1,628 research outputs found
Chi-Baba Chi-Baba
Photograph of Perry Como; Illustration of stars and clouds in sky with music staff and noteshttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-sheet-music/9037/thumbnail.jp
That\u27s a Lot of Bunk / words by Al Wilson, James A. Brennan, and Mack Henshaw
Cover: photo of James Barton, a Caucasian male in blackface; cartoon drawings satirizing ideas such as taxi drivers never cheat or landlords never raise the rent; Publisher: Edward B. Marks Music Co. (New York)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/sharris_d/1050/thumbnail.jp
The Remote Observatories of the Southeastern Association for Research in Astronomy (SARA)
We describe the remote facilities operated by the Southeastern Association for Research in Astronomy (SARA) , a consortium of colleges and universities in the US partnered with Lowell Observatory, the Chilean National Telescope Allocation Committee, and the Instituto de AstrofĂsica de Canarias. SARA observatories comprise a 0.96 m telescope at Kitt Peak, Arizona; one of 0.6 m aperture on Cerro Tololo, Chile; and the 1 m Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope at the Roque de los Muchachos, La Palma, Spain. All are operated using standard VNC or Radmin protocols communicating with on-site PCs. Remote operation offers considerable flexibility in scheduling, allowing long-term observational cadences difficult to achieve with classical observing at remote facilities, as well as obvious travel savings. Multiple observers at different locations can share a telescope for training, educational use, or collaborative research programs. Each telescope has a CCD system for optical imaging, using thermoelectric cooling to avoid the need for frequent local service, and a second CCD for offset guiding. The Arizona and Chile telescopes also have fiber-fed echelle spectrographs. Switching between imaging and spectroscopy is very rapid, so a night can easily accommodate mixed observing modes. We present some sample observational programs. For the benefit of other groups organizing similar consortia, we describe the operating structure and principles of SARA, as well as some lessons learned from almost 20 years of remote operations
The Curious Case of Kounis Syndrome: Exploring Clinical Manifestations and Management in the Presence of Nonobstructive Coronary Arteries
Kounis syndrome, an allergic hypersensitivity coronary disorder, is a rare but potentially life-threatening condition triggered by various allergens, including medications. We present the case of a 41-year-old male with no prior cardiac history, who developed Kounis syndrome following vancomycin administration for suspected cellulitis. The patient initially presented with rash, fever, and malaise, which progressed to chest discomfort associated with diaphoresis and elevated troponin levels. Diagnostic evaluations, including electrocardiographic changes and coronary angiography, confirmed a diagnosis of type I Kounis syndrome. This case adds to the limited literature on vancomycin-induced Kounis syndrome, and underscores the importance of considering this diagnosis in patients with myocardial damage following exposure to potential allergens
AdS Field Theory from Conformal Field Theory
We provide necessary and sufficient conditions for a Conformal Field Theory
to have a description in terms of a perturbative Effective Field Theory in AdS.
The first two conditions are well-known: the existence of a perturbative `1/N'
expansion and an approximate Fock space of states generated by a finite number
of low-dimension operators. We add a third condition, that the Mellin
amplitudes of the CFT correlators must be well-approximated by functions that
are bounded by a polynomial at infinity in Mellin space, or in other words,
that the Mellin amplitudes have an effective theory-type expansion. We explain
the relationship between our conditions and unitarity, and provide an analogy
with scattering amplitudes that becomes exact in the flat space limit of AdS.
The analysis also yields a simple connection between conformal blocks and AdS
diagrams, providing a new calculational tool very much in the spirit of the
S-Matrix program.
We also begin to explore the potential pathologies associated with higher
spin fields in AdS by generalizing Weinberg's soft theorems to AdS/CFT. The AdS
analog of Weinberg's argument constrains the interactions of conserved currents
in CFTs, but there are potential loopholes that are unavailable to theories of
massless higher spin particles in flat spacetime.Comment: 31+7 pages, 5 figure
Block of death-receptor apoptosis protects mouse cytomegalovirus from macrophages and is a determinant of virulence in immunodeficient hosts.
The inhibition of death-receptor apoptosis is a conserved viral function. The murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) gene M36 is a sequence and functional homologue of the human cytomegalovirus gene UL36, and it encodes an inhibitor of apoptosis that binds to caspase-8, blocks downstream signaling and thus contributes to viral fitness in macrophages and in vivo. Here we show a direct link between the inability of mutants lacking the M36 gene (ΔM36) to inhibit apoptosis, poor viral growth in macrophage cell cultures and viral in vivo fitness and virulence. ΔM36 grew poorly in RAG1 knockout mice and in RAG/IL-2-receptor common gamma chain double knockout mice (RAGγC(-/-)), but the depletion of macrophages in either mouse strain rescued the growth of ΔM36 to almost wild-type levels. This was consistent with the observation that activated macrophages were sufficient to impair ΔM36 growth in vitro. Namely, spiking fibroblast cell cultures with activated macrophages had a suppressive effect on ΔM36 growth, which could be reverted by z-VAD-fmk, a chemical apoptosis inhibitor. TNFα from activated macrophages synergized with IFNγ in target cells to inhibit ΔM36 growth. Hence, our data show that poor ΔM36 growth in macrophages does not reflect a defect in tropism, but rather a defect in the suppression of antiviral mediators secreted by macrophages. To the best of our knowledge, this shows for the first time an immune evasion mechanism that protects MCMV selectively from the antiviral activity of macrophages, and thus critically contributes to viral pathogenicity in the immunocompromised host devoid of the adaptive immune system
Bounds on SCFTs from Conformal Perturbation Theory
The operator product expansion (OPE) in 4d (super)conformal field theory is
of broad interest, for both formal and phenomenological applications. In this
paper, we use conformal perturbation theory to study the OPE of nearly-free
fields coupled to SCFTs. Under fairly general assumptions, we show that the OPE
of a chiral operator of dimension with its complex
conjugate always contains an operator of dimension less than . Our
bounds apply to Banks-Zaks fixed points and their generalizations, as we
illustrate using several examples.Comment: 36 pages; v2: typos fixed, minor change
Simplifying instanton corrections to N=4 SYM correlators
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