8,406 research outputs found
Development of fad7-1 single mutant Arabidopsis thaliana plants that are resistant to aphids
Aphids are a group of sap-feeding insects that attack most of the worldâs crops. The loss of function of fatty acid desaturase7 (FAD7) in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato plant) induces aphid resistance that is dependent upon the accumulation of plant defense hormones such as salicylic acid (SA). Tomato lacks most of the genetic resources found in the model plant Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). There is an analogous fad7-1 line of Arabidopsis; however, the line has a background mutation, the glabra-1 (gl1), that causes the absence of trichomes (small hairs), which are essential to plant defense. In order to study aphid resistance, a single mutant line of fad7-1 mutants were developed using cross breeding between the fad7-1/gl1 mutant and wild-type plants. Homozygous fad7-1 mutants were then identified using the Kasajima DNA extraction method, followed by the use of single nucleotide polymorphism-polymerase chain reaction (SNP-PCR) primers using allele-specific PCR. A phenotypic screening was then performed to screen out the plants with the glabra-1 mutation using the presence or absence of trichomes. Two single Arabidopsis fad7-1 mutant lines were identified, and subsequently verified using a bioassay to be aphid resistant relative to other genotypes as seen in tomato
Synergistic Gravity and the Role of Resonances in GRS-Inspired Braneworlds
We consider 5D braneworld models of quasi-localized gravity in which 4D
gravity is reproduced at intermediate scales while the extra dimension opens up
at both the very short and the very long distances, where the geometry is flat.
Our main interest is the interplay between the zero mode of these models,
whenever a normalizable zero mode exists, and the effects of zero energy
graviton resonant modes coming from the contributions of massive KK modes. We
first consider a compactified version of the GRS model and find that
quasi-localized gravity is characterized by a scale for which both the
resonance and the zero mode have significant contribution to 4D gravity. Above
this scale, gravity is primarily mediated by the zero mode, while the resonance
gives only minor corrections. Next, we consider an asymmetric version of the
standard non-compact GRS model, characterized by different cosmological
constants on each AdS side. We show that a resonance is present but the
asymmetry, through the form of the localizing potential, can weaken it,
resulting in a shorter lifetime and, thus, in a shorter distance scale for 4D
gravity. As a third model exhibiting quasi-localization, we consider a version
of the GRS model in which the central positive tension brane has been replaced
by a configuration of a scalar field propagating in the bulk.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, added 1 figure, revised version as published in
Class. Quant. Gra
Stealth Acceleration and Modified Gravity
We show how to construct consistent braneworld models which exhibit late time
acceleration. Unlike self-acceleration, which has a de Sitter vacuum state, our
models have the standard Minkowski vacuum and accelerate only in the presence
of matter, which we dub ``stealth-acceleration''. We use an effective action
for the brane which includes an induced gravity term, and allow for an
asymmetric set-up. We study the linear stability of flat brane vacua and find
the regions of parameter space where the set-up is stable. The 4-dimensional
graviton is only quasi-localised in this set-up and as a result gravity is
modified at late times. One of the two regions is strongly coupled and the
scalar mode is eaten up by an extra symmetry that arises in this limit. Having
filtered the well-defined theories we then focus on their cosmology. When the
graviton is quasi-localised we find two main examples of acceleration. In each
case, we provide an illustrative model and compare it to LambdaCDM.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figure
Product CFTs, gravitational cloning, massive gravitons and the space of gravitational duals
The question of graviton cloning in the context of the bulk/boundary
correspondence is considered. It is shown that multi-graviton theories can be
obtained from products of large-N CFTs. No more than one interacting massless
graviton is possible. There can be however, many interacting massive gravitons.
This is achieved by coupling CFTs via multi-trace marginal or relevant
perturbations. The geometrical structure of the gravitational duals of such
theories is that of product manifolds with their boundaries identified. The
calculational formalism is described and the interpretation of such theories is
discussed.Comment: Latex, 25 pages. (v2) Minor corrections and references adde
The AGN Luminosity Fraction in Merging Galaxies
Galaxy mergers are key events in galaxy evolution, often causing massive
starbursts and fueling active galactic nuclei (AGN). In these highly dynamic
systems, it is not yet precisely known how much starbursts and AGN respectively
contribute to the total luminosity, at what interaction stages they occur, and
how long they persist. Here we estimate the fraction of the bolometric infrared
(IR) luminosity that can be attributed to AGN by measuring and modeling the
full ultraviolet to far-infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) in up to
33 broad bands for 24 merging galaxies with the Code for Investigating Galaxy
Emission. In addition to a sample of 12 confirmed AGN in late-stage mergers,
found in the Revised Bright Galaxy Sample or
Faint Source Catalog, our sample includes a comparison sample of 12 galaxy
mergers from the Interacting Galaxies Survey, mostly early-stage. We
perform identical SED modeling of simulated mergers to validate our methods,
and we supplement the SED data with mid-IR spectra of diagnostic lines obtained
with InfraRed Spectrograph. The estimated AGN contributions to the IR
luminosities vary from system to system from 0% up to 91% but are significantly
greater in the later-stage, more luminous mergers, consistent with what is
known about galaxy evolution and AGN triggering.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Intra-sexual competition alters the relationship between testosterone and ornament expression in a wild territorial bird
Open Access funded by Natural Environment Research Council Under a Creative Commons licensePeer reviewedPublisher PD
Galaxy Clusters in the Line of Sight to Background Quasars: I. Survey Design and Incidence of MgII Absorbers at Cluster Redshifts
We describe the first optical survey of absorption systems associated with
galaxy clusters at z= 0.3-0.9. We have cross-correlated SDSS DR3 quasars with
high-redshift cluster/group candidates from the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey. We
have found 442 quasar-cluster pairs for which the MgII doublet might be
detected at a transverse (physical) distance d<2 Mpc from the cluster centers.
