by Jockeys in a Sample of Australian Thoroughbred Races—An Observational Study

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    The use of whips by jockeys is an issue. The current study viewed opportunistic high-speed footage of 15 race finishes frame-by-frame to examine the outcomes of arm and wrist actions (n = 350) on 40 horses viewed from the left of the field. Any actions fully or partially obscured by infrastructure or other horses were removed from the database, leaving a total of 104 non-contact sweeps and 134 strikes. For all instances of arm actions that resulted in fully visible whip strikes behind the saddle (n = 109), the outcomes noted were area struck, percentage of unpadded section making contact, whether the seam made contact and whether a visible indentation was evident on impact. We also recorded use of clockwise or counter-clockwise arm action from each jockey's whip, whether the whip was held like a tennis racquet or a ski pole, whether the hind leg on the side of the impact was in stance or swing phase and whether the jockey's arm was seen traveling above shoulder height. The goal of the study was to characterize the area struck and the visual impact of whip use at the level of the horse. We measured the ways in which both padded and unpadded sections of the whip made impact. There was evidence of at least 28 examples, in 9 horses, of breaches of the whip rules (one seam contact, 13 contacts with the head, and 14 arm actions that rose above the height of the shoulder). The whip caused a visible indentation on 83% of impacts. The unpadded section of the whip made contact on 64% of impacts. The results call into question the ability of Stewards to effectively police the rules concerning whip use and, more importantly, challenge the notion that padding the distal section of whips completely safeguards horses from any possible whip-related pain

    Effect of a single acupuncture treatment on surgical wound healing in dogs: a randomized, single blinded, controlled pilot study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The aim of the study was to investigate the effect of acupuncture on wound healing after soft tissue or orthopaedic surgery in dogs.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>29 dogs were submitted to soft tissue and/or orthopaedic surgeries. Five dogs had two surgical wounds each, so there were totally 34 wounds in the study. All owners received instructions for post operative care as well as antibiotic and pain treatment. The dogs were randomly assigned to treatment or control groups. Treated dogs received one dry needle acupuncture treatment right after surgery and the control group received no such treatment. A veterinary surgeon that was blinded to the treatment, evaluated the wounds at three and seven days after surgery in regard to oedema (scale 0-3), scabs (yes/no), exudate (yes/no), hematoma (yes/no), dermatitis (yes/no), and aspect of the wound (dry/humid).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There was no significant difference between the treatment and control groups in the variables evaluated three and seven days after surgery. However, oedema reduced significantly in the group treated with acupuncture at seven days compared to three days after surgery, possibly due the fact that there was more oedema in the treatment group at day three (although this difference was nor significant between groups).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The use of a single acupuncture treatment right after surgery in dogs did not appear to have any beneficial effects in surgical wound healing.</p

    Short RNA Guides Cleavage by Eukaryotic RNase III

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    In eukaryotes, short RNAs guide a variety of enzymatic activities that range from RNA editing to translation repression. It is hypothesized that pre-existing proteins evolved to bind and use guide RNA during evolution. However, the capacity of modern proteins to adopt new RNA guides has never been demonstrated. Here we show that Rnt1p, the yeast orthologue of the bacterial dsRNA-specific RNase III, can bind short RNA transcripts and use them as guides for sequence-specific cleavage. Target cleavage occurred at a constant distance from the Rnt1p binding site, leaving the guide RNA intact for subsequent cleavage. Our results indicate that RNase III may trigger sequence-specific RNA degradation independent of the RNAi machinery, and they open the road for a new generation of precise RNA silencing tools that do not trigger a dsRNA-mediated immune response

    HEXIM1 targets a repeated GAUC motif in the riboregulator of transcription 7SK and promotes base pair rearrangements

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    7SK snRNA, an abundant RNA discovered in human nucleus, regulates transcription by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). It sequesters and inhibits the transcription elongation factor P-TEFb which, by phosphorylation of RNAPII, switches transcription from initiation to processive elongation and relieves pauses of transcription. This regulation process depends on the association between 7SK and a HEXIM protein, neither isolated partner being able to inhibit P-TEFb alone. In this work, we used a combined NMR and biochemical approach to determine 7SK and HEXIM1 elements that define their binding properties. Our results demonstrate that a repeated GAUC motif located in the upper part of a hairpin on the 5′-end of 7SK is essential for specific HEXIM1 recognition. Binding of a peptide comprising the HEXIM Arginine Rich Motif (ARM) induces an opening of the GAUC motif and stabilization of an internal loop. A conserved proline-serine sequence in the middle of the ARM is shown to be essential for the binding specificity and the conformational change of the RNA. This work provides evidences for a recognition mechanism involving a first event of induced fit, suggesting that 7SK plasticity is involved in the transcription regulation

    OLIGOPEPTIDES ARE THE MAIN SOURCE OF NITROGEN FOR LACTOCOCCUS-LACTIS DURING GROWTH IN MILK

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    The consumption of amino acids and peptides was monitored during growth in milk of proteinase-positive (Prt(+)) and -negative (Prt(-)) strains of Lactococcus lactis, The Prt(-) strains showed monophasic exponential growth, while the Prt(+) strains grew in two phases. The first growth phases of the Prt(+) and Prt- strains were the same, and no hydrolysis of casein was observed, Also, the levels of consumption of amino acids and peptides in the Prt(+) and Prt(-) strains were similar. At the end of this growth phase, not all free amino acids and peptides were used, indicating that the remaining free amino acids and peptides were unable to sustain growth. The consumption of free amino acids was very low (about 5 mg/liter), suggesting that these nitrogen sources play only a minor role in growth. Oligopeptide transport-deficient strains (Opp(-)) of L. lactis were unable to utilize oligopeptides and grew poorly in milk, However, a di- and tripeptide transport-deficient strain (DtpT(-)) grew exactly like the wild type (Opp(+) DtpT(+)) did, These observations indicate that oligopeptides represent the main nitrogen source for growth in milk during the first growth phase. In the second phase of growth of Prt(+) strains, milk proteins are hydrolyzed to peptides by the proteinase, Several of the oligopeptides formed are taken up and hydrolyzed internally by peptidases to amino acids, several of which are subsequently released into the medium (see also E. R. S. Kunji, A. Hagting, C. J. De Vries, V.Juillard, A. J. Haandrikman, B. Poolman, and W. N. Konings, J. Biol. Chem. 270:1569-1574, 1995). It is concluded that growth of L. Iactis in milk depends on oligopeptides as nitrogen source for 98% of growth and that the oligopeptide transport system plays a crucial role in the utilization of these peptides
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