4,987 research outputs found

    Variants of the human PPARG locus and the susceptibility to chronic periodontitis

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    Apart from its regulatory function in lipid and glucose metabolism, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)γ has impact on the regulation of inflammation and bone metabolism. The aim of the study was to investigate the association of five polymorphisms (rs10865710, rs2067819, rs3892175, rs1801282, rs3856806) within the PPARG gene with chronic periodontitis. The study population comprised 402 periodontitis patients and 793 healthy individuals. Genotyping of the PPARG gene polymorphisms was performed by PCR and melting curve analysis. Comparison of frequency distribution of genotypes between individuals with periodontal disease and healthy controls for the polymorphism rs3856806 showed a P-value of 0.04 but failed to reach significance after correction for multiple testing (P  0.90). A 3-site analysis (rs2067819-rs1801282-rs3856860) revealed five haplotypes with a frequency of ≥1% among cases and controls. Following adjustment for age, gender and smoking, none of the haplotypes was significantly different between periodontitis and healthy controls after Bonferroni correction. This study could not show a significant association between PPARG gene variants and chronic periodontitis

    Reconstructing the geometric structure of a Riemannian symmetric space from its Satake diagram

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    The local geometry of a Riemannian symmetric space is described completely by the Riemannian metric and the Riemannian curvature tensor of the space. In the present article I describe how to compute these tensors for any Riemannian symmetric space from the Satake diagram, in a way that is suited for the use with computer algebra systems. As an example application, the totally geodesic submanifolds of the Riemannian symmetric space SU(3)/SO(3) are classified. The submission also contains an example implementation of the algorithms and formulas of the paper as a package for Maple 10, the technical documentation for this implementation, and a worksheet carrying out the computations for the space SU(3)/SO(3) used in the proof of Proposition 6.1 of the paper.Comment: 23 pages, also contains two Maple worksheets and technical documentatio

    Carrier-density effects in many-polaron systems

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    Many-polaron systems with finite charge-carrier density are often encountered experimentally. However, until recently, no satisfactory theoretical description of these systems was available even in the framework of simple models such as the one-dimensional spinless Holstein model considered here. In this work, previous results obtained using numerical as well as analytical approaches are reviewed from a unified perspective, focussing on spectral properties which reveal the nature of the quasiparticles in the system. In the adiabatic regime and for intermediate electron-phonon coupling, a carrier-density driven crossover from a polaronic to a rather metallic system takes place. Further insight into the effects due to changes in density is gained by calculating the phonon spectral function, and the fermion-fermion and fermion-lattice correlation functions. Finally, we provide strong evidence against the possibility of phase separation.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter; final versio

    Phonon-affected steady-state transport through molecular quantum dots

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    We consider transport through a vibrating molecular quantum dot contacted to macroscopic leads acting as charge reservoirs. In the equilibrium and nonequilibrium regime, we study the formation of a polaron-like transient state at the quantum dot for all ratios of the dot-lead coupling to the energy of the local phonon mode. We show that the polaronic renormalization of the dot-lead coupling is a possible mechanism for negative differential conductance. Moreover, the effective dot level follows one of the lead chemical potentials to enhance resonant transport, causing novel features in the inelastic tunneling signal. In the linear response regime, we investigate the impact of the electron-phonon interaction on the thermoelectrical properties of the quantum dot device.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, FQMT11 Proceeding

    High-density correlation energy expansion of the one-dimensional uniform electron gas

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    We show that the expression of the high-density (i.e small-rsr_s) correlation energy per electron for the one-dimensional uniform electron gas can be obtained by conventional perturbation theory and is of the form \Ec(r_s) = -\pi^2/360 + 0.00845 r_s + ..., where rsr_s is the average radius of an electron. Combining these new results with the low-density correlation energy expansion, we propose a local-density approximation correlation functional, which deviates by a maximum of 0.1 millihartree compared to the benchmark DMC calculations.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in J. Chem. Phy

    Interplay of charge and spin correlations in nickel perovskites

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    Analyzing the motion of low--spin (s=1/2)(s=1/2) holes in a high--spin (S=1)(S=1) background, we derive a sort of generalized t--J Hamiltonian for the NiO2\rm NiO_2 planes of Sr--doped nickelates. In addition to the rather complex carrier--spin and spin--spin couplings we take into account the coupling of the doped holes to in--plane oxygen breathing modes by a Holstein--type interaction term. Because of strong magnetic confinement effects the holes are nearly entirely prelocalized and the electron--phonon coupling becomes much more effective in forming polarons than in the isostructural cuprates. In the light of recent experiments on La2−xSrxNiO4\rm La_{2-x}Sr_xNiO_4 we discuss how the variety of the observed transport and charge/spin--ordering phenomena can be qualitatively understood in terms of our model Hamiltonian.Comment: 2 pages, LTpaper.sty, Proc. XXI Int. Conf. on Low Temp. Phys. Prague 9

    Curing of Epoxy Matrix Composites

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    Models were developed which describe the curing process of composites constructed from continuous fiber-reinforced, thermosetting resin matrix prepreg materials. On the basis of the models, a computer code was developed, which for flat-plate composites cured by a specified cure cycle, provides the temperature distribution, the degree of cure of the resin, the resin viscosity inside the composite, the void sizes, the temperatures and pressures inside voids, and the residual stress distribution after the cure. In addition, the computer code can be used to determine the amount of resin flow out of the composite and the resin content of the composite and the bleeder. Tests were performed measuring the temperature distribution in and the resin flow out of composites constructed from Hercules AS/3501-6 graphite epoxy prepreg tape. The data were compared with results calculated with the computer code for the conditions employed in the tests and good agreement was found between the data and the results of the computer code. A parametric study was also performed to illustrate how the model and the associated computer code can be used to determine the appropriate cure cycle for a given application, which results in a composite that is cured uniformly, has a low void content, and is cured in the shortest amount of time.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66605/2/10.1177_002199838301700204.pd
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