2,892 research outputs found

    Solar Neutrinos: Status and Prospects

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    We describe the current status of solar neutrino measurements and of the theory -- both neutrino physics and solar astrophysics -- employed in interpreting measurements. Important recent developments include Super-Kamiokande's determination of the neutrino-electron elastic scattering rate for 8B neutrinos to 3%; the latest SNO global analysis in which the inclusion of low-energy data from SNO I and II significantly narrowed the range of allowed values for the neutrino mixing angle theta12; Borexino results for both the 7Be and pep neutrino fluxes, the first direct measurements constraining the rate of ppI and ppII burning in the Sun; global reanalyses of solar neutrino data that take into account new reactor results on theta13; a new decadal evaluation of the nuclear physics of the pp chain and CNO cycle defining best values and uncertainties in the nuclear microphysics input to solar models; recognition of an emerging discrepancy between two tests of solar metallicity, helioseismological mappings of the sound speed in the solar interior, and analyses of the metal photoabsorption lines based on our best current description of the Sun's photosphere; a new round of standard solar model calculations optimized to agree either with helioseismology or with the new photospheric analysis; and, motivated by the solar abundance problem, the development of nonstandard, accreting solar models, in order to investigate possible consequences of the metal segregation that occurred in the proto-solar disk. We review this progress and describe how new experiments such as SNO+ could help us further exploit neutrinos as a unique probe of stellar interiors.Comment: 82 pages, 11 figure

    Bait uptake by wild badgers and its implications for oral vaccination against tuberculosis

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    This is the final version. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record.Data Availability: All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.The deployment of baits containing vaccines or toxins has been used successfully in the management of wildlife populations, including for disease control. Optimisation of deployment strategies seeks to maximise uptake by the targeted population whilst ensuring cost-effectiveness. Tuberculosis (TB) caused by infection with Mycobacterium bovis affects a broad range of mammalian hosts across the globe, including cattle, wildlife and humans. The control of TB in cattle in the UK and Republic of Ireland is hampered by persistent infection in European badgers (Meles meles). The present study aimed to determine the best strategy for maximising uptake of an oral vaccine by wild badgers, using a surrogate novel bait deployed at 40 badger social groups. Baits contained a blood-borne biomarker (Iophenoxic Acid, IPA) in order to measure consumption in badgers subsequently cage trapped at targeted setts. Evidence for the consumption of bait was found in 83% (199/240) of captured badgers. The probability that badgers had consumed at least one bait (IPA >10 μg ml-1) was significantly higher following deployment in spring than in summer. Lower uptake amongst social groups where more badgers were captured, suggested competition for baits. The probability of bait consumption was significantly higher at groups where main and outlier setts were provided with baits than at those where outliers were present but not baited. Badgers captured 10–14 days post bait feeding had significantly higher levels of bait uptake compared to those caught 24–28 days later. Uptake rates did not vary significantly in relation to badger age and whether bait was placed above ground or down setts. This study suggests that high levels of bait uptake can be achieved in wild badger populations and identifies factors influencing the potential success of different deployment strategies. The implications for the development of an oral badger vaccine are discussed.Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA

    An Audit of Pre-Pregnancy Maternal Obesity and Diabetes Screening in Rural Regional Tasmania and Its Impact on Pregnancy and Neonatal Outcomes.

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    Maternal obesity in pregnancy, a growing health problem in Australia, adversely affects both mothers and their offspring. Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is similarly associated with adverse pregnancy and neonatal complications. A low-risk digital medical record audit of antenatal and postnatal data of 2132 pregnant mothers who gave birth between 2016-2018 residing in rural-regional Tasmania was undertaken. An expert advisory group guided the research and informed data collection. Fifty five percent of pregnant mothers were overweight or obese, 43.6% gained above the recommended standards for gestational weight gain and 35.8% did not have an oral glucose tolerance test. The audit identified a high prevalence of obesity among pregnant women and low screening rates for gestational diabetes mellitus associated with adverse maternal and neonatal pregnancy outcomes. We conclude that there is a high prevalence of overweight and obesity among pregnant women in rural regional Tasmania. Further GDM screening rates are low, which require addressing

