854 research outputs found
Peculiar Features of the Interaction Potential between Hydrogen and Antihydrogen at Intermediate Separations
We evaluate the interaction potential between a hydrogen and an antihydrogen
using the second-order perturbation theory within the framework of the
four-body system in a separable two-body basis. We find that the H-Hbar
interaction potential possesses the peculiar features of a shallow local
minimum located around interatomic separations of r ~ 6 a.u. and a barrier
rising at r~5 a.u. Additional theoretical and experimental investigations on
the nature of these peculiar features will be of great interest.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
A time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for the measurement of testosterone in saliva: Monitoring of testosterone replacement therapy with testosterone buciclate
Monitoring of testosterone replacement therapy requires a reliable method for testosterone measurement. Determination of salivary testosterone, which reflects the hormone's biologically active plasma fraction, is a superior technique for this purpose. The aim of the present study was to establish a new sensitive time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for the accurate measurement of testosterone levels in saliva and to validate it by monitoring testosterone replacement therapy in eight hypogonadal men. A clinical phase I- study with the new ester testosterone buciclate was performed to search for new testosterone preparations to produce constant serum levels in the therapy of male hypogonadism. After two control examinations eight male patients with primary hypogonadism were randomly assigned to two treatment groups (n = 2x4) and given single doses of either 200 mg (group I) or 600 mg (group II) testosterone buciclate intramuscularly. Saliva and blood samples were obtained 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 days post injection and then weekly for three months. The time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for salivary testosterone shows a detection limit of 16 pmol/l, an intra-assay CV of 8.9% (at a testosterone concentration of 302 pmol/l), an inter-assay CV of 8.7% (at a testosterone concentration of 305 pmol/l) and a good correlation with an established radioimmunsassay of r = 0.89. The sample volume required by this method is only 180 mu l for extraction and duplicate determination. The assay procedure requires no more than three hours. In group I (200 mg) testosterone did not increase to normal levels either in saliva or in serum. However, in group II, androgen levels increased significantly and were maintained in the normal range for up to 12 weeks with maximal salivary testosterone levels of 303 +/- 18 pmol/l (mean+/-SE) and maximal testosterone levels of 13.1 +/- 0.9 nmol/l (mean+/-SE) in serum in study week 6 and 7. The time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for salivary testosterone provides a useful tool for monitoring androgen status in men and women and is well suited for the follow-up of testosterone replacement therapy on an outpatient basis. The long-acting ester testosterone buciclate is a promising agent for substitution therapy of male hypogonadism and in combination with testosterone monitoring in saliva offers an interesting new perspective for male contraception
Variational calculations for the hydrogen-antihydrogen system with a mass-scaled Born-Oppenheimer potential
The problem of proton-antiproton motion in the --
system is investigated by means of the variational method. We introduce a
modified nuclear interaction through mass-scaling of the Born-Oppenheimer
potential. This improved treatment of the interaction includes the nondivergent
part of the otherwise divergent adiabatic correction and shows the correct
threshold behavior.
Using this potential we calculate the vibrational energy levels with angular
momentum 0 and 1 and the corresponding nuclear wave functions, as well as the
S-wave scattering length. We obtain a full set of all bound states together
with a large number of discretized continuum states that might be utilized in
variational four-body calculations. The results of our calculations gives an
indication of resonance states in the hydrogen-antihydrogen system
Surfaces immersed in su(N+1) Lie algebras obtained from the CP^N sigma models
We study some geometrical aspects of two dimensional orientable surfaces
arrising from the study of CP^N sigma models. To this aim we employ an
identification of R^(N(N+2)) with the Lie algebra su(N+1) by means of which we
construct a generalized Weierstrass formula for immersion of such surfaces. The
structural elements of the surface like its moving frame, the Gauss-Weingarten
and the Gauss-Codazzi-Ricci equations are expressed in terms of the solution of
the CP^N model defining it. Further, the first and second fundamental forms,
the Gaussian curvature, the mean curvature vector, the Willmore functional and
the topological charge of surfaces are expressed in terms of this solution. We
present detailed implementation of these results for surfaces immersed in su(2)
and su(3) Lie algebras.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure; changes: major revision of presentation,
clarifications adde
Multipositronic systems
The stability of Coulombic systems containing positrons are investigated by
the stochastic variational method. The existence of several new exotic atoms
are predicted, including HPse+, LiPs2e+, or (H-,Ps2). Similar systems
(replacing the positrons by holes) might be observed in semiconductors.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., in pres
Ghrelin drives GH secretion during fasting in man
OBJECTIVES: In humans, fasting leads to elevated serum GH concentrations.
