1,434 research outputs found
Effect of salt/urea blocks on body weight, body composition and wool production of sheep fed low-protein native grass hay
Four groups of 20 two-tooth Merino wethers were group-fed ad lib. on low quality pasture hay (3 · 5% crude protein) for 16 weeks. One group (control) was fed the hay without a supplement. Two other groups were fed salt blocks containing 10% molasses, and 5% pollard with either 35 or 20% urea. The fourth group was fed a block containing 20% urea without molasses or pollard. The control group lost 20% of their initial body-weight over the 16-week feeding period. All three groups with access to urea-containing blocks lost significantly less bodyweight than the control group. Groups fed molasses-pollard blocks with either 35 or 20% urea lost less than 10% of their initial hotly-weight, while the group fed the block without molasses and pollard lost 12 % of the initial body-weight. The voluntary intake of pasture hay and the faecal dry matter output were increased by urea block supplementation. Weight of clean scoured wool was increased, though not significantly, in groups given urea-containing blocks
A Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor projected on to the sky with reduced focal anisoplanatism
A method for producing a laser guide star wavefront sensor for adaptive optics with reduced focal anisoplanatism is presented. A theoretical analysis and numerical simulations have been carried out and the results are presented. The technique, named Sky-Projected Laser Array Shack–Hartmann (SPLASH), is shown to suffer considerably less from focal anisoplanatism than a conventional laser guide star system. The method is potentially suitable for large telescope apertures (8 m), and possibly for extremely large telescopes
The Effect of Negative-Energy Shells on the Schwarzschild Black Hole
We construct Penrose diagrams for Schwarzschild spacetimes joined by massless
shells of matter, in the process correcting minor flaws in the similar diagrams
drawn by Dray and 't Hooft, and confirming their result that such shells
generate a horizon shift. We then consider shells with negative energy density,
showing that the horizon shift in this case allows for travel between the
heretofore causally separated exterior regions of the Schwarzschild geometry.
These drawing techniques are then used to investigate the properties of
successive shells, joining multiple Schwarzschild regions. Again, the presence
of negative-energy shells leads to a causal connection between the exterior
regions, even in (some) cases with two successive shells of equal but opposite
total energy.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
LplA1-dependent utilization of host lipoyl peptides enables Listeria cytosolic growth and virulence
The bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes replicates within the cytosol of mammalian cells. Mechanisms by which the bacterium exploits the host cytosolic environment for essential nutrients are poorly defined. L. monocytogenes is a lipoate auxotroph and must scavenge this critical cofactor, using lipoate ligases to facilitate attachment of the lipoyl moiety to metabolic enzyme complexes. Although the L. monocytogenes genome encodes two putative lipoate ligases, LplA1 and LplA2, intracellular replication and virulence require only LplA1. Here we show that LplA1 enables utilization of host-derived lipoyl peptides by L. monocytogenes . LplA1 is dispensable for growth in the presence of free lipoate, but necessary for growth on low concentrations of mammalian lipoyl peptides. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the intracellular growth defect of the δ lplA1 mutant is rescued by addition of exogenous lipoic acid to host cells, suggesting that L. monocytogenes dependence on LplA1 is dictated by limiting concentrations of available host lipoyl substrates. Thus, the ability of L. monocytogenes and other intracellular pathogens to efficiently use host lipoyl peptides as a source of lipoate may be a requisite adaptation for life within the mammalian cell.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72528/1/MMI+5956+Supp.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72528/2/j.1365-2958.2007.05956.x.pd
Averaged Energy Conditions and Evaporating Black Holes
In this paper the averaged weak (AWEC) and averaged null (ANEC) energy
conditions, together with uncertainty principle-type restrictions on negative
energy (``quantum inequalities''), are examined in the context of evaporating
black hole backgrounds in both two and four dimensions. In particular,
integrals over only half-geodesics are studied. We determine the regions of the
spacetime in which the averaged energy conditions are violated. In all cases
where these conditions fail, there appear to be quantum inequalities which
bound the magnitude and extent of the negative energy, and hence the degree of
the violation. The possible relevance of these results for the validity of
