2,700 research outputs found
Enabling alternative livelihoods for aquatic resource dependent communities of the Tonle Sap: summary note
Inland fisheries, Environmental impact, Structures, Man-induced effects, Livelihoods
Chiral molecular films as electron polarizers and polarization modulators
Recent experiments on electron scattering through molecular films have shown
that chiral molecules can be efficient sources of polarized electrons even in
the absence of heavy nuclei as source of a strong spin-orbit interaction. We
show that self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of chiral molecules are strong
electron polarizers due to the high density effect of the monolayers and
explicitly compute the scattering amplitude off a helical molecular model of
carbon atoms. Longitudinal polarization is shown to be the signature of chiral
scattering. For elastic scattering, we find that at least double scattering
events must take place for longitudinal polarization to arise. We predict
energy windows for strong polarization, determined by the energy dependences of
spin-orbit strength and multiple scattering probability. An incoherent
mechanism for polarization amplification is proposed, that increases the
polarization linearly with the number of helix turns, consistent with recent
experiments on DNA SAMs.Comment: 5 Pages, 4 figure
Nod1 signaling overcomes resistance of S. pneumoniae to opsonophagocytic killing
Airway infection by the Gram-positive pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp) leads to recruitment of neutrophils but
limited bacterial killing by these cells. Co-colonization by Sp and a Gram-negative species, Haemophilus influenzae (Hi),
provides sufficient stimulus to induce neutrophil and complement-mediated clearance of Sp from the mucosal surface
in a murine model. Products from Hi, but not Sp, also promote killing of Sp by ex vivo neutrophil-enriched peritoneal
exudate cells. Here we identify the stimulus from Hi as its peptidoglycan. Enhancement of opsonophagocytic killing
was facilitated by signaling through nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-1 (Nod1), which is involved in
recognition of γ-D-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelic acid (meso-DAP) contained in cell walls of Hi but not Sp. Neutrophils
from mice treated with Hi or compounds containing meso-DAP, including synthetic peptidoglycan fragments, showed
increased Sp killing in a Nod1-dependent manner. Moreover, Nod1-/- mice showed reduced Hi-induced clearance of Sp
during co-colonization. These observations offer insight into mechanisms of microbial competition and demonstrate
the importance of Nod1 in neutrophil-mediated clearance of bacteria in vivo
Ion and polymer dynamics in polymer electrolytes PPO-LiClO4: II. 2H and 7Li NMR stimulated-echo experiment
We use 2H NMR stimulated-echo spectroscopy to measure two-time correlation
functions characterizing the polymer segmental motion in polymer electrolytes
PPO-LiClO4 near the glass transition temperature Tg. To investigate effects of
the salt on the polymer dynamics, we compare results for different ether oxygen
to lithium ratios, namely, 6:1, 15:1, 30:1 and infinity. For all compositions,
we find nonexponential correlation functions, which can be described by a
Kohlrausch function. The mean correlation times show quantitatively that an
increase of the salt concentration results in a strong slowing down of the
segmental motion. Consistently, for the high 6:1 salt concentration, a high
apparent activation energy E_a=4.1eV characterizes the temperature dependence
of the mean correlation times at Tg < T< 1.1T_g, while smaller values E_a=2.5eV
are observed for moderate salt contents. The correlation functions are most
nonexponential for 15:1 PPO-LiClO4, whereas the stretching is reduced for
higher and lower salt concentrations. A similar dependence of the correlation
functions on the evolution time in the presence and in the absence of ions
indicates that addition of salt hardly affects the reorientational mechanism.
For all compositions, mean jump angles of about 15 degree characterize the
segmental reorientation. In addition, comparison of results from 2H and 7Li NMR
stimulated-echo experiments suggests a coupling of ion and polymer dynamics in
15:1 PPO-LiClO4.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
On the low-temperature lattice thermal transport in nanowires
We propose a theory of low temperature thermal transport in nano-wires in the
regime where a competition between phonon and flexural modes governs the
relaxation processes. Starting with the standard kinetic equations for two
different types of quasiparticles we derive a general expression for the
coefficient of thermal conductivity. The underlying physics of thermal
conductance is completely determined by the corresponding relaxation times,
which can be calculated directly for any dispersion of quasiparticles depending
on the size of a system. We show that if the considered relaxation mechanism is
dominant, then at small wire diameters the temperature dependence of thermal
conductivity experiences a crossover from to -dependence.
Quantitative analysis shows reasonable agreement with resent experimental
results.Comment: 12 pages, 3 eps figure
The Formal Dynamism of Categories: Stops vs. Fricatives, Primitivity vs. Simplicity
Minimalist Phonology (MP; Pöchtrager 2006) constructs its theory based on the phonological epistemological principle (Kaye 2001) and exposes the arbitrary nature of standard Government Phonology (sGP) and strict-CV (sCV), particularly with reference to their confusion of melody and structure.
For Pöchtrager, these are crucially different, concluding that place of articulation is melodic (expressed with elements), while manner of articulation is structural. In this model, the heads (xN and xO) can license and incorporate the length of the other into their own interpretation, that is xN influences xO projections as well as its own and vice versa. This dynamism is an aspect of the whole framework and this paper in particular will show that stops and fricatives evidence a plasticity of category and that, although fricatives are simpler in structure, stops are the more primitive of the two.
This will be achieved phonologically through simply unifying the environment of application of the licensing forces within Pöchtrager's otherwise sound onset structure. In doing so, we automatically make several predictions about language acquisition and typology and show how lenition in Qiang (Sino-Tibetan) can be more elegantly explained
VLBI for Gravity Probe B. V. Proper Motion and Parallax of the Guide Star, IM Pegasi
We present the principal astrometric results of the very-long-baseline
interferometry (VLBI) program undertaken in support of the Gravity Probe B
(GP-B) relativity mission. VLBI observations of the GP-B guide star, the RS CVn
binary IM Pegasi (HR 8703), yielded positions at 35 epochs between 1997 and
2005. We discuss the statistical assumptions behind these results and our
methods for estimating the systematic errors. We find the proper motion of IM
Peg in an extragalactic reference frame closely related to the International
Celestial Reference Frame 2 (ICRF2) to be -20.83 +- 0.03 +- 0.09 mas/yr in
right ascension and -27.27 +- 0.03 +- 0.09 mas/yr in declination. For each
component the first uncertainty is the statistical standard error and the
second is the total standard error (SE) including plausible systematic errors.
We also obtain a parallax of 10.37 +- 0.07 mas (distance: 96.4 +- 0.7 pc), for
which there is no evidence of any significant contribution of systematic error.
Our parameter estimates for the ~25-day-period orbital motion of the stellar
radio emission have SEs corresponding to ~0.10 mas on the sky in each
coordinate. The total SE of our estimate of IM Peg's proper motion is ~30%
smaller than the accuracy goal set by the GP-B project before launch: 0.14
mas/yr for each coordinate of IM Peg's proper motion. Our results ensure that
the uncertainty in IM Peg's proper motion makes only a very small contribution
to the uncertainty of the GP-B relativity tests.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
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