14,577 research outputs found
Many-nodes/many-links spinfoam: the homogeneous and isotropic case
I compute the Lorentzian EPRL/FK/KKL spinfoam vertex amplitude for regular
graphs, with an arbitrary number of links and nodes, and coherent states peaked
on a homogeneous and isotropic geometry. This form of the amplitude can be
applied for example to a dipole with an arbitrary number of links or to the
4-simplex given by the compete graph on 5 nodes. All the resulting amplitudes
have the same support, independently of the graph used, in the large j (large
volume) limit. This implies that they all yield the Friedmann equation: I show
this in the presence of the cosmological constant. This result indicates that
in the semiclassical limit quantum corrections in spinfoam cosmology do not
come from just refining the graph, but rather from relaxing the large j limit.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Projection-based measurement and identification
A recently developed Projection-based Digital Image Correlation (P-DVC)
method is here extended to 4D (space and time) displacement field measurement
and mechanical identification based on a single radiograph per loading step
instead of volumes as in standard DVC methods. Two levels of data reductions
are exploited, namely, reduction of the data acquisition (and time) by a factor
of 1000 and reduction of the solution space by exploiting model reduction
techniques. The analysis of a complete tensile elastoplastic test composed of
127 loading steps performed in 6 minutes is presented. The 4D displacement
field as well as the elastoplastic constitutive law are identified. Keywords:
Image-based identification, Model reduction, Fast 4D identification, In-situ
tomography measurements. INTRODUCTION Identification and validation of
increasingly complex mechanical models is a major concern in experimental solid
mechanics. The recent developments of computed tomography coupled with in-situ
tests provide extremely rich and non-destructive analyses [1]. In the latter
cases, the sample was imaged inside a tomograph, either with interrupted
mechanical load or with a continuously evolving loading and on-the-fly
acquisitions (as ultra-fast X-ray synchrotron tomography, namely, 20 Hz full
scan acquisition for the study of crack propagation [2]). Visualization of fast
transformations, crack openings, or unsteady behavior become accessible.
Combined with full-field measurements, in-situ tests offer a quantitative basis
for identifying a broad range of mechanical behavior.Comment: SEM 2019, Jun 2019, Reno, United State
Physical interaction between MYCN oncogene and polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) in neuroblastoma: Functional and therapeutic implications
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.CLU (clusterin) is a tumor suppressor gene that we have previously shown to be negatively modulated by the MYCN proto-oncogene, but the mechanism of repression was unclear. Here, we show that MYCN inhibits the expression of CLU by direct interaction with the non-canonical E box sequence CACGCG in the 5′-flanking region. Binding of MYCN to the CLU gene induces bivalent epigenetic marks and recruitment of repressive proteins such as histone deacetylases and Polycomb members. MYCN physically binds in vitro and in vivo to EZH2, a component of the Polycomb repressive complex 2, required to repress CLU. Notably, EZH2 interacts with the Myc box domain 3, a segment of MYC known to be essential for its transforming effects. The expression of CLU can be restored in MYCN-amplified cells by epigenetic drugs with therapeutic results. Importantly, the anticancer effects of the drugs are ablated if CLU expression is blunted by RNA interference. Our study implies that MYC tumorigenesis can be effectively antagonized by epigenetic drugs that interfere with the recruitment of chromatin modifiers at repressive E boxes of tumor suppressor genes such as CLU.SPARKS, The Neuroblastoma Society,
a Wellcome Trust grant (to A. S.), and the Italian Association for Cancer
Research
The EPRL intertwiners and corrected partition function
Do the SU(2) intertwiners parametrize the space of the EPRL solutions to the
simplicity constraint? What is a complete form of the partition function
written in terms of this parametrization? We prove that the EPRL map is
injective for n-valent vertex in case when it is a map from SO(3) into
SO(3)xSO(3) representations. We find, however, that the EPRL map is not
isometric. In the consequence, in order to be written in a SU(2) amplitude
form, the formula for the partition function has to be rederived. We do it and
obtain a new, complete formula for the partition function. The result goes
beyond the SU(2) spin-foam models framework.Comment: RevTex4, 15 pages, 5 figures; theorem of injectivity of EPRL map
correcte
DC and AC Electrical Characterization of Stacks of HTS Tapes
Today the Bi-2223 tape represents a suitable candidate for the use in various HTS devices. The LHC current leads use Bi-2223 tapes soldered together in short lengths, forming stacks of rugged HTS conductors. Critical current and AC loss measurements were performed on BSCCO stacks, in the temperature range of 65 K and 77 K and in magnetic fields of up to 0.5 T. The experimental results reported in this paper give a broad description of the stacks behavior in the range of current and field values of practical interest, and provide design parameters for the optimization of current leads operating both in DC and pulsed conditions
Development and Manufacture of the Coil End Spacers of the LHC Pre-series Dipoles
