1,238 research outputs found

    Terahertz pulsed imaging of freshly excised human colonic tissues

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    We present the results from a feasibility study which measures properties in the terahertz frequency range of excised cancerous, dysplastic and healthy colonic tissues from 30 patients. We compare their absorption and refractive index spectra to identify trends which may enable different tissue types to be distinguished. In addition, we present statistical models based on variations between up to 17 parameters calculated from the reflected time and frequency domain signals of all the measured tissues. These models produce a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 77% in distinguishing between healthy and all diseased tissues and a sensitivity of 89% and a specificity of 71% in distinguishing between dysplastic and healthy tissues. The contrast between the tissue types was supported by histological staining studies which showed an increased vascularity in regions of increased terahertz absorption

    The influence of magnetic anisotropy on the Zeeman spectra of lanthanide doped nanoparticles

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    High-resolution infra-red spectra of KY3F10 nanoparticles doped with Nd3+ and Er3+ are measured in magnetic fields of up to 4 T. A simple model of the magnetic splittings of the ground and excited states is used to show that the presence or absence of observable splittings depends on the anisotropy of the response to the magnetic field. Detailed crystal-field calculations accurately model the spectra, including nonlinear effects

    Spectral Classification; Old and Contemporary

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    Beginning with a historical account of the spectral classification, its refinement through additional criteria is presented. The line strengths and ratios used in two dimensional classifications of each spectral class are described. A parallel classification scheme for metal-poor stars and the standards used for classification are presented. The extension of spectral classification beyond M to L and T and spectroscopic classification criteria relevant to these classes are described. Contemporary methods of classifications based upon different automated approaches are introduced.Comment: To be published in "Principles and Perspectives in Cosmochemistry" Lecture Notes on Kodai School on Synthesis of Elements in Stars: Ed Aruna Goswami & Eswar Reddy, Springer Verlag, 2009, 17 pages, 10 figure

    The removal of thermally aged films of triacylglycerides by surfactant solutions

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    Thermal ageing of triacylglycerides (TAG) at high temperatures produces films which resist removal using aqueous surfactant solutions. We used a mass loss method to investigate the removal of thermally aged TAG films from hard surfaces using aqueous solutions of surfactants of different charge types. It was found that cationic surfactants are most effective at high pH, whereas anionics are most effective at low pH and a non-ionic surfactant is most effective at intermediate pH. We showed that the TAG film removal process occurs in several stages. In the first ‘‘lag phase’’ no TAG removal occurs; the surfactant first partitions into the thermally aged film. In the second stage, the TAG film containing surfactant was removed by solubilisation into micelles in the aqueous solution. The effects of pH and surfactant charge on the TAG removal process correlate with the effects of these variables on the extent of surfactant partitioning to the TAG film and on the maximum extent of TAG solubilisation within the micelles. Additionally, we showed how the TAG removal is enhanced by the addition of amphiphilic additives such as alcohols which act as co-surfactants. The study demonstrates that aqueous surfactant solutions provide a viable and more benign alternative to current methods for the removal of thermally aged TAG films

    Football-induced fatigue in hypoxia impairs repeated sprint ability and perceptual-cognitive skills

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    The present study investigated the effects of football-induced fatigue during hypoxia on RS and perceptual-cognitive skills. Ten male semi-professional football players underwent four sessions; a control session (0-m) to quantify RS in a non-fatigued state; and three further sessions at hypoxia (0-m;1500-m;3000-m) examining RS and perceptual-cognitive skill responses for a given physical workload. Anticipation and decision-making accuracy were obtained at the 30-min mark of each half. The mean number of trials (%) in which the player made the correct response was used for analysis. HR, TC, RPE and % saturation of O2 were measured during the warm-up, football-induced fatigue and RS test. It was found that HR, RPE and % saturation of O2 were different between conditions (P<0.05; ES=0.44-6.13). Further, RS were affected by football-induced fatigue for DC (4.8%; P=0.019; ES=0.68) and AV (5.5%; P=0.006; ES=0.79). In hypoxia, it was observed that football-induced fatigue decreased by 6.5% in DC, 6.3% in AV and 3.1% in PV at 1500-m compared to 0-m (P<0.05). Further significant changes were found at 3000-m compared to 0-m decreasing 12.8% in DC, 12.8% in AV and 6.2% in PV (P<0.0005). More pronounced declines in perceptual-cognitive skills were found as altitude increased (5.0-12.5 %; P<0.05; ES=1.17-2.41) and between both halves (5.3-6.7 %; P<0.05). The data demonstrates that the RS test was highly sensitive to fatigue and hypoxia for a given physical load. Simulated matches in hypoxia revealed larger decreases, when compared to normoxia in RS and perceptual-cognitive skills, highlighting the need for optimal acclimatisation strategies, including physical and technical preparation, prior to playing a

