8,008 research outputs found

    Correlation between microstructure and superconducting properties of MgB2 bulk samples with Mg addition and Mg/hBN co-additions

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    The microstructure of polycrystalline MgB2 has a strong influence on the current carrying ability, with grain boundaries and non-superconducting nanoparticles acting as good flux pinning centres which improve the local (intrinsic) critical current density (Jc) of the material, whereas porosity and poor connectivity between grains or particles adversely affect macroscopic current transport. Previous studies have found that hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) doping improves intrinsic Jc by introducing nanoscale flux pinning centres, and Mg doping improves extrinsic Jc by liquid-assisted sintering. Here we investigate the effect of co-doping with 5 wt.% Mg and 1 wt.% hBN with the aim of combining the improved intrinsic and extrinsic properties in bulk MgB2 samples fabricated using field assisted sintering. Additionally, the influence of ball milling and processing temperatures on MgB2 samples with only Mg additions is reported. By correlating microstructure with superconducting properties, we show that the presence of Mg liquid during processing of Mg-doped samples accelerates the reaction between BN and MgB2, forming an impurity phase, MgNB9, the presence of which is detrimental to superconducting performance. Nevertheless, we have achieved a considerable improvement in performance of samples doped only with Mg by increasing the sintering temperature

    Higgs Physics at the Large Hadron Collider

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    In this talk I will begin by summarising the importance of the Higgs physics studies at the LHC. I will then give a short description of the pre-LHC constraints on the Higgs mass and the theoretical predictions for the LHC along with a discussion of the current experimental results, ending with prospects in the near future at the LHC. In addition to the material covered in the presented talk, I have included in the writeup, a critical appraisal of the theoretical uncertainties in the Higgs cross-sections at the Tevatron as well as a discussion of the recent experimental results from the LHC which have become available since the time of the workshop.Comment: LateX, 12 figures, 15 pages, Presented at the XIth Workshop on High Energy Physics Phenomenology, 2010, Ahmedabad, Indi

    Nitrous oxide emissions increase exponentially when optimum nitrogen fertilizer rates are exceeded in the North China plain

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    The IPCC assume a linear relationship between nitrogen (N) application rate and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions in inventory reporting, however, a growing number of studies show a nonlinear relationship under specific soil-climatic conditions. In the North China plain, a global hotspot of N2O emissions, covering a land as large as Germany, the correlation between N rate and N2O emissions remains unclear. We have therefore specifically investigated the N2O response to N applications by conducting field experiments with five N rates, and high-frequency measurements of N2O emissions across contrasting climatic years. Our results showed that cumulative and yield-scaled N2O emissions both increased exponentially as N applications were raised above the optimum rate in maize (Zea mays L.). In wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) there was a corresponding quadratic increase in N2O emissions with the magnitude of the response in 2012–2013 distinctly larger than that in 2013–2014 owing to the effects of extreme snowfall. Existing empirical models (including the IPCC approach) of the N2O response to N rate have overestimated N2O emissions in the North China plain, even at high N rates. Our study therefore provides a new and robust analysis of the effects of fertilizer rate and climatic conditions on N2O emissions

    Functional human T-cell immunity and osteoprotegerin ligand control alveolar bone destruction in periodontal infection

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    Periodontitis, a prime cause of tooth loss in humans, is implicated in the increased risk of systemic diseases such as heart failure, stroke, and bacterial pneumonia. The mechanisms by which periodontitis and antibacterial immunity lead to alveolar bone and tooth loss are poorly understood. To study the human immune response to specific periodontal infections, rye transplanted human peripheral blood lymphocytes (HuPBLs) from periodontitis patients into NOD/SCID mice. Oral challenge of HuPBL-NOD/SCID mice with Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, a well-known Gram-negative anaerobic microorganism that causes human periodontitis, activates human CD4(+) T cells in the periodontium and triggers local alveolar bone destruction. Human CD4(+) T cells, but not CD8(+) T cells or B cells, are identified as essential mediators of alveolar bone destruction. Stimulation of CD4(+) T cells by A. actinomycetemcomitans induces production of osteoprotegerin ligand (OPG-L), a key modulator of osteoclastogenesis and osteoclast activation. In vivo inhibition of OPG-L function with the decoy receptor OPG diminishes alveolar bone destruction and reduces the number of peridontal osteoclasts after microbial challenge. These data imply that the molecular explanation for alveolar bone destruction observed in perio dental infections is mediated by microorganism-triggered induction of OPG-L expression on CD4(+) T cells and the consequent activation of osteoclasts. Inhibition of OPG-L may thus have therapeutic value to prevent alveolar bone and/or tooth loss in human periodontitis.open11263sciescopu