The coil end spacers play an important role in the performance of superconducting coils, as their shape and location determine the mechanical stability of the conductors in the coil ends (and hence the overall coil training performance) and the local field quality. The dipole end spacers are often of a size and a geometry difficult to be industrially series manufactured and measured. Efficiency of the production and related costs are a key issue to achieve the required production rate of the LHC main dipoles at an affordable price. For the latter reasons, a design approach integrating state-of-the-art CAD/CAM optimization techniques allowing to considerably decrease design and machining time was implemented. This paper gives examples and describes the design criteria, the computation methods, the machining and measuring procedures adopted to carry out the pre-series production
Spinning Loop Black Holes
In this paper we construct four Kerr-like spacetimes starting from the loop
black hole Schwarzschild solutions (LBH) and applying the Newman-Janis
transformation. In previous papers the Schwarzschild LBH was obtained replacing
the Ashtekar connection with holonomies on a particular graph in a
minisuperspace approximation which describes the black hole interior. Starting
from this solution, we use a Newman-Janis transformation and we specialize to
two different and natural complexifications inspired from the complexifications
of the Schwarzschild and Reissner-Nordstrom metrics. We show explicitly that
the space-times obtained in this way are singularity free and thus there are no
naked singularities. We show that the transformation move, if any, the
causality violating regions of the Kerr metric far from r=0. We study the
space-time structure with particular attention to the horizons shape. We
conclude the paper with a discussion on a regular Reissner-Nordstrom black hole
derived from the Schwarzschild LBH and then applying again the Newmann-Janis
transformation.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figure
Asymptotics of LQG fusion coefficients
The fusion coefficients from SO(3) to SO(4) play a key role in the definition
of spin foam models for the dynamics in Loop Quantum Gravity. In this paper we
give a simple analytic formula of the EPRL fusion coefficients. We study the
large spin asymptotics and show that they map SO(3) semiclassical intertwiners
into semiclassical intertwiners. This non-trivial
property opens the possibility for an analysis of the semiclassical behavior of
the model.Comment: 14 pages, minor change
BAFF Index and CXCL13 levels in the cerebrospinal fluid associate respectively with intrathecal IgG synthesis and cortical atrophy in multiple sclerosis at clinical onset
Abstract
Background
B lymphocytes are thought to play a relevant role in multiple sclerosis (MS) pathology. The in vivo analysis of intrathecally produced B cell-related cytokines may help to clarify the mechanisms of B cell recruitment and immunoglobulin production within the central nervous system (CNS) in MS.
Methods
Paired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum specimens from 40 clinically isolated syndrome suggestive of MS or early-onset relapsing-remitting MS patients (CIS/eRRMS) and 17 healthy controls (HC) were analyzed for the intrathecal synthesis of IgG (quantitative formulae and IgG oligoclonal bands, IgGOB), CXCL13, BAFF, and IL-21. 3D-FLAIR, 3D-DIR, and 3D-T1 MRI sequences were applied to evaluate white matter (WM) and gray matter (GM) lesions and global cortical thickness (gCTh).
Results
Compared to HC, CIS/eRRMS having IgGOB (IgGOB+, 26 patients) had higher intrathecal IgG indexes ( p \u2009<\u20090.01), lower values of BAFF Index (11.9\u2009\ub1\u20096.1 vs 17.5\u2009\ub1\u20095.2, p \u2009<\u20090.01), and higher CSF CXCL13 levels (27.7\u2009\ub1\u200933.5 vs 0.9\u2009\ub1\u20091.5, p \u2009<\u20090.005). In these patients, BAFF Index but not CSF CXCL13 levels inversely correlated with the intrathecal IgG synthesis ( r \u2009>\u20090.5 and p \u2009<\u20090.05 for all correlations). CSF leukocyte counts were significantly higher in IgGOB+ compared to IgGOB\u2212 ( p \u2009<\u20090.05) and HC ( p \u2009<\u20090.01), and correlated to CSF CXCL13 concentrations ( r 0.77, p \u2009<\u20090.001).
The gCTh was significantly lower in patients with higher CSF CXCL13 levels (2.41\u2009\ub1\u20090.1 vs 2.49\u2009\ub1\u20090.1\ua0mm, p \u2009<\u20090.05), while no difference in MRI parameters of WM and GM pathology was observed between IgGOB+ and IgGOB\u2212.
Conclusions
The intrathecal IgG synthesis inversely correlated with BAFF Index and showed no correlation with CSF CXCL13. These findings seem to indicate that intrathecally synthesized IgG are produced by long-term PCs that have entered the CNS from the peripheral blood, rather than produced by PCs developed in the meningeal follicle-like structures (FLS). In this study, CXCL13 identifies a subgroup of MS patients characterized by ..
Metastable lifetimes in a kinetic Ising model: Dependence on field and system size
The lifetimes of metastable states in kinetic Ising ferromagnets are studied
by droplet theory and Monte Carlo simulation, in order to determine their
dependences on applied field and system size. For a wide range of fields, the
dominant field dependence is universal for local dynamics and has the form of
an exponential in the inverse field, modified by universal and nonuniversal
power-law prefactors. Quantitative droplet-theory predictions are numerically
verified, and small deviations are shown to depend nonuniversally on the
details of the dynamics. We identify four distinct field intervals in which the
field dependence and statistical properties of the lifetimes are different. The
field marking the crossover between the weak-field regime, in which the decay
is dominated by a single droplet, and the intermediate-field regime, in which
it is dominated by a finite droplet density, vanishes logarithmically with
system size. As a consequence the slow decay characteristic of the former
regime may be observable in systems that are macroscopic as far as their
equilibrium properties are concerned.Comment: 18 pages single spaced. RevTex Version 3. FSU-SCRI-94-1
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