17,959 research outputs found
Character of the structural and magnetic phase transitions in the parent and electron doped BaFe2As2 compounds
We present a combined high-resolution x-ray diffraction and x-ray resonant
magnetic scattering (XRMS) study of as-grown BaFe2As2. The structural/magnetic
transitions must be described as a two-step process. At T_S = 134.5 K we
observe the onset of a second-order structural transition from the
high-temperature paramagnetic tetragonal structure to a paramagnetic
orthorhombic phase, followed by a discontinuous step in the structural order
parameter that is coincident with a first-order antiferromagnetic (AFM)
transition at T_N = 133.75 K. These data, together with detailed
high-resolution x-ray studies of the structural transition in lightly doped
Ba(Fe{1-x}Co{x})2As2 and Ba(Fe{1-x}Rh{x})2As2 compounds, show that the
structural and AFM transitions do, in fact, occur at slightly different
temperatures in the parent BaFe2As2 compound, and evolve towards split
secondorder transitions as the doping concentration is increased. We estimate
the composition for the tricritical point for Co-doping and employ a mean-field
approach to show that our measurements can be explained by the inclusion of an
anharmonic term in the elastic free energy and magneto-elastic coupling in the
form of an emergent Ising-nematic degree of freedom.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures; accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Depressive symptoms and quality of life in people with age-related macular degeneration
Purpose: To examine quality of life and associated factors in people with Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). Methods: One hundred and forty-five AMD participants (mean age 78.0 +/- 7.7 years) and 104 age- and gender- matched controls (mean age 78.1 +/- 5.8 years) comprised the study populations for this case-control study. Depressive symptoms were measured with the Goldberg Anxiety and Depression (GAD) scale; general health and daily functioning was assessed with the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36 (SF-36) and questions relating to assistance required for daily living activities. Results: People with AMD performed more poorly than controls on the GAD depression scale, and physical functioning subscale of SF-36. 44.4% of people with AMD had clinically significant depressive symptoms compared to 17.5% of controls (p < 0.001). Multiple regression analysis revealed that AMD was independently associated with depressive symptoms and a path model indicated that AMD led to depressive symptoms both directly and indirectly via reduced general health and social functioning. Conclusion: Psychological and functional outcome measures are reduced in people with AMD. Earlier recognition and treatment of depressive symptoms in people with AMD may be crucial to maintaining quality of life in this group
Correlation between fracture surface morphology and toughness in Zr-based bulk metallic glasses
Fracture surfaces of Zr-based bulk metallic glasses of various compositions tested in the as-cast and annealed conditions were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy. The tougher samples have shown highly jagged patterns at the beginning stage of crack propagation, and the length and roughness of this jagged pattern correlate well with the measured fracture toughness values. These jagged patterns, the main source of energy dissipation in the sample, are attributed to the formation of shear bands inside the sample. This observation provides strong evidence of significant “plastic zone” screening at the crack tip
A surface electrode point Paul trap
We present a model as well as experimental results for a surface electrode
radio-frequency Paul trap that has a circular electrode geometry well-suited
for trapping of single ions and two-dimensional planar ion crystals. The trap
design is compatible with microfabrication and offers a simple method by which
the height of the trapped ions above the surface may be changed \emph{in situ}.