singularity theorems in evaporating black hole spacetimes is discussed.Comment: Sections 2.1 and 2.2 have been revised and some erroneous statements
corrected. The main conclusions and the figures are unchanged. 27 pp, plain
Latex, 3 figures available upon reques
Cross-Newell equations for hexagons and triangles
The Cross-Newell equations for hexagons and triangles are derived for general
real gradient systems, and are found to be in flux-divergence form. Specific
examples of complex governing equations that give rise to hexagons and
triangles and which have Lyapunov functionals are also considered, and explicit
forms of the Cross-Newell equations are found in these cases. The general
nongradient case is also discussed; in contrast with the gradient case, the
equations are not flux-divergent. In all cases, the phase stability boundaries
and modes of instability for general distorted hexagons and triangles can be
recovered from the Cross-Newell equations.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figur
The VLT LBG redshift survey – VI. Mapping H i in the proximity of z ∼ 3 LBGs with X-Shooter
We present an analysis of the spatial distribution and dynamics of neutral hydrogen gas around galaxies using new X-Shooter observations of z ∼ 2.5–4 quasars. Adding the X-Shooter data to our existing data set of high-resolution quasar spectroscopy, we use a total sample of 29 quasars alongside ∼1700 Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs) in the redshift range 2 ≲ z ≲ 3.5. We measure the Lyα forest auto-correlation function, finding a clustering length of s0 = 0.081 ± 0.006 h−1 Mpc, and the cross-correlation function with LBGs, finding a cross-clustering length of s0 = 0.27 ± 0.14 h−1 Mpc and power-law slope γ = 1.1 ± 0.2. Our results highlight the weakly clustered nature of neutral hydrogren systems in the Lyα forest. Building on this, we make a first analysis of the dependence of the clustering on absorber strength, finding a clear preference for stronger Lyα forest absorption features to be more strongly clustered around the galaxy population, suggesting that they trace on average higher mass haloes. Using the projected and 2-D cross-correlation functions, we constrain the dynamics of Lyα forest clouds around z ∼ 3 galaxies. We find a significant detection of large-scale infall of neutral hydrogen, with a constraint on the Lyα forest infall parameter of βF = 1.02 ± 0.22
Weak energy condition violation and superluminal travel
Recent solutions to the Einstein Field Equations involving negative energy
densities, i.e., matter violating the weak-energy-condition, have been
obtained, namely traversable wormholes, the Alcubierre warp drive and the
Krasnikov tube. These solutions are related to superluminal travel, although
locally the speed of light is not surpassed. It is difficult to define
faster-than-light travel in generic space-times, and one can construct metrics
which apparently allow superluminal travel, but are in fact flat Minkowski
space-times. Therefore, to avoid these difficulties it is important to provide
an appropriate definition of superluminal travel.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX2e, Springer style files -included.
Contribution to the Proceedings of the Spanish Relativity Meeting-2001
(Madrid, September 2001
Elastic deformation of a fluid membrane upon colloid binding
When a colloidal particle adheres to a fluid membrane, it induces elastic
deformations in the membrane which oppose its own binding. The structural and
energetic aspects of this balance are theoretically studied within the
framework of a Helfrich Hamiltonian. Based on the full nonlinear shape
equations for the membrane profile, a line of continuous binding transitions
and a second line of discontinuous envelopment transitions are found, which
meet at an unusual triple point. The regime of low tension is studied
analytically using a small gradient expansion, while in the limit of large
tension scaling arguments are derived which quantify the asymptotic behavior of
phase boundary, degree of wrapping, and energy barrier. The maturation of
animal viruses by budding is discussed as a biological example of such
colloid-membrane interaction events.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, REVTeX style, follow-up on cond-mat/021242
Evolving Lorentzian Wormholes
Evolving Lorentzian wormholes with the required matter satisfying the Energy
conditions are discussed. Several different scale factors are used and the
corresponding consequences derived. The effect of extra, decaying (in time)
compact dimensions present in the wormhole metric is also explored and certain
interesting conclusions are derived for the cases of exponential and
Kaluza--Klein inflation.Comment: 10 pages( RevTex, Twocolumn format), Two figures available on request
from the first author. transmission errors corrected
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