207 research outputs found
Promoting Civic Knowledge and Political Efficacy Among Low-Income Youth Through Applied Political Participation
Studies indicate growing disparities in youth civic knowledge and political efficacy based on socioeconomic status, parental educational attainment, and race. Most studies of youth political participation focus on the effect political efficacy and civic knowledge have on political participation. Few report on the effect political participation has on political efficacy and civic knowledge. This article describes an intervention that coupled civic literacy workshops with applied political participation to increase the civic knowledge and political efficacy of low-income, ethnically diverse high school students. Over three years, 47 high school students enrolled in Upward Bound participated in a six-hour civic literacy workshop. Upon conclusion of the workshop, students spent a day meeting with legislators and attending legislative hearings. Results indicate increases in political efficacy and significant increases in civic knowledge among the youth after both the workshop and the visits with elected officials
A Signal-Passing DNA-Strand-Exchange Mechanism for Active Self-Assembly of DNA Nanostructures
DNA nanostructured tiles play an active role in their own self-assembly in the system described herein whereby they initiate a binding event that produces a cascading assembly process. We present DNA tiles that have a simple but powerful property: they respond to a binding event at one end of the tile by passing a signal across the tile to activate a binding site at the other end. This action allows sequential, virtually irreversible self-assembly of tiles and enables local communication during the self-assembly process. This localized signal-passing mechanism provides a new element of control for autonomous self-assembly of DNA nanostructures
Availability: A Metric for Nucleic Acid Strand Displacement Systems
DNA strand displacement systems have transformative potential in synthetic biology. While powerful examples have been reported in DNA nanotechnology, such systems are plagued by leakage, which limits network stability, sensitivity, and scalability. An approach to mitigate leakage in DNA nanotechnology, which is applicable to synthetic biology, is to introduce mismatches to complementary fuel sequences at key locations. However, this method overlooks nuances in the secondary structure of the fuel and substrate that impact the leakage reaction kinetics in strand displacement systems. In an effort to quantify the impact of secondary structure on leakage, we introduce the concepts of availability and mutual availability and demonstrate their utility for network analysis. Our approach exposes vulnerable locations on the substrate and quantifies the secondary structure of fuel strands. Using these concepts, a 4-fold reduction in leakage has been achieved. The result is a rational design process that efficiently suppresses leakage and provides new insight into dynamic nucleic acid networks
JWST Imaging of the Cartwheel Galaxy Reveals Dust Associated with SN 2021afdx
We present near- and mid-infrared (0.9-18 m) photometry of supernova
(SN) 2021afdx, which was imaged serendipitously with the James Webb Space
Telescope (JWST) as part of its Early Release Observations of the Cartwheel
Galaxy. Our ground-based optical observations show it is likely to be a Type
IIb SN, the explosion of a yellow supergiant, and its infrared spectral energy
distribution (SED) 200 days after explosion shows two distinct
components, which we attribute to hot ejecta and warm dust. By fitting models
of dust emission to the SED, we derive a dust mass of , which is the highest yet observed in a Type IIb SN
but consistent with other Type II SNe observed by the Spitzer Space Telescope.
We also find that the radius of the dust is significantly larger than the
radius of the ejecta, as derived from spectroscopic velocities during the
photospheric phase, which implies that we are seeing an infrared echo off of
preexisting dust in the progenitor environment, rather than dust newly formed
by the SN. Our results show the power of JWST to address questions of dust
formation in SNe, and therefore the presence of dust in the early universe,
with much larger samples than have been previously possible.Comment: updated to match accepted versio
High Precision and High Yield Fabrication of Dense Nanoparticle Arrays onto DNA Origami at Statistically Independent Binding Sites
High precision, high yield, and high density self-assembly of nanoparticles into arrays is essential for nanophotonics. Spatial deviations as small as a few nanometers can alter the properties of near-field coupled optical nanostructures. Several studies have reported assemblies of few nanoparticle structures with controlled spacing using DNA nanostructures with variable yield. Here, we report multi-tether design strategies and attachment yields for homo- and hetero-nanoparticle arrays templated by DNA origami nanotubes. Nanoparticle attachment yield via DNA hybridization is comparable with streptavidin-biotin binding. Independent of the number of binding sites, \u3e97% site-occupation was achieved with four tethers and 99.2% site-occupation is theoretically possible with five tethers. The interparticle distance was within 2 nm of all design specifications and the nanoparticle spatial deviations decreased with interparticle spacing. Modified geometric, binomial, and trinomial distributions indicate that site-bridging, steric hindrance, and electrostatic repulsion were not dominant barriers to self-assembly and both tethers and binding sites were statistically independent at high particle densities
Sars-Cov-2 Serostatus and Covid-19 Illness Characteristics By Variant Time Period in Non-Hospitalized Children and adolescents
OBJECTIVE: to describe COVID-19 illness characteristics, risk factors, and SARS-CoV-2 serostatus by variant time period in a large community-based pediatric sample.
