226 research outputs found
Resolving the M2-brane
We construct deformed, T^2 wrapped, rotating M2-branes on a resolved cone
over Q^{1,1,1} and Q^{1,1,1}/Z_2, as well as on a product of two Eguchi-Hanson
instantons. All worldvolume directions of these supersymmetric and regular
solutions are fibred over the transverse space. These constitute gravity duals
of D=3, N=2 gauge theories. In particular, the deformed M2-brane on a resolved
cone over Q^{1,1,1} and the S^1 wrapped M2-brane on a resolved cone over
Q^{1,1,1}/Z_2 provide explicit realizations of holographic renormalization
group flows in M-theory for which both conformal and Lorentz symmetries are
broken in the IR region and restored in the UV limit. These solutions can be
dualized to supersymmetric type IIB pp-waves, which are rendered non-singular
either by additional flux or a twisted time-like direction.Comment: Latex, 23 pages, references adde
Wrapped branes with fluxes in 8d gauged supergravity
We study the gravity dual of several wrapped D-brane configurations in
presence of 4-form RR fluxes partially piercing the unwrapped directions. We
present a systematic approach to obtain these solutions from those without
fluxes. We use D=8 gauged supergravity as a starting point to build up these
solutions. The configurations include (smeared) M2-branes at the tip of a G_2
cone on S^3 x S^3, D2-D6 branes with the latter wrapping a special Lagrangian
3-cycle of the complex deformed conifold and an holomorphic sphere in its
cotangent bundle T^*S^2, D3-branes at the tip of the generalized resolved
conifold, and others obtained by means of T duality and KK reduction. We
elaborate on the corresponding N=1 and N=2 field theories in 2+1 dimensions.Comment: 32 pages, LateX, v2: minor changes, reference added, v3: section
3.5.2 improve
Near-flat space limit and Einstein manifolds
We study the near-flat space limit for strings on AdS(5)xM(5), where the
internal manifold M(5) is equipped with a generic metric with U(1)xU(1)xU(1)
isometry. In the bosonic sector, the limiting sigma model is similar to the one
found for AdS(5)xS(5), as the global symmetries are reduced in the most general
case. When M(5) is a Sasaki-Einstein space like T(1,1), Y(p,q) and L(p,q,r),
whose dual CFT's have N=1 supersymmetry, the near-flat space limit gives the
same bosonic sector of the sigma model found for AdS(5)xS(5). This indicates
the generic presence of integrable subsectors in AdS/CFT.Comment: 30 pages, 1 figur
A New Fractional D2-brane, G_2 Holonomy and T-duality
Recently, a new example of a complete non-compact Ricci-flat metric of G_2
holonomy was constructed, which has an asymptotically locally conical structure
at infinity with a circular direction whose radius stabilises. In this paper we
find a regular harmonic 3-form in this metric, which we then use in order to
obtain an explicit solution for a fractional D2-brane configuration. By
performing a T-duality transformation on the stabilised circle, we obtain the
type IIB description of the fractional brane, which now corresponds to D3-brane
with one of its world-volume directions wrapped around the circle.Comment: Latex, 13 page
Semiclassical strings in Sasaki-Einstein manifolds and long operators in N=1 gauge theories
We study the AdS/CFT relation between an infinite class of 5-d Ypq
Sasaki-Einstein metrics and the corresponding quiver theories. The long BPS
operators of the field theories are matched to massless geodesics in the
geometries, providing a test of AdS/CFT for these cases. Certain small
fluctuations (in the BMN sense) can also be successfully compared. We then go
further and find, using an appropriate limit, a reduced action, first order in
time derivatives, which describes strings with large R-charge. In the field
theory we consider holomorphic operators with large winding numbers around the
quiver and find, interestingly, that, after certain simplifying assumptions,
they can be described effectively as strings moving in a particular metric.
Although not equal, the metric is similar to the one in the bulk. We find it
encouraging that a string picture emerges directly from the field theory and
discuss possible ways to improve the agreement.Comment: 44 pages, LaTeX, 9 figures. v2: References adde
The Prevalence of Latent Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Infection Based on an Interferon-Îł Release Assay: A Cross-Sectional Survey Among Urban Adults in Mwanza, Tanzania.
