3,349 research outputs found
Conformal Scalar Propagation and Hawking Radiation
The construction of the conformal scalar propagator which has been obtained
in the preceding two projects as an analytic function of the Schwarzschild
black-hole space-time is completed with a boundary condition imposed by the
physical context through contour integration in the exterior vicinity of the
event horizon. It is shown that, as a consequence of the semi-classical
character which the emitted quanta have in that exterior vicinity, the particle
production by the Schwarzschild black hole which was formally established in
the preceding project is identical to thermal Hawking radiation. By extension,
it is established that such a particle production corresponds to a spectrum
which detracts from thermality by the amount predicted by Parikh and Wilczek if
energy conservation is properly imposed as a constraint on scalar propagation.
The results obtained herein support the case made by S. Hawking on the relation
between quantum propagation and observation of particles produced by a black
hole.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, one footnote removed, motto added. Due to appear
in General Relativity and Gravitatio
Migrations and habitat use of the smooth hammerhead shark (Sphyrna zygaena) in the Atlantic Ocean
The smooth hammerhead shark, Sphyrna zygaena, is a cosmopolitan semipelagic shark captured as bycatch in pelagic oceanic fisheries, especially pelagic longlines targeting swordfish and/or tunas. From 2012 to 2016, eight smooth hammerheads were tagged with Pop-up Satellite Archival Tags in the inter-tropical region of the Northeast Atlantic Ocean, with successful transmissions received from seven tags (total of 319 tracking days). Results confirmed the smooth hammerhead is a highly mobile species, as the longest migration ever documented for this species (> 6600 km) was recorded. An absence of a diel vertical movement behavior was noted, with the sharks spending most of their time at surface waters (0-50 m) above 23 degrees C. The operating depth of the pelagic long-line gear was measured with Minilog Temperature and Depth Recorders, and the overlap with the species vertical distribution was calculated. The overlap is taking place mainly during the night and is higher for juveniles (similar to 40% of overlap time). The novel information presented can now be used to contribute to the provision of sustainable management tools and serve as input for Ecological Risk Assessments for smooth hammerheads caught in Atlantic pelagic longline fisheries.Oceanario de Lisboa through Project "SHARK-TAG: Migrations and habitat use of the smooth hammerhead shark in the Atlantic Ocean"; Investigador-FCT from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT, Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia) [Ref: IF/00253/2014]; EU European Social Fund; Programa Operacional Potencial Human
Site-specific incorporation of phosphotyrosine using an expanded genetic code.
Access to phosphoproteins with stoichiometric and site-specific phosphorylation status is key to understanding the role of protein phosphorylation. Here we report an efficient method to generate pure, active phosphotyrosine-containing proteins by genetically encoding a stable phosphotyrosine analog that is convertible to native phosphotyrosine. We demonstrate its general compatibility with proteins of various sizes, phosphotyrosine sites and functions, and reveal a possible role of tyrosine phosphorylation in negative regulation of ubiquitination
Kinetic Characterisation of a Single Chain Antibody against the Hormone Abscisic Acid: Comparison with Its Parental Monoclonal
A single-chain Fv fragment antibody (scFv) specific for the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) has been expressed in the bacterium Escherichia coli as a fusion protein. The kinetics of ABA binding have been measured using surface plasmon resonance spectrometry (BIAcore 2000) using surface and solution assays. Care was taken to calculate the concentration of active protein in each sample using initial rate measurements under conditions of partial mass transport limitation. The fusion product, parental monoclonal antibody and the free scFv all have low nanomolar affinity constants, but there is a lower dissociation rate constant for the parental monoclonal resulting in a three-fold greater affinity. Analogue specificity was tested and structure-activity binding preferences measured. The biologically-active (+)-ABA enantiomer is recognised with an affinity three orders of magnitude higher than the inactive (-)-ABA. Metabolites of ABA including phaseic acid, dihydrophaseic acid and deoxy-ABA have affinities over 100-fold lower than that for (+)-ABA. These properties of the scFv make it suitable as a sensor domain in bioreporters specific for the naturally occurring form of ABA
Particle creation rate for dynamical black holes
We present the particle creation probability rate around a general black hole
as an outcome of quantum fluctuations. Using the uncertainty principle for
these fluctuation, we derive a new ultraviolet frequency cutoff for the
radiation spectrum of a dynamical black hole. Using this frequency cutoff, we
define the probability creation rate function for such black holes. We consider
a dynamical Vaidya model, and calculate the probability creation rate for this
case when its horizon is in a slowly evolving phase. Our results show that one
can expect the usual Hawking radiation emission process in the case of a
dynamical black hole when it has a slowly evolving horizon. Moreover,
calculating the probability rate for a dynamical black hole gives a measure of
when Hawking radiation can be killed off by an incoming flux of matter or
radiation. Our result strictly suggests that we have to revise the Hawking
radiation expectation for primordial black holes that have grown substantially
since they were created in the early universe. We also infer that this
frequency cut off can be a parameter that shows the primordial black hole
growth at the emission moment.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure. The paper was rewritten in more clear
presentation and one more appendix is adde
Grouping practices in the primary school: what influences change?
During the 1990s, there was considerable emphasis on promoting particular kinds of pupil grouping as a means of raising educational standards. This survey of 2000 primary schools explored the extent to which schools had changed their grouping practices in responses to this, the nature of the changes made and the reasons for those changes. Forty eight percent of responding schools reported that they had made no change. Twenty two percent reported changes because of the literacy hour, 2% because of the numeracy hour, 7% because of a combination of these and 21% for other reasons. Important influences on decisions about the types of grouping adopted were related to pupil learning and differentiation, teaching, the implementation of the national literacy strategy, practical issues and school self-evaluation
Generalized shrinkage F-like statistics for testing an interaction term in gene expression analysis in the presence of heteroscedasticity
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Many analyses of gene expression data involve hypothesis tests of an interaction term between two fixed effects, typically tested using a residual variance. In expression studies, the issue of variance heteroscedasticity has received much attention, and previous work has focused on either between-gene or within-gene heteroscedasticity. However, in a single experiment, heteroscedasticity may exist both within and between genes. Here we develop flexible shrinkage error estimators considering both between-gene and within-gene heteroscedasticity and use them to construct <it>F</it>-like test statistics for testing interactions, with cutoff values obtained by permutation. These permutation tests are complicated, and several permutation tests are investigated here.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our proposed test statistics are compared with other existing shrinkage-type test statistics through extensive simulation studies and a real data example. The results show that the choice of permutation procedures has dramatically more influence on detection power than the choice of <it>F </it>or <it>F</it>-like test statistics. When both types of gene heteroscedasticity exist, our proposed test statistics can control preselected type-I errors and are more powerful. Raw data permutation is not valid in this setting. Whether unrestricted or restricted residual permutation should be used depends on the specific type of test statistic.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The <it>F</it>-like test statistic that uses the proposed flexible shrinkage error estimator considering both types of gene heteroscedasticity and unrestricted residual permutation can provide a statistically valid and powerful test. Therefore, we recommended that it should always applied in the analysis of real gene expression data analysis to test an interaction term.</p
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