35,797 research outputs found
Quantum walks on two kinds of two-dimensional models
In this paper, we numerically study quantum walks on two kinds of
two-dimensional graphs: cylindrical strip and Mobius strip. The two kinds of
graphs are typical two-dimensional topological graph. We study the crossing
property of quantum walks on these two models. Also, we study its dependence on
the initial state, size of the model. At the same time, we compare the quantum
walk and classical walk on these two models to discuss the difference of
quantum walk and classical walk
On the Unpulsed Radio Emission from J0737-3039
The double pulsar system J0737-3039 appears associated with a continuous
radio emission, nearly three times stronger than that of the two pulsars
together. If such an emission comes from a tranparent cloud its spatial extent
(> 10^13 cm) should be substantially larger than the orbital separation.
Assuming homogeneity and equipartition, the cloud magnetic field is 0.03 G and
the electron characteristic energy ~ 60 MeV. This is consistent with supposing
that relativistic electrons produced in the shock formed by the interaction of
the more luminous pulsar wind with the magnetosphere of the companion flow away
filling a larger volume. Alternatively, the unpulsed emission may directly come
from the bow shock if some kind of coherent mechanism is at work. Possible
observational signatures that can dicriminate between the two pictures are
shortly discussed.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, accepted for publication in A&A (Letters
ND-Track: Tractography utilising parametric models of white matter fibre orientation dispersion
This work develops a tractography algorithm to leverage fibre dispersion estimates derived from fitting parametric models of orientation dispersion to diffusion data. Tractography techniques are powerful tools to probe white matter (WM) connectivity non-invasively. Most current techniques follow a small number of discrete directions per voxel to identify WM connections. This approach addresses the limitation of traditional DTI-based tractography for regions with crossing fibres. However, it remains an oversimplification for regions with fanning and bending configurations, where the underlying fibre orientation distributions are continuous rather than discrete [2]. Following only a discrete set of directions in this case misrepresents the underlying anatomy and is likely to result in false negative connectivity estimates. Recent parameterized models of fibre dispersion represent such sub-voxel fibre architecture more realistically and provide more accurate estimates of dispersion than non-parametric techniques such as spherical deconvolution, which are vulnerable to noise [3]. Here, we present a new tractography algorithm, hereby referred to as ND-Track (Neurite Dispersion Tracking), that leverages directional information gathered from parametric models of dispersion. We investigate the advantages of tracking with dispersion measures on a simple phantom and in in-vivo data, tracking through the coronal radiata, a region known to exhibit a significant degree of fibre dispersion. We further demonstrate that this approach does not compromise the tracking of the WM pathways for which the standard technique works well
Abnormally high content of free glucosamine residues identified in a preparation of commercially available porcine intestinal heparan sulfate
Heparan sulfate (HS) polysaccharides are ubiquitous in animal tissues as components of proteoglycans, and they participate in many important biological processes. HS carbohydrate chains are complex and can contain rare structural components such as N-unsubstituted glucosamine (GlcN). Commercially available HS preparations have been invaluable in many types of research activities. In the course of preparing microarrays to include probes derived from HS oligosaccharides, we found an unusually high content of GlcN residue in a recently purchased batch of porcine intestinal mucosal HS. Composition and sequence analysis by mass spectrometry of the oligosaccharides obtained after heparin lyase III digestion of the polysaccharide indicated two and three GlcN in the tetrasaccharide and hexasaccharide fractions, respectively. (1)H NMR of the intact polysaccharide showed that this unusual batch differed strikingly from other HS preparations obtained from bovine kidney and porcine intestine. The very high content of GlcN (30%) and low content of GlcNAc (4.2%) determined by disaccharide composition analysis indicated that N-deacetylation and/or N-desulfation may have taken place. HS is widely used by the scientific community to investigate HS structures and activities. Great care has to be taken in drawing conclusions from investigations of structural features of HS and specificities of HS interaction with proteins when commercial HS is used without further analysis. Pending the availability of a validated commercial HS reference preparation, our data may be useful to members of the scientific community who have used the present preparation in their studies
Future X-ray timing missions
Thanks to the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), it is now widely recognized
that fast X-ray timing can be used to probe strong gravity fields around
collapsed objects and constrain the equation of state of dense matter in
neutron stars. We first discuss some of the outstanding issues which could be
solved with an X-ray timing mission building on the great successes of RXTE and
providing an order of magnitude better sensitivity. Then we briefly describe
the 'Experiment for X-ray timing and Relativistic Astrophysics' (EXTRA)
recently proposed to the European Space Agency as a follow-up to RXTE and the
related US mission 'Relativistic Astrophysics Explorer' (RAE).Comment: To be published in `Proceedings of the Third Microquasar Workshop:
Granada Workshop on galactic relativistic jet sources', Eds A. J.
