604 research outputs found
Slipping friction of an optically and magnetically manipulated microsphere rolling at a glass-water interface
The motion of submerged magnetic microspheres rolling at a glass-water
interface has been studied using magnetic rotation and optical tweezers
combined with bright-field microscopy particle tracking techniques. Individual
microspheres of varying surface roughness were magnetically rotated both in and
out of an optical trap to induce rolling, along either plain glass cover slides
or glass cover slides functionalized with polyethylene glycol. It has been
observed that the manipulated microspheres exhibited nonlinear dynamic
rolling-while-slipping motion characterized by two motional regimes: At low
rotational frequencies, the speed of microspheres free-rolling along the
surface increased proportionately with magnetic rotation rate; however, a
further increase in the rotation frequency beyond a certain threshold revealed
a sharp transition to a motion in which the microspheres slipped with respect
to the external magnetic field resulting in decreased rolling speeds. The
effects of surface-microsphere interactions on the position of this threshold
frequency are posed and investigated. Similar experiments with microspheres
rolling while slipping in an optical trap showed congruent results.Comment: submitted to Journal of Applied Physics, 11 figure
Fucosylation inhibitor development for producing afucosylated antibodies
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Discussion Papers on Irrigation Water Supply Organizations
ii, 61 p. ; 28 cm
Irrigation organizations and the reallocation of western water / Rodney T. Smith -- Issues in water conservation / Bruce Driver -- Irrigation districts and water quality / John H. Davidson -- Some thoughts on governing special districts / Tim De Younghttps://scholar.law.colorado.edu/books_reports_studies/1085/thumbnail.jp
Discussion Papers on Irrigation Water Supply Organizations
ii, 61 p. ; 28 cm
Irrigation organizations and the reallocation of western water / Rodney T. Smith -- Issues in water conservation / Bruce Driver -- Irrigation districts and water quality / John H. Davidson -- Some thoughts on governing special districts / Tim De Younghttps://scholar.law.colorado.edu/books_reports_studies/1085/thumbnail.jp
Resource utilization and outcome at a university versus a community teaching hospital in tPA treated stroke patients: a retrospective cohort study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Comparing patterns of resource utilization between hospitals is often complicated by biases in community and patient populations. Stroke patients treated with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) provide a particularly homogenous population for comparison because of strict eligibility criteria for treatment. We tested whether resource utilization would be similar in this homogenous population between two hospitals located in a single Midwestern US community by comparing use of diagnostic testing and associated outcomes following treatment with t-PA.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Medical records from 206 consecutive intravenous t-PA-treated stroke patients from two teaching hospitals (one university, one community-based) were reviewed. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics and outcome were analyzed, as were the frequency of use of CT, MRI, MRA, echocardiography, angiography, and EEG.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Seventy-nine and 127 stroke patients received t-PA at the university and community hospitals, respectively. The two patient populations were demographically similar. There were no differences in stroke severity. All outcomes were similar at both hospitals. Utilization of CT scans, and non-invasive carotid and cardiac imaging studies were similar at both hospitals; however, brain MR, TEE, and catheter angiography were used more frequently at the university hospital. EEG was obtained more often at the community hospital.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Utilization of advanced brain imaging and invasive diagnostic testing was greater at the university hospital, but was not associated with improved clinical outcomes. This could not be explained on the basis of stroke severity or patient characteristics. This variation of practice suggests substantial opportunities exist to reduce costs and improve efficiency of diagnostic resource use as well as reduce patient exposure to risk from diagnostic procedures.</p
Surveillance, Diversity and Vegetative Compatibility Groups of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum Collected in Cotton Fields in Australia (2017 to 2022)
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) is a billion-dollar crop in regional New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland, Australia. Fusarium wilt (FW) caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. vasinfectum (Fov) is an economically important disease. Initial disease losses of up to 90% when the disease was first detected resulted in fields being taken out of cotton production. The disease is now well-managed due to the adoption of highly resistant varieties. However, annual disease surveys recently revealed that the disease dynamic has changed in the past few seasons. With relatively mild and wet weather conditions during the 2021/22 growing season, FW was detected in eight surveyed valleys in NSW and Queensland, with the disease incidence as high as 44.5% and 98.5% in individual fields in early and late seasons, respectively. Fov is genetically distinct and evolved from local Fusarium oxysporum strains. Additionally, the pathogen was reported to evolve rapidly under continuous cotton cropping pressure. However, our knowledge of the genetic composition of the prevailing population is limited. Sequences of the translation elongation factor alpha 1 (TEF1) revealed that 94% of Fusarium isolates recovered from FW-infected cotton were clustered together with known Australian Fov and relatively distant related to overseas Fov races. All these isolates, except for nine, were further confirmed positive with a specific marker based on the Secreted in Xylem 6 (SIX6) effector gene. Vegetative compatibility group (VCG) analyses of 166 arbitrarily selected isolates revealed a predominance of VCG01111. There was only one detection of VCG01112 in the Border Rivers valley where it was first described. In this study, the exotic Californian Fov race 4 strain was not detected using a specific marker based on the unique Tfo1 insertion in the phosphate (PHO) gene. This study indicated that the prevalence and abundance of Fov across NSW and Queensland in the past five seasons was probably independent of its genetic diversity
Anisotropies in the Distribution of Satellite Galaxies
We find that satellites of isolated disk galaxies at projected radii between
300 and 500 kpc are distributed asymmetrically about the parent galaxy and
aligned preferentially with the disk minor axis. The dynamical timescale at
these radii is sufficiently long that the shape of this distribution must
reflect the formation history of the outer halo rather than its internal
evolution. We also find that the orbital angular momenta of satellites at
projected major axis distances of \ltsim 200 kpc tend to align with that of
the central disk. These results demonstrate that satellites are dynamically
related to their primary galaxy. Satellites drawn from current simulations of
hierarchical galaxy formation exhibit neither the systematic alignment nor the
net rotation with the central disk that we find in the data.Comment: 15 pages, submitted to ApJ
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