Traditionally, changes in hypothalamic GH-releasing hormone and
somatostatin release are considered as the main mechanisms that induce
this elevated GH secretion during fasting. Ghrelin is an endogenous ligand
of the GH secretagogue receptor and is synthesized in the stomach. As
ghrelin administration in man stimulates GH release, while serum ghrelin
concentrations are elevated during fasting in man, this increase in
ghrelin levels might be another mechanism whereby fasting results in
stimulation of GH release. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS: In ten healthy non-obese
males we performed a double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study
comparing fasting with and fasting without GH receptor blockade. GH,
ghrelin, insulin, glucose and free fatty acids were assessed. RESULTS:
While ghrelin levels do not vary considerably in the fed state, fasting
rapidly induced a diurnal rhythm in ghrelin concentrations. These changes
in serum ghrelin concentrations during fasting were followed by similar,
profound changes in serum GH levels. The rapid development of a diurnal
ghrelin rhythm could not be explained by changes in insulin, glucos
Configuration-interaction calculations of PsH and e(+)Be
The configuration-interaction (CI) method is applied to the study of the positronium-hydride (PsH) and positronic-beryllium (e+Be) systems. The binding energy and other properties are slowly convergent with respect to the angular momentum of the orbitals used to construct the CI basis states. The largest calculations recover 94% and 80% of the binding energy against dissociation when compared with existing calculations of PsH and e+ Be. Extrapolating using Cl convergence trends improves these results to 99% and 98%, respectively. Convergence is not so good for the electron-positron annihilation rates, but the extrapolated annihilation rates were within 10% of the best calculations. Two different schemes have been used to construct the CI basis, and it is found that it is possible to discard roughly half the CI basis with almost no degradation in the binding energy and the annihilation rate. These investigations demonstrate the feasibility of using single particle orbitals centred on the nucleus to represent positronic systems with two valence electrons
Estimating the age of Calliphora vicina eggs (Diptera: Calliphoridae): determination of embryonic morphological landmarks and preservation of egg samples
ORCID No. 0000-0002-8917-9646© The Author(s) 2016. Open Access. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The attached file is the published version of the article
Stomatal Opening Involves Polar, Not Radial, Stiffening Of Guard Cells
It has long been accepted that differential radial thickening of guard cells plays an important role in the turgor-driven shape changes required for stomatal pore opening to occur [1-4]. This textbook description derives from an original interpretation of structure rather than measurement of mechanical properties. Here we show, using atomic force microscopy, that although mature guard cells display a radial gradient of stiffness, this is not present in immature guard cells, yet young stomata show a normal opening response. Finite element modeling supports the experimental observation that radial stiffening plays a very limited role in stomatal opening. In addition, our analysis reveals an unexpected stiffening of the polar regions of the stomata complexes, both in Arabidopsis and other plants, suggesting a widespread occurrence. Combined experimental data (analysis of guard cell wall epitopes and treatment of tissue with cell wall digesting enzymes, coupled with bioassay of guard cell function) plus modeling lead us to propose that polar stiffening reflects a mechanical, pectin-based pinning down of the guard cell ends, which restricts increase of stomatal complex length during opening. This is predicted to lead to an improved response sensitivity of stomatal aperture movement with respect to change of turgor pressure. Our results provide new insight into the mechanics of stomatal function, both negating an established view of the importance of radial thickening and providing evidence for a significant role for polar stiffening. Improved stomatal performance via altered cell-wall-mediated mechanics is likely to be of evolutionary and agronomic significance
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