    THE OPTIMIZATION OF TRUNK POSITION FOR THE 2016 RIO PARALYPMIC WHEELCHAIR RACING FINALS

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    This research investigated the relationship between athlete aerodynamics (based on peak frontal area during recovery phase) and finishing position for athletes in the 100m- 5000m wheelchair Athletics events. A retrospective analysis was performed on T54 classified male and female finalists (n=86) at the 2016 Rio Paralympic Games. Medalling female athletes more consistently favoured an aerodynamic position than was observed for males, who may be more inclined to overcome additional resistive forces through powerful techniques due to enhanced strength capacities. Whilst aerodynamics does not appear the sole performance requirement for male athletes, time savings of up to 116s over a 5000m race can be obtained, if athletes improve their aerodynamics, without compromising force generating capacity, demonstrating its importance to athletes

    Calcium buffering in the heart in health and disease

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    Changes of intracellular Ca2+ concentration regulate many aspects of cardiac myocyte function. About 99% of the cytoplasmic calcium in cardiac myocytes is bound to buffers, and their properties will therefore have a major influence on Ca2+ signaling. This article considers the fundamental properties and identities of the buffers and how to measure them. It reviews the effects of buffering on the systolic Ca2+ transient and how this may change physiologically, and in heart failure and both atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, as well. It is concluded that the consequences of this strong buffering may be more significant than currently appreciated, and a fuller understanding is needed for proper understanding of cardiac calcium cycling and contractility

    The inclusion of two-loop SUSYQCD corrections to gluino and squark pole masses in the minimal and next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model: SOFTSUSY3.7

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    We describe an extension of the SOFTSUSY spectrum calculator to include two-loop supersymmetric QCD (SUSYQCD) corrections of order O(α s 2 ) to gluino and squark pole masses, either in the minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) or the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model (NMSSM). This document provides an overview of the program and acts as a manual for the new version of SOFTSUSY, which includes the increase in accuracy in squark and gluino pole mass predictions. Program summary Program title: SOFTSUSY Program Files doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.17632/sh77x9j7hs.1 Licensing provisions: GNU GPLv3 Programming language: C++, fortran, C Nature of problem: Calculating supersymmetric particle spectrum, mixing parameters and couplings in the MSSM or the NMSSM. The solution to the renormalization group equations must be consistent with theoretical boundary conditions on supersymmetry breaking parameters, as well as a weak-scale boundary condition on gauge couplings, Yukawa couplings and the Higgs potential parameters. Solution method: Nested fixed point iteration. Restrictions: SOFTSUSY will provide a solution only in the perturbative regime and it assumes that all couplings of the model are real (i.e. CP−conserving). If the parameter point under investigation is non-physical for some reason (for example because the electroweak potential does not have an acceptable minimum), SOFTSUSY returns an error message. The higher order corrections included are for the MSSM (R-parity conserving or violating) or the real R-parity conserving NMSSM only. Journal reference of previous version: Comput. Phys. Comm. 189 (2015) 192. Does the new version supersede the previous version?: Yes. Reasons for the new version: It is desirable to improve the accuracy of the squark and gluinos mass predictions, since they strongly affect supersymmetric particle production cross-sections at colliders. Summary of revisions: The calculation of the squark and gluino pole masses is extended to be of next-to-next-to leading order in SUSYQCD, i.e. including terms up to O(g s 4 ∕(16π 2 ) 2 ). Additional comments: Program obtainable from http://softsusy.hepforge.org/This work has been partially supported by STFC grantST/L000385/1. We thank the Cambridge SUSY working group for helpful discussions. The work of SPM was supported in part by the National Science Foundation grant number PHY-1417028. DGR acknowledges the support of the Ohio Supercomputer Center grant number NUL0003-1

    Normal X-inactivation mosaicism in corneas of heterozygous FlnaDilp2/+ female mice--a model of human Filamin A (FLNA) diseases