To investigate the incidence (dN/dz) and equivalent-width distribution n(W) of
MgII systems at cluster redshifts, two statistical samples were drawn out of
these pairs: one made of high-resolution spectroscopic quasar observations (46
pairs), and one made of quasars used in MgII searches found in the literature
(375 pairs). The results are: (1) the population of strong MgII systems
(W_0>2.0 Ang.) near cluster redshifts shows a significant (>3 sigma)
overabundance (up to a factor of 15) when compared with the 'field' population;
(2) the overabundance is more evident at smaller distances (d<1 Mpc) than
larger distances (d<2 Mpc) from the cluster center; and, (3) the population of
weak MgII systems (W_0<0.3 Ang.) near cluster redshifts conform to the field
statistics. Unlike in the field, this dichotomy makes n(W) in clusters appear
flat and well fitted by a power-law in the entire W-range. A sub-sample of the
most massive clusters yields a stronger and still significant signal. Since
either the absorber number density or filling-factor/cross-section affects the
absorber statistics, an interesting possibility is that we have detected the
signature of truncated halos due to environmental effects. Thus, we argue that
the excess of strong systems is due to a population of absorbers in an
overdense galaxy environment, and the lack of weak systems to a different
population, that got destroyed in the cluster environment. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Structural and morphological evolution of powders nanostructured ceramics: transitional aluminas
This work aims with the study of the transformation of boehmite into transitional aluminas. Boehmite was obtained by a sol-gel method from an aluminium hazardous waste. The thermal behaviour of boehmite was followed by thermogravimetry and differential thermal analysis to determine the transformation temperatures. By calcinations of boehmite at temperatures ranging between 250-1000ÂșC, transitional aluminas (?, ? , ?-Al2O3) were synthesized and characterized by XRD, TEM and FTIR. All the transitional aluminas exhibit nanometric crystallite size, ranging from 2.5-15nm. ?-Al2O3 was obtained as a nanostructured material at 500ÂșC with a cell parameter a=7.923Ă
. ?-phase stars to appear at 850ÂșC with a crystallite size of 6nm and cell parameters a=5.672Ă
and c=24.600Ă
. For ?-Al2O3 the cell parameters, in Ă
, were a=11.817, b=2.912, c=5.621 and ?=103.8Âș. The progressive conversion of the transitional phase ?-Al2O3 into the stable polymorph ?-alumina, takes place gradually and a four-phases region is achieved at 1000ÂșC, where coexist with other transitional phase such as ?- and ?-Al2O3
Braneworld holography in Gauss-Bonnet gravity
We investigate holography on an (n-1)-dimensional brane embedded in a
background of AdS black holes, in n-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet gravity. We
demonstrate that for a critical brane near the AdS boundary, the Friedmann
equation corresponds to that of the standard cosmology driven by a CFT dual to
the AdS bulk. We show that there is no holographic description for non-critical
branes, or when the brane is further away from the AdS boundary. We then derive
a Cardy-Verlinde formula for the dual CFT on the critical brane near the
boundary. This gives us insight into the remarkable correspondence between
Cardy-Verlinde formulae and Friedmann equations in Einstein gravity.Comment: 24 pages, no figures; references added, minor changes, version to
appear in CQ
Aging in lattice-gas models with constrained dynamics
We investigate the aging behavior of lattice-gas models with constrained
dynamics in which particle exchange with a reservoir is allowed. Such models
provide a particularly simple interpretation of aging phenomena as a slow
approach to criticality. They appear as the simplest three dimensional models
exhibiting a glassy behavior similar to that of mean field (low temperature
mode-coupling) models.Comment: 5 pages and 3 figures, REVTeX. Submitted to Europhysics Letter
- âŠ