One third of the world's population is estimated to be latently infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (LTBI). Surveys of LTBI are rarely performed in resource poor TB high endemic countries like Tanzania although low-income countries harbor the largest burden of the worlds LTBI. The primary objective was to estimate the prevalence of LTBI in household contacts of pulmonary TB cases and a group of apparently healthy neighborhood controls in an urban setting of such a country. Secondly we assessed potential impact of LTBI on inflammation by quantitating circulating levels of an acute phase reactant: alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) in neighborhood controls. The study was nested within the framework of two nutrition studies among TB patients in Mwanza, Tanzania. Household contacts- and neighborhood controls were invited to participate. The study involved a questionnaire, BMI determination and blood samples to measure AGP, HIV testing and a Quantiferon Gold In tube (QFN-IT) test to detect signs of LTBI. 245 household contacts and 192 neighborhood controls had available QFN-IT data. Among household contacts, the proportion of QFT-IT positive was 59% compared to 41% in the neighborhood controls (pâ=â0.001). In a linear regression model adjusted for sex, age, CD4 and HIV, a QFT-IT positive test was associated with a 10% higher level of alpha-1-acid glycoprotein(AGP) (10(B) 1.10, 95% CI 1.01; 1.20, pâ=â0.03), compared to individuals with a QFT-IT negative test. LTBI is highly prevalent among apparently healthy urban Tanzanians even without known exposure to TB in the household. LTBI was found to be associated with elevated levels of AGP. The implications of this observation merit further studies
Review of AdS/CFT Integrability, Chapter II.2: Quantum Strings in AdS5xS5
We review the semiclassical analysis of strings in AdS5xS5 with a focus on
the relationship to the underlying integrable structures. We discuss the
perturbative calculation of energies for strings with large charges, using the
folded string spinning in an AdS3 subset of AdS5 as our main example.
Furthermore, we review the perturbative light-cone quantization of the string
theory and the calculation of the worldsheet S-matrix.Comment: 20 pages, see also overview article arXiv:1012.3982, v2: references
to other chapters update
Evidence for waning of latency in a cohort study of tuberculosis
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To investigate how the risk of active tuberculosis disease is influenced by time since original infection and to determine whether the risk of reactivation of tuberculosis increases or decreases with age.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Cohort analysis of data for the separate ten year birth cohorts of 1876-1885 to 1959-1968 obtained from Statistics Norway and the National Tuberculosis Registry. These data were used to calculate the rates and the changes in the rates of bacillary (or active) tuberculosis. Data on bacillary tuberculosis for adult (20+) age groups were obtained from the National Tuberculosis Registry and Statistics Norway from 1946 to 1974. Most cases during this period arose due to reactivation of remote infection. Participants in this part of the analysis were all reported active tuberculosis cases in Norway from 1946 to 1974 as recorded in the National Tuberculosis Registry.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Tuberculosis decreased at a relatively steady rate when following individual birth cohorts, but with a tendency of slower decline as time passed since infection. A mean estimate of this rate of decline was 57% in a 10 year period.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The risk of reactivation of latent tuberculosis decreases with age. This decline may reflect the rate at which latent tuberculosis is eliminated from a population with minimal transmission of tubercle bacilli. A model for risk of developing active tuberculosis as a function of time since infection shows that the rate at which tuberculosis can be eliminated from a society can be quite substantial if new infections are effectively prevented. The findings clearly indicate that preventative measures against transmission of tuberculosis will be the most effective. These results also suggest that the total population harbouring live tubercle bacilli and consequently the future projection for increased incidence of tuberculosis in the world is probably overestimated.</p
Is Adipose Tissue a Place for Mycobacterium tuberculosis Persistence?
BACKGROUND: Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the etiological agent of tuberculosis (TB), has the ability to persist in its human host for exceptionally long periods of time. However, little is known about the location of the bacilli in latently infected individuals. Long-term mycobacterial persistence in the lungs has been reported, but this may not sufficiently account for strictly extra-pulmonary TB, which represents 10â15% of the reactivation cases. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We applied in situ and conventional PCR to sections of adipose tissue samples of various anatomical origins from 19 individuals from Mexico and 20 from France who had died from causes other than TB. M. tuberculosis DNA could be detected by either or both techniques in fat tissue surrounding the kidneys, the stomach, the lymph nodes, the heart and the skin in 9/57 Mexican samples (6/19 individuals), and in 8/26 French samples (6/20 individuals). In addition, mycobacteria could be immuno-detected in perinodal adipose tissue of 1 out of 3 biopsy samples from individuals with active TB. In vitro, using a combination of adipose cell models, including the widely used murine adipose cell line 3T3-L1, as well as primary human adipocytes, we show that after binding to scavenger receptors, M. tuberculosis can enter within adipocytes, where it accumulates intracytoplasmic lipid inclusions and survives in a non-replicating state that is insensitive to the major anti-mycobacterial drug isoniazid. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Given the abundance and the wide distribution of the adipose tissue throughout the body, our results suggest that this tissue, among others, might constitute a vast reservoir where the tubercle bacillus could persist for long periods of time, and avoid both killing by antimicrobials and recognition by the host immune system. In addition, M. tuberculosis-infected adipocytes might provide a new model to investigate dormancy and to evaluate new drugs for the treatment of persistent infection
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