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Some abnormalities of mouse corneal epithelial maintenance can be identified by the atypical mosaic patterns they produce in X-chromosome inactivation mosaics and chimeras. Human <it>FLNA</it>/+ females, heterozygous for X-linked, filamin A gene (<it>FLNA</it>) mutations, display a range of disorders and X-inactivation mosaicism is sometimes quantitatively unbalanced. <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>mice, heterozygous for an X-linked filamin A (<it>Flna</it>) nonsense mutation have variable eye, skeletal and other abnormalities, but X-inactivation mosaicism has not been investigated. The aim of this study was to determine whether X-inactivation mosaicism in the corneal epithelia of <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>mice was affected in any way that might predict abnormal corneal epithelial maintenance.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>X-chromosome inactivation mosaicism was studied in the corneal epithelium and a control tissue (liver) of <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>and wild-type (WT) female X-inactivation mosaics, hemizygous for the X-linked, <it>LacZ </it>reporter H253 transgene, using β-galactosidase histochemical staining. The corneal epithelia of <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>and WT X-inactivation mosaics showed similar radial, striped patterns, implying epithelial cell movement was not disrupted in <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>corneas. Corrected stripe numbers declined with age overall (but not significantly for either genotype individually), consistent with previous reports suggesting an age-related reduction in stem cell function. Corrected stripe numbers were not reduced in <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>compared with WT X-inactivation mosaics and mosaicism was not significantly more unbalanced in the corneal epithelia or livers of <it>Flna</it><sup><it>Dilp2/+ </it></sup>than wild-type <it>Flna<sup>+/+ </sup></it>X-inactivation mosaics.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Mosaic analysis identified no major effect of the mouse <it>Flna<sup>Dilp2 </sup></it>mutation on corneal epithelial maintenance or the balance of X-inactivation mosaicism in the corneal epithelium or liver.</p

    Combinatorial Bounds for Conflict-free Coloring on Open Neighborhoods

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    In an undirected graph GG, a conflict-free coloring with respect to open neighborhoods (denoted by CFON coloring) is an assignment of colors to the vertices such that every vertex has a uniquely colored vertex in its open neighborhood. The minimum number of colors required for a CFON coloring of GG is the CFON chromatic number of GG, denoted by χON(G)\chi_{ON}(G). The decision problem that asks whether χON(G)k\chi_{ON}(G) \leq k is NP-complete. We obtain the following results: * Bodlaender, Kolay and Pieterse [WADS 2019] showed the upper bound χON(G)fvs(G)+3\chi_{ON}(G)\leq {\sf fvs}(G)+3, where fvs(G){\sf fvs}(G) denotes the size of a minimum feedback vertex set of GG. We show the improved bound of χON(G)fvs(G)+2\chi_{ON}(G)\leq {\sf fvs}(G)+2, which is tight, thereby answering an open question in the above paper. * We study the relation between χON(G)\chi_{ON}(G) and the pathwidth of the graph GG, denoted pw(G){\sf pw}(G). The above paper from WADS 2019 showed the upper bound χON(G)2tw(G)+1\chi_{ON}(G) \leq 2{\sf tw}(G)+1 where tw(G){\sf tw}(G) stands for the treewidth of GG. This implies an upper bound of χON(G)2pw(G)+1\chi_{ON}(G) \leq 2{\sf pw}(G)+1. We show an improved bound of χON(G)53(pw(G)+1)\chi_{ON}(G) \leq \lfloor \frac{5}{3}({\sf pw}(G)+1) \rfloor. * We prove new bounds for χON(G)\chi_{ON}(G) with respect to the structural parameters neighborhood diversity and distance to cluster, improving existing results. * We also study the partial coloring variant of the CFON coloring problem, which allows vertices to be left uncolored. Let χON(G)\chi^*_{ON}(G) denote the minimum number of colors required to color GG as per this variant. Abel et. al. [SIDMA 2018] showed that χON(G)8\chi^*_{ON}(G) \leq 8 when GG is planar. They asked if fewer colors would suffice for planar graphs. We answer this question by showing that χON(G)5\chi^*_{ON}(G) \leq 5 for all planar GG. All our bounds are a result of constructive algorithmic procedures.Comment: 30 page
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