We demonstrate trapping of single and few Sr+ ions over an ion height range of
200-1000 microns for several hours under Doppler laser cooling, and use these
to characterize the trap, finding good agreement with our model.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, 1 tabl
Automatic extraction of knowledge from web documents
A large amount of digital information available is written as text documents in the form of web pages, reports, papers, emails, etc. Extracting the knowledge of interest from such documents from multiple sources in a timely fashion is therefore crucial. This paper provides an update on the Artequakt system which uses natural language tools to automatically extract knowledge about artists from multiple documents based on a predefined ontology. The ontology represents the type and form of knowledge to extract. This knowledge is then used to generate tailored biographies. The information extraction process of Artequakt is detailed and evaluated in this paper
Non-lethal exposure to H2O2 boosts bacterial survival and evolvability against oxidative stress
Unicellular organisms have the prevalent challenge to survive under oxidative stress of reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). ROS are present as by-products of photosynthesis and aerobic respiration. These reactive species are even employed by multicellular organisms as potent weapons against microbes. Although bacterial defences against lethal and sub-lethal oxidative stress have been studied in model bacteria, the role of fluctuating H2O2 concentrations remains unexplored. It is known that sub-lethal exposure of Escherichia coli to H2O2 results in enhanced survival upon subsequent exposure. Here we investigate the priming response to H2O2 at physiological concentrations. The basis and the duration of the response (memory) were also determined by time-lapse quantitative proteomics. We found that a low level of H2O2 induced several scavenging enzymes showing a long half-life, subsequently protecting cells from future exposure. We then asked if the phenotypic resistance against H2O2 alters the evolution of resistance against oxygen stress. Experimental evolution of H2O2 resistance revealed faster evolution and higher levels of resistance in primed cells. Several mutations were found to be associated with resistance in evolved populations affecting different loci but, counterintuitively, none of them was directly associated with scavenging systems. Our results have important implications for host colonisation and infections where microbes often encounter reactive oxygen species in gradients
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Mononuclear cell transcriptome changes associated with dimethyl fumarate in MS.
ObjectiveTo identify short-term changes in gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) associated with treatment response to dimethyl fumarate (DMF, Tecfidera) in patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS).MethodsBlood samples were collected from 24 patients with RRMS (median Expanded Disability Status Scale score, 2.0; range 1-7) at baseline, 6 weeks, and 15 months after the initiation of treatment with DMF (BG-12; Tecfidera). Seven healthy controls were also recruited, and blood samples were collected over the same time intervals. PBMCs were extracted from blood samples and sequenced using next-generation RNA sequencing. Treatment responders were defined using the composite outcome measure "no evidence of disease activity" (NEDA-4). Time-course and cross-sectional differential expression analyses were performed to identify transcriptomic markers of treatment response.ResultsTreatment responders (NEDA-4 positive, 8/24) over the 15-month period had 478 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) 6 weeks after the start of treatment. These were enriched for nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) and inhibition of nuclear factor ÎşB (NFÎşB) pathway transcripts. For patients who showed signs of disease activity, there were no DEGs at 6 weeks relative to their (untreated) baseline. Contrasting transcriptomes expressed at 6 weeks with those at 15 months of treatment, 0 and 1,264 DEGs were found in the responder and nonresponder groups, respectively. Transcripts in the nonresponder group (NEDA-4 negative, 18/24) were enriched for T-cell signaling genes.ConclusionShort-term PBMC transcriptome changes reflecting activation of the Nrf2 and inhibition of NFÎşB pathways distinguish patients who subsequently show a medium-term treatment response with DMF. Relative stabilization of gene expression patterns may accompany treatment-associated suppression of disease activity
Dark-ages reionization and galaxy formation simulation - IX. Economics of reionizing galaxies
Using a series of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations we show that
during the rapid growth of high-redshift (z > 5) galaxies, reserves of
molecular gas are consumed over a time-scale of 300Myr, almost independent of
feedback scheme. We find that there exists no such simple relation for the
total gas fractions of these galaxies, with little correlation between gas
fractions and specific star formation rates. The bottleneck or limiting factor
in the growth of early galaxies is in converting infalling gas to cold
star-forming gas. Thus, we find that the majority of high redshift dwarf
galaxies are effectively in recession, with demand (of star formation) never
rising to meet supply (of gas), irrespective of the baryonic feedback physics
modelled. We conclude that the basic assumption of self-regulation in galaxies
- that they can adjust total gas consumption within a Hubble time - does not
apply for the dwarf galaxies thought to be responsible for providing most UV
photons to reionize the high redshift Universe. We demonstrate how this rapid
molecular time-scale improves agreement between semi-analytic model predictions
of the early Universe and observed stellar mass functions.Comment: 17 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, minor
updates to align with final published versio
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