Castro-Tirado, J. Greiner and J. M. Paredes, Astrophysics and Space Science,
in press. More about EXTRA can be found at:
http://www.cesr.fr/~barret/extra.htm
Recent Progress in Neutron Star Theory
This review contains chapters discussing: Energy density fluctionals of
nuclear matter, Many-body theory of nucleon matter, Hadronic and quark matter,
Mixtures of phases in dense matter, Neutron star observations and predictions.Comment: 33 pages +13 figs., Ann. Rev. Nucl. & Part. Science, 200
Large-signal dynamic behavior of distributed-feedback lasers including lateral effects
The large-signal behavior of DFB lasers is analyzed, including lateral as well as longitudinal variations in carrier density, photon density, and refractive index. The effective index method and other approximations are used to reduce the complex three-dimensional problem to one dimension. The coupled wave and carrier rate equations are then solved in a self-consistent manner. Lateral spatial carrier hole burning and lateral diffusion are found to affect the relaxation oscillation frequency and damping rate of DFB lasers, depending on their detailed structure. The effective time-averaged linewidth enhancement factor is also affected. In symmetric AR-coated λ/4 phase-shifted lasers the side mode suppression ratio can be deteriorated significantly by lateral spatial hole burning when kL is large.published_or_final_versio
The Influence of Different Technologies of Soil Processing on Infiltration Properties of Soil in the Cambisols Area of the Opava District
The subject of the contribution is the evaluation of the influence of the conventional tillage and reduced tillage technology of soil processing on the infiltration properties of the soil in the Větřkovice area. Field experimental work at the area was carried out in the years 2013–2015 on Cambisol district medium-heavy clayey soil. The research was conducted on sloping erosion-endangered blocks of arable land sown with spring barley. The areas were chosen each year in the way that one of the experimental areas was handled by conventional tillage technologies and the other by reduced tillage technologies. Intact soil samples were taken into Kopecký’s cylinders in the three landscape positions, at a depth of 10 cm (representing topsoil) and 30 cm (representing subsoil). The cumulative infiltration was measured using a mini-disc infiltrometer near the consumption points. The Zhang method (1997), which provides an estimate of the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity K(h), was used for the evaluation of the infiltration tests of the mini-disc infiltrometer. The soil profile processed by conventional tillage showed a higher degree of compaction. The bulk density was between 1.10–1.67 g.cm-3, compared to the land processed by the reduced tillage technology, where the values were between 0.80–1.29 g.cm-3. Unsaturated hydraulic conductivity values were about one‑third higher within the reduced tillage technology soil processing
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Neuromyelitis optica IgG and natural killer cells produce NMO lesions in mice without myelin loss.
The pathogenesis of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) involves targeting of NMO-immunoglobulin G (NMO-IgG) to aquaporin-4 (AQP4) on astrocytes in the central nervous system. Prior work provided evidence for complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) in NMO lesion development. Here, we show that antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), in the absence of complement, can also produce NMO-like lesions. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity was produced in vitro by incubation of mouse astrocyte cultures with human recombinant monoclonal NMO-IgG and human natural killer cells (NK-cells). Injection of NMO-IgG and NK-cells in mouse brain caused loss of AQP4 and GFAP, two characteristic features of NMO lesions, but little myelin loss. Lesions were minimal or absent following injection of: (1) control (non-NMO) IgG with NK-cells; (2) NMO-IgG and NK-cells in AQP4-deficient mice; or (3) NMO-IgG and NK-cells in wild-type mice together with an excess of mutated NMO-IgG lacking ADCC effector function. NK-cells greatly exacerbated NMO lesions produced by NMO-IgG and complement in an ex vivo spinal cord slice model of NMO, causing marked myelin loss. NMO-IgG can thus produce astrocyte injury by ADCC in a complement-independent and dependent manner, suggesting the potential involvement of ADCC in NMO pathogenesis
Analysis of investigation of undergraduate nurse's critical thinking
2003-2004 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
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