    Heterotic Models from Vector Bundles on Toric Calabi-Yau Manifolds

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    We systematically approach the construction of heterotic E_8 X E_8 Calabi-Yau models, based on compact Calabi-Yau three-folds arising from toric geometry and vector bundles on these manifolds. We focus on a simple class of 101 such three-folds with smooth ambient spaces, on which we perform an exhaustive scan and find all positive monad bundles with SU(N), N=3,4,5 structure groups, subject to the heterotic anomaly cancellation constraint. We find that anomaly-free positive monads exist on only 11 of these toric three-folds with a total number of bundles of about 2000. Only 21 of these models, all of them on three-folds realizable as hypersurfaces in products of projective spaces, allow for three families of quarks and leptons. We also perform a preliminary scan over the much larger class of semi-positive monads which leads to about 44000 bundles with 280 of them satisfying the three-family constraint. These 280 models provide a starting point for heterotic model building based on toric three-folds.Comment: 41 pages, 5 figures. A table modified and a table adde

    Casimir forces on a silicon micromechanical chip

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    Quantum fluctuations give rise to van der Waals and Casimir forces that dominate the interaction between electrically neutral objects at sub-micron separations. Under the trend of miniaturization, such quantum electrodynamical effects are expected to play an important role in micro- and nano-mechanical devices. Nevertheless, utilization of Casimir forces on the chip level remains a major challenge because all experiments so far require an external object to be manually positioned close to the mechanical element. Here, by integrating a force-sensing micromechanical beam and an electrostatic actuator on a single chip, we demonstrate the Casimir effect between two micromachined silicon components on the same substrate. A high degree of parallelism between the two near-planar interacting surfaces can be achieved because they are defined in a single lithographic step. Apart from providing a compact platform for Casimir force measurements, this scheme also opens the possibility of tailoring the Casimir force using lithographically defined components of non-conventional shapes

    Redox imbalance in peripheral blood of type 1 myotonic dystrophy patients

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    Objectives: The aim of our study was to determine if redox imbalance caused by the activities of antioxidant enzymes existed in erythrocytes of type 1 myotonic dystrophy ( DM1) patients. Methods: The activities of erythrocyte superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase were measured in 30 DM1 patients and 15 healthy controls ( HCs). The obtained values were correlated with the Muscular Impairment Rating Scale ( MIRS) score and creatine kinase ( CK). Results: Superoxide dismutase and catalase activities were lower in DM1 patients compared to HCs. A positive correlation was found between disease duration and MIRS score as well as with glutathione reductase activity. In DM1 patients, there were positive correlations between catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase activities. After sub-dividing DM1 patients according to CK levels, superoxide dismutase activity was still statistically different from HCs. However, catalase activity was significantly lower only in DM1 patients with increased CK. Discussion: Undesirable alterations in antioxidant enzyme activities during DM1 disease progression may result in conditions favoring oxidative stress and changes in metabolism which together could contribute to muscle wasting

    Heterotic type IIA duality with fluxes - towards the complete story

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    In this paper we study the heterotic type IIA duality when fluxes are turned on. We show that many of the known fluxes are dual to each other and claim that certain fluxes on the heterotic side require that the type IIA picture is lifted to M or even F-theory compactifications with geometric fluxes.Comment: 31 pages, references adde

    Allelic replacement of the streptococcal cysteine protease SpeB in a Δsrv mutant background restores biofilm formation

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Group A <it>Streptococcus </it>(GAS) is a Gram-positive human pathogen that is capable of causing a wide spectrum of human disease. Thus, the organism has evolved to colonize a number of physiologically distinct host sites. One such mechanism to aid colonization is the formation of a biofilm. We have recently shown that inactivation of the streptococcal regulator of virulence (Srv), results in a mutant strain exhibiting a significant reduction in biofilm formation. Unlike the parental strain (MGAS5005), the streptococcal cysteine protease (SpeB) is constitutively produced by the <it>srv </it>mutant (MGAS5005Δ<it>srv</it>) suggesting Srv contributes to the control of SpeB production. Given that SpeB is a potent protease, we hypothesized that the biofilm deficient phenotype of the <it>srv </it>mutant was due to the constitutive production of SpeB. In support of this hypothesis, we have previously demonstrated that treating cultures with E64, a commercially available chemical inhibitor of cysteine proteases, restored the ability of MGAS5005Δ<it>srv </it>to form biofilms. Still, it was unclear if the loss of biofilm formation by MGAS5005Δ<it>srv </it>was due only to the constitutive production of SpeB or to other changes inherent in the <it>srv </it>mutant strain. To address this question, we constructed a Δ<it>srv</it>Δ<it>speB </it>double mutant through allelic replacement (MGAS5005Δ<it>srv</it>Δ<it>speB</it>) and tested its ability to form biofilms <it>in vitro</it>.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>Allelic replacement of <it>speB </it>in the <it>srv </it>mutant background restored the ability of this strain to form biofilms under static and continuous flow conditions. Furthermore, addition of purified SpeB to actively growing wild-type cultures significantly inhibited biofilm formation.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The constitutive production of SpeB by the <it>srv </it>mutant strain is responsible for the significant reduction of biofilm formation previously observed. The double mutant supports a model by which Srv contributes to biofilm formation and/or dispersal through regulation of <it>speB</it>/SpeB.</p
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