    Charged Dilatonic AdS Black Branes in Arbitrary Dimensions

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    We study electromagnetically charged dilatonic black brane solutions in arbitrary dimensions with flat transverse spaces, that are asymptotically AdS. This class of solutions includes spacetimes which possess a bulk region where the metric is approximately invariant under Lifshitz scalings. Given fixed asymptotic boundary conditions, we analyze how the behavior of the bulk up to the horizon varies with the charges and derive the extremality conditions for these spacetimes.Comment: References update

    Phylogenetic relationships between Treponema putidum and Treponema denticola isolates

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    Poster Session: Scientific Groups - 88. Microbiology/Immunology II: no. 691OBJECTIVES: To use a multi-gene sequencing approach to characterize genetic diversity within T. putidum strains, to establish their phylogenetic relationships with other species of human and non-human treponemes. METHODS: Sets of primers based on T. denticola gene sequences, were screened for their ability to PCR amplify gene fragments from five T. putidum strains (OMZ 758 (type), 844, 846, 847, 848) as well as several dog and human T. denticola isolates (generously supplied by Dr. Chris Wyss). Individual and concatenated gene sequences were analyzed using various computational evolutionary biology approaches, including Bayesian inference and Maximum Likelihood (ML) ...postprin

    Does the `Higgs' have Spin Zero?

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    The Higgs boson is predicted to have spin zero. The ATLAS and CMS experiments have recently reported of an excess of events with mass ~ 125 GeV that has some of the characteristics expected for a Higgs boson. We address the questions whether there is already any evidence that this excess has spin zero, and how this possibility could be confirmed in the near future. The excess observed in the gamma gamma final state could not have spin one, leaving zero and two as open possibilities. We calculate the angular distribution of gamma gamma pairs from the decays of a spin-two boson produced in gluon-gluon collisions, showing that is unique and distinct from the spin-zero case. We also calculate the distributions for lepton pairs that would be produced in the W W* decays of a spin-two boson, which are very different from those in Higgs decays, and note that the kinematics of the event selection used to produce the excess observed in the W W* final state have reduced efficiency for spin two.Comment: 22 pages, 22 figures, Version accepted for publication in JHEP, includes additional plots of dilepton mass distribution

    Partial Homology Relations - Satisfiability in terms of Di-Cographs

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    Directed cographs (di-cographs) play a crucial role in the reconstruction of evolutionary histories of genes based on homology relations which are binary relations between genes. A variety of methods based on pairwise sequence comparisons can be used to infer such homology relations (e.g.\ orthology, paralogy, xenology). They are \emph{satisfiable} if the relations can be explained by an event-labeled gene tree, i.e., they can simultaneously co-exist in an evolutionary history of the underlying genes. Every gene tree is equivalently interpreted as a so-called cotree that entirely encodes the structure of a di-cograph. Thus, satisfiable homology relations must necessarily form a di-cograph. The inferred homology relations might not cover each pair of genes and thus, provide only partial knowledge on the full set of homology relations. Moreover, for particular pairs of genes, it might be known with a high degree of certainty that they are not orthologs (resp.\ paralogs, xenologs) which yields forbidden pairs of genes. Motivated by this observation, we characterize (partial) satisfiable homology relations with or without forbidden gene pairs, provide a quadratic-time algorithm for their recognition and for the computation of a cotree that explains the given relations
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