470 research outputs found
Knee joint neuromuscular activation performance during muscle damage and superimposed fatigue
This study examined the concurrent effects of exercise-induced muscle damage and superimposed acute fatigue on the neuromuscular activation performance of the knee flexors of nine males (age: 26.7 ± 6.1yrs; height 1.81 ± 0.05m; body mass 81.2 ± 11.7kg [mean ± SD]). Measures were obtained during three experimental conditions: (i) FAT-EEVID, involving acute fatiguing exercise performed on each assessment occasion plus a single episode of eccentric exercise performed on the first occasion and after the fatigue trial; (ii) FAT, involving the fatiguing exercise only and; (iii) CON consisting of no exercise. Assessments were performed prior to (pre) and at lh, 24h, 48h, 72h, and 168h relative to the eccentric exercise. Repeated-measures ANOVAs showed that muscle damage within the FAT-EEVID condition elicited reductions of up to 38%, 24%) and 65%> in volitional peak force, electromechanical delay and rate of force development compared to baseline and controls, respectively (F[io, 80] = 2.3 to 4.6; p to 30.7%>) following acute fatigue (Fp; i6] = 4.3 to 9.1; p ; Fp, iq = 3.9; p <0.05). The safeguarding of evoked muscle activation capability despite compromised volitional performance might reveal aspects of capabilities for emergency and protective responses during episodes of fatigue and antecedent muscle damaging exercise
Supervoid Origin of the Cold Spot in the Cosmic Microwave Background
We use a WISE-2MASS-Pan-STARRS1 galaxy catalog to search for a supervoid in
the direction of the Cosmic Microwave Background Cold Spot. We obtain
photometric redshifts using our multicolor data set to create a tomographic map
of the galaxy distribution. The radial density profile centred on the Cold Spot
shows a large low density region, extending over 10's of degrees. Motivated by
previous Cosmic Microwave Background results, we test for underdensities within
two angular radii, , and . Our data, combined with an
earlier measurement by Granett et al 2010, are consistent with a large supervoid with centered at . Such a supervoid, constituting a
fluctuation in the model, is a plausible cause
for the Cold Spot.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of IAU 306 Symposium: Statistical
Challenges in 21st Century Cosmolog
First identification of large electric monopole strength in well-deformed rare earth nuclei
Excited states in the well-deformed rare earth isotopes Sm and
Er were populated via ``safe'' Coulomb excitation at the Munich MLL
Tandem accelerator. Conversion electrons were registered in a cooled Si(Li)
detector in conjunction with a magnetic transport and filter system, the
Mini-Orange spectrometer. For the first excited state in Sm at
1099 keV a large value of the monopole strength for the transition to the
ground state of could be extracted. This confirms the interpretation of the lowest
excited state in Sm as the collective -vibrational
excitation of the ground state. In Er the measured large electric
monopole strength of clearly identifies the state at 1934 keV to be the
-vibrational excitation of the ground state.Comment: submitted to Physics Letters
Activity-Dependent Exocytosis of Lysosomes Regulates the Structural Plasticity of Dendritic Spines
Lysosomes have traditionally been viewed as degradative organelles, though a growing body of evidence suggests that they can function as Ca2+ stores. Here, we examined the function of these stores in hippocampal pyramidal neurons. We found that back-propagating action potentials (bpAPs) could elicit Ca2+ release from lysosomes in the dendrites. This Ca2+ release triggered the fusion of lysosomes with the plasma membrane, resulting in the release of Cathepsin B. Cathepsin B increased the activity of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9), an enzyme involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling and synaptic plasticity. Inhibition of either lysosomal Ca2+ signalling or Cathepsin B release prevented the maintenance of dendritic spine growth induced by Hebbian activity. This impairment could be rescued by exogenous application of active MMP-9. Our findings suggest that activity-dependent exocytosis of Cathepsin B from lysosomes regulates the long-term structural plasticity of dendritic spines by triggering MMP-9 activation and ECM remodelling
The Cold Spot in the Cosmic Microwave Background: the Shadow of a Supervoid
Standard inflationary hot big bang cosmology predicts small
fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) with
isotropic Gaussian statistics. All measurements support the
standard theory, except for a few anomalies discovered in the
Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe maps and confirmed recently
by the Planck satellite. The Cold Spot is one of the most
significant of such anomalies, and the leading explanation of it
posits a large void that imprints this extremely cold area via
the linear Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect due to the decay
of gravitational potentials over cosmic time, or via the Rees-
Sciama (RS) effect due to late-time non-linear evolution.
Despite several observational campaigns targeting the Cold Spot
region, to date no suitably large void was found at higher
redshifts z>0.3. Here we report the detection of an R=(192±15)h
−1Mpc size supervoid of depth δ=−0.13±0.03, and centred at
redshift z=0.22. This supervoid, possibly the largest ever
found, is large enough to significantly affect the CMB via the
non-linear RS effect, as shown in our Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi
framework. This discovery presents the first plausible
explanation for any of the physical CMB anomalies, and raises
the possibility that local large-scale structure could be
responsible for other anomalies as well
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