154 research outputs found
Towards granular hydrodynamics in two-dimensions
We study steady-state properties of inelastic gases in two-dimensions in the
presence of an energy source. We generalize previous hydrodynamic treatments to
situations where high and low density regions coexist. The theoretical
predictions compare well with numerical simulations in the nearly elastic
limit. It is also seen that the system can achieve a nonequilibrium
steady-state with asymmetric velocity distributions, and we discuss the
conditions under which such situations occur.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, revtex, references added, also available from
http://arnold.uchicago.edu/?ebn
Chandra ACIS Survey of M33 (ChASeM33): The enigmatic X-ray emission from IC131
We present the first X-ray analysis of the diffuse hot ionized gas and the
point sources in IC131, after NGC604 the second most X-ray luminous giant HII
region in M33. The X-ray emission is detected only in the south eastern part of
IC131 (named IC131-se) and is limited to an elliptical region of ~200pc in
extent. This region appears to be confined towards the west by a hemispherical
shell of warm ionized gas and only fills about half that volume. Although the
corresponding X-ray spectrum has 1215 counts, it cannot conclusively be told
whether the extended X-ray emission is thermal, non-thermal, or a combination
of both. A thermal plasma model of kT_e=4.3keV or a single power law of
Gamma=2.1 fit the spectrum equally well. If the spectrum is purely thermal
(non-thermal), the total unabsorbed X-ray luminosity in the 0.35-8keV energy
band amounts to L_X = 6.8(8.7)x10^35erg/s. Among other known HII regions
IC131-se seems to be extreme regarding the combination of its large extent of
the X-ray plasma, the lack of massive O stars, its unusually high electron
temperature (if thermal), and the large fraction of L_X emitted above 2keV
(~40-53%). A thermal plasma of ~4keV poses serious challenges to theoretical
models, as it is not clear how high electron temperatures can be produced in
HII regions in view of mass-proportional and collisionless heating. If the gas
is non-thermal or has non-thermal contributions, synchrotron emission would
clearly dominate over inverse Compton emission. It is not clear if the same
mechanisms which create non-thermal X-rays or accelerate CRs in SNRs can be
applied to much larger scales of 200pc. In both cases the existing theoretical
models for giant HII regions and superbubbles do not explain the hardness and
extent of the X-ray emission in IC131-se.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ.
For a high resolution version of the paper see
http://hea-www.harvard.edu/vlp_m33_public/publications.htm
Multidrug-resistant Escherichia coli from canine urinary tract infections tend to have commensal phylotypes, lower prevalence of virulence determinants and ampC-replicons
AbstractMultidrug-resistant Escherichia coli is an emerging clinical challenge in domestic species. Treatment options in many cases are limited. This study characterized MDR E. coli isolates from urinary tract infections in dogs, collected between 2002 and 2011. Isolates were evaluated in terms of β-lactamase production, phylogenetic group, ST type, replicon type and virulence marker profile. Comparisons were made with antibiotic susceptible isolates also collected from dogs with urinary tract infections. AmpC β-lactamase was produced in 67% of the MDR isolates (12/18). Of these, 8 could be specifically attributed to the CMY-2 gene. None of the isolates tested in either group expressed ESBLs. Phylo-group distribution was as expected in the susceptible isolates, with an over representation of the pathogenic B2 phylo-group (67%). In contrast, the phylogenetic background for the MDR group was mixed, with representation of commensal phylo-groups A and B1. The B2 phylo-group represented the smallest proportion (A, B1, B2 or D was 28%, 22%, 11% and 33%, respectively). Virulence marker profiles, evaluated using Identibac® microarray, discriminated between the two groups. Marker sequences for a core panel of virulence determinants were identified in most of the susceptible isolates, but not in most of the MDR isolates. These findings indicate that for MDR isolates, plasmid-mediated AmpC is an important resistance mechanism, and while still capable of causing clinical disease, there is evidence for a shift towards phylogenetic groups of reduced inferred virulence potential. There was no evidence of zoonotic potential in either the susceptible or MDR urinary tract isolates in this study
CENP-C recruits M18BP1 to centromeres to promote CENP-A chromatin assembly
CENP-C provides a link between existing CENP-A chromatin and the proteins required for new CENP-A nucleosome assembly
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Adoption of preventive behaviors in response to the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic: a multiethnic perspective
Background: As public health leaders prepare for possible future influenza pandemics, the rapid spread of 2009 H1N1 influenza highlights the need to focus on measures the public can adopt to help slow disease transmission. Such measures may relate to hygiene (e.g., hand washing), social distancing (e.g., avoiding places where many people gather), and pharmaceutical interventions (e.g., vaccination). Given the disproportionate impact of public health emergencies on minority communities in the United States, it is important to understand whether there are differences in acceptance across racial/ethnic groups that could lead to targeted and more effective policies and communications. Objectives: This study explores racial/ethnic differences in the adoption of preventive behaviors during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic. Patients/Methods Data are from a national telephone poll conducted March 17 to April 11, 2010, among a representative sample of 1123 white, 330 African American, 317 Hispanic, 268 Asian, and 262 American Indian/Alaska Native adults in the USA. Results: People in at least one racial/ethnic minority group were more likely than whites to adopt several behaviors related to hygiene, social distancing, and healthcare access, including increased hand washing and talking with a healthcare provider (P-values <0·05). Exceptions included avoiding others with influenza-like illnesses and receiving 2009 H1N1 and seasonal influenza vaccinations. After we controlled the data for socioeconomic status, demographic factors, healthcare access, and illness- and vaccine-related attitudes, nearly all racial/ethnic differences in behaviors persisted. Conclusions: Minority groups appear to be receptive to several preventive behaviors, but barriers to vaccination are more pervasive
Competing Sound Sources Reveal Spatial Effects in Cortical Processing
Neurons in the avian auditory forebrain show strong sensitivity to the spatial configuration of two competing sources, even though there is only weak spatial dependence for any single source
Do clusters contain a large population of dwarf galaxies?
We analyze systematic effects in the determination of the galaxy luminosity
function in clusters using a deep mock catalogue constructed from a numerical
simulation of a hierarchical universe. The results indicate a strong tendency
to derive a rising faint end (\alpha \lsim -1.5) in clusters selected in two
dimensions, using a galaxy catalogue constructed with a universal flat
luminosity function with . This is due to the projection
effects inherent in catalogues of clusters constructed using 2 dimensional
data. Many of the clusters found in 2d have no significant 3d counterparts, and
most suffer from massive background contamination that cannot be corrected for
by subtracting random offset fields. The luminosity function of high surface
brightness galaxies in the field and within small groups follows a Schechter
function with a fairly flat faint end slope, with
to -1.2. On the contrary, observational studies of clusters
constructed using Abell, EDCC and APM catalogues are systematically found to
have steeper luminosity functions with to -2.0. This may be
attributed to projection effects rather than a dominant population of high
surface brightness dwarf galaxies (M\gsim M^*+2) in clusters. It should be
straighforward to confirm our results by measuring redshifts of these faint
cluster galaxies.Comment: 23 pages, 7 Postscript figures TeX, accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal, e-mail:[email protected]
http://iate.oac.uncor.edu/cv.htm
Molecular networks linked by Moesin drive remodeling of the cell cortex during mitosis
During mitosis, cortical Moesin activity is restricted to promote cell elongation and cytokinesis, but localized Moesin recruitment is necessary for polar bleb retraction and cortical relaxation
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