19,071 research outputs found
Local and Global Studies of Ion Outflow From the High Latitude Ionosphere
Ion outflow from the ionosphere plays a fundamental but poorly defined role in magnetospheric processes. The purpose of the research is to better understand the mass coupling between the Earth's ionosphere and Magnetosphere. The work performed under this grant falls in three areas: (1) event studies using archived data from the DE-1/2 satellites; (2) investigations using Data from the ISTP satellites; and (3) work supporting a Space Physics Educational Outreach (SPEO) grant supplement
Land use change detection with LANDSAT-2 data for monitoring and predicting regional water quality degradation
The author has identified the following significant results. Comparison between LANDSAT 1 and 2 imagery of Arkansas provided evidence of significant land use changes during the 1972-75 time period. Analysis of Arkansas historical water quality information has shown conclusively that whereas point source pollution generally can be detected by use of water quality data collected by state and federal agencies, sampling methodologies for nonpoint source contamination attributable to surface runoff are totally inadequate. The expensive undertaking of monitoring all nonpoint sources for numerous watersheds can be lessened by implementing LANDSAT change detection analyses
Prototype of NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement Mission Ground Validation System
NASA is developing a Ground Validation System (GVS) as one of its contributions to the Global Precipitation Mission (GPM). The GPM GVS provides an independent means for evaluation, diagnosis, and ultimately improvement of GPM spaceborne measurements and precipitation products. NASA's GPM GVS consists of three elements: field campaigns/physical validation, direct network validation, and modeling and simulation. The GVS prototype of direct network validation compares Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite-borne radar data to similar measurements from the U.S. national network of operational weather radars. A prototype field campaign has also been conducted; modeling and simulation prototypes are under consideration
Feather corticosterone levels on wintering grounds have no carry-over effects on breeding among three populations of great skuas (<i>Stercorarius skua</i>)
Environmental conditions encountered by migratory seabirds in their wintering areas can shape their fitness. However, the underlying physiological mechanisms remain largely unknown as birds are relatively inaccessible during winter. To assess physiological condition during this period, we measured corticosterone concentrations in winter-grown primary feathers of female great skuas (Stercorarius skua) from three breeding colonies (Bjørnøya, Iceland, Shetland) with wintering areas identified from characteristic stable isotope signatures. We subsequently compared winter feather corticosterone levels between three wintering areas (Africa, Europe and America). Among females breeding in 2009, we found significant differences in feather corticosterone levels between wintering areas. Surprisingly, levels were significantly higher in Africa despite seemingly better local ecological factors (based on lower foraging effort). Moreover, contrary to our predictions, females sharing the same wintering grounds showed significant differences in feather corticosterone levels depending on their colony of origin suggesting that some skuas could be using suboptimal wintering areas. Among females wintering in Africa, Shetland females showed feather corticosterone levels on average 22% lower than Bjørnøya and Iceland females. Finally, the lack of significant relationships between winter feather corticosterone levels and any of the breeding phenology traits does not support the hypothesis of potential carry-over effects of winter feather corticosterone. Yet, the fitness consequences of elevated feather corticosterone levels remain to be determined
Learning associations between clinical information and motion-based descriptors using a large scale MR-derived cardiac motion atlas
The availability of large scale databases containing imaging and non-imaging
data, such as the UK Biobank, represents an opportunity to improve our
understanding of healthy and diseased bodily function. Cardiac motion atlases
provide a space of reference in which the motion fields of a cohort of subjects
can be directly compared. In this work, a cardiac motion atlas is built from
cine MR data from the UK Biobank (~ 6000 subjects). Two automated quality
control strategies are proposed to reject subjects with insufficient image
quality. Based on the atlas, three dimensionality reduction algorithms are
evaluated to learn data-driven cardiac motion descriptors, and statistical
methods used to study the association between these descriptors and non-imaging
data. Results show a positive correlation between the atlas motion descriptors
and body fat percentage, basal metabolic rate, hypertension, smoking status and
alcohol intake frequency. The proposed method outperforms the ability to
identify changes in cardiac function due to these known cardiovascular risk
factors compared to ejection fraction, the most commonly used descriptor of
cardiac function. In conclusion, this work represents a framework for further
investigation of the factors influencing cardiac health.Comment: 2018 International Workshop on Statistical Atlases and Computational
Modeling of the Hear
Sequestration of cholesterol within the host late endocytic pathway restricts liver-stage Plasmodium development
While lysosomes are degradative compartments and one of the defenses against invading pathogens, they are also hubs of metabolic activity. Late endocytic compartments accumulate around Plasmodium berghei liver-stage parasites during development, and whether this is a host defense strategy or active recruitment by the parasites is unknown. In support of the latter hypothesis, we observed that the recruitment of host late endosomes (LEs) and lysosomes is reduced in uis4(−) parasites, which lack a parasitophorous vacuole membrane protein and arrest during liver-stage development. Analysis of parasite development in host cells deficient for late endosomal or lysosomal proteins revealed that the Niemann–Pick type C (NPC) proteins, which are involved in cholesterol export from LEs, and the lysosome-associated membrane proteins (LAMP) 1 and 2 are important for robust liver-stage P. berghei growth. Using the compound U18666A, which leads to cholesterol sequestration in LEs similar to that seen in NPC- and LAMP-deficient cells, we show that the restriction of parasite growth depends on cholesterol sequestration and that targeting this process can reduce parasite burden in vivo. Taken together, these data reveal that proper LE and lysosome function positively contributes to liver-stage Plasmodium development
Nonlocal restoration of two-mode squeezing in the presence of strong optical loss
We present the experimental realization of a theoretical effect discovered by
Olivares and Paris, in which a pair of entangled optical beams undergoing
independent losses can see nonlocal correlations restored by the use of a
nonlocal resource correlating the losses. Twin optical beams created in an
entangled Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) state by an optical parametric
oscillator above threshold were subjected to 50% loss from beamsplitters in
their paths. The resulting severe degradation of the signature quantum
correlations observed between the two beams was then suppressed when another,
independent EPR state impinged upon the other input ports of the beamsplitters,
effectively entangling the losses inflicted to the initial EPR state. The
additional EPR beam pair was classically coherent with the primary one but had
no quantum correlations with it. This result may find applications as a quantum
tap for entanglement.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, submitted for publicatio
Ocular sequelae of congenital toxoplasmosis in Brazil compared with Europe
Toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis appears to be more severe in Brazil, where it is a leading cause of blindness, than in Europe, but direct comparisons are lacking. Evidence is accumulating that more virulent genotypes of Toxoplasma gondii predominate in South America
A Lorentzian Gromov-Hausdoff notion of distance
This paper is the first of three in which I study the moduli space of
isometry classes of (compact) globally hyperbolic spacetimes (with boundary). I
introduce a notion of Gromov-Hausdorff distance which makes this moduli space
into a metric space. Further properties of this metric space are studied in the
next papers. The importance of the work can be situated in fields such as
cosmology, quantum gravity and - for the mathematicians - global Lorentzian
geometry.Comment: 20 pages, 0 figures, submitted to Classical and quantum gravity,
seriously improved presentatio
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