DESIGN: Data were collected prospectively over four timepoints between October 2020 and November 2022 from a population-based cohort ages 5 to 19 years old.
SETTING: State of Texas, USA.
PARTICIPANTS: Participants ages 5 to 19 years were recruited from large pediatric healthcare systems, Federally Qualified Healthcare Centers, urban and rural clinical practices, health insurance providers, and a social media campaign.
EXPOSURE: SARS-CoV-2 infection.
MAIN OUTCOME(S) AND MEASURE(S): SARS-CoV-2 antibody status was assessed by the Roche Elecsys
RESULTS: Over half (57.2%) of the sample (N = 3911) was antibody positive. Symptomatic infection increased over time from 47.09% during the pre-Delta variant time period, to 76.95% during Delta, to 84.73% during Omicron, and to 94.79% during the Omicron BA.2. Those who were not vaccinated were more likely (OR 1.71, 95% CI 1.47, 2.00) to be infected versus those fully vaccinated.
CONCLUSIONS: Results show an increase in symptomatic COVID-19 infection among non-hospitalized children with each progressive variant over the past two years. Findings here support the public health guidance that eligible children should remain up to date with COVID-19 vaccinations
SN 2022jox: An extraordinarily ordinary Type II SN with Flash Spectroscopy
We present high cadence optical and ultraviolet observations of the Type II
supernova (SN), SN 2022jox which exhibits early spectroscopic high ionization
flash features of \ion{H}{1}, \ion{He}{2}, \ion{C}{4}, and \ion{N}{4} that
disappear within the first few days after explosion. SN 2022jox was discovered
by the Distance Less than 40 Mpc (DLT40) survey 0.75 days after explosion
with followup spectra and UV photometry obtained within minutes of discovery.
The SN reached a peak brightness of M 17.3 mag, and has an
estimated Ni mass of 0.04 M, typical values for normal Type II
SNe. The modeling of the early lightcurve and the strong flash signatures
present in the optical spectra indicate interaction with circumstellar material
(CSM) created from a progenitor with a mass loss rate of . There may also be some indication
of late-time CSM interaction in the form of an emission line blueward of
H seen in spectra around 200 days. The mass-loss rate is much higher
than the values typically associated with quiescent mass loss from red
supergiants, the known progenitors of Type II SNe, but is comparable to
inferred values from similar core collapse SNe with flash features, suggesting
an eruptive event or a superwind in the progenitor in the months or years
before explosion.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Shock Cooling and Possible Precursor Emission in the Early Light Curve of the Type II SN 2023ixf
We present the densely sampled early light curve of the Type II supernova
(SN) 2023ixf, first observed within hours of explosion in the nearby Pinwheel
Galaxy (Messier 101; 6.7 Mpc). Comparing these data to recently updated models
of shock cooling emission, we find that the progenitor likely had a radius of
(statistical uncertainty only), consistent with a red
supergiant. These models provide a good fit to the data starting about 1 day
after the explosion, despite the fact that the classification spectrum shows
signatures of circumstellar material around SN 2023ixf during that time.
Photometry during the first day after the explosion, provided almost entirely
by amateur astronomers, does not agree with the shock cooling models or a
simple power-law rise fit to data after 1 day. We consider the possible causes
of this discrepancy, including precursor activity from the progenitor star,
circumstellar interaction, and emission from the shock before or after it
breaks out of the stellar surface. The very low luminosity () and short duration of the initial excess leads us to
prefer a scenario related to prolonged emission from the SN shock traveling
through the progenitor system.Comment: submitted to ApJ
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