4,522 research outputs found
Mott Insulator to Superfluid transition in Bose-Bose mixtures in a two-dimensional lattice
We perform a numeric study (Worm algorithm Monte Carlo simulations) of
ultracold two-component bosons in two-dimensional optical lattices. We study
how the Mott insulator to superfluid transition is affected by the presence of
a second superfluid bosonic species. We find that, at fixed interspecies
interaction, the upper and lower boundaries of the Mott lobe are differently
modified. The lower boundary is strongly renormalized even for relatively low
filling factor of the second component and moderate (interspecies) interaction.
The upper boundary, instead, is affected only for large enough filling of the
second component. Whereas boundaries are renormalized we find evidence of
polaron-like excitations. Our results are of interest for current experimental
setups.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted as PRA Rapid Communicatio
Developmental Expression of \u3cem\u3eDrop-Dead\u3c/em\u3e is Required for Early Adult Survival and Normal Body Mass in \u3cem\u3eDrosophila melanogaster\u3c/em\u3e
In Drosophila melanogaster, mutations in the gene drop-dead (drd) result in early adult lethality, with flies dying within 2 weeks of eclosion. Additional phenotypes include neurodegeneration, tracheal defects, starvation, reduced body mass, and female sterility. The cause of early lethality and the function of the drd protein remain unknown. In the current study, the temporal profiles of drd expression required for adult survival and body mass regulation were investigated. Knockdown of drd expression by UAS-RNAi transgenes and rescue of drd expression on a drd mutant background by a UAS-drd transgene were controlled with the Heat Shock Protein 70 (Hsp70)-Gal4 driver. Flies were heat-shocked at different stages of their life cycle, and the survival and body mass of the resulting adult flies were assayed. Surprisingly, the adult lethal phenotype did not depend upon drd expression in the adult. Rather, expression of drd during the second half of metamorphosis was both necessary and sufficient to prevent rapid adult mortality. In contrast, the attainment of normal adult body mass required a different temporal pattern of drd expression. In this case, manipulation of drd expression solely during larval development or metamorphosis had no effect on body mass, while knockdown or rescue of drd expression during all of pre-adult (embryonic, larval, and pupal) development did significantly alter body mass. Together, these results indicate that the adult-lethal gene drd is required only during development. Furthermore, the mutant phenotypes of body mass and lifespan are separable phenotypes arising from an absence of drd expression at different developmental stages
Neurodegeneration in \u3cem\u3eDrop-Dead\u3c/em\u3e Mutant \u3cem\u3eDrosophila melanogaster\u3c/em\u3e Is Associated with the Respiratory System but Not with Hypoxia
Mutations in the gene drop-dead (drd) cause diverse phenotypes in adult Drosophila melanogaster including early lethality, neurodegeneration, tracheal defects, gut dysfunction, reduced body mass, and female sterility. Despite the identification of the drd gene itself, the causes of early lethality and neurodegeneration in the mutant flies remain unknown. To determine the pattern of drd expression associated with the neurodegenerative phenotype, knockdown of drd with various Gal4 drivers was performed. Early adult lethality and neurodegeneration were observed upon knockdown of drd in the tracheal system with two independent insertions of the breathless-Gal4 driver and upon knockdown in the tracheal system and elsewhere with the DJ717-Gal4 driver. Surprisingly, rescue of drd expression exclusively in the tracheae in otherwise mutant flies rescued the neurodegenerative phenotype but not adult lethality. Gut dysfunction, as measured by defecation rate, was not rescued in these flies, and gut function appeared normal upon tracheal-specific knockdown of drd. Finally, the hypothesis that tracheal dysfunction in drd mutants results in hypoxia was tested. Hypoxia-sensitive reporter transgenes (LDH-Gal4 and LDH-LacZ) were placed on a drd mutant background, but enhanced expression of these reporters was not observed. In addition, manipulation of drd expression in the tracheae did not affect expression of the hypoxia-induced genes LDH, tango, and similar. Overall, these results indicate that there are at least two causes of adult lethality in drd mutants, that gut dysfunction and neurodegeneration are independent phenotypes, and that neurodegeneration is associated with tracheal expression of drd but not with hypoxia
Il ruolo comunicativo del punto vendita nel «sistema moda»: un approccio semiotico al marketing
Il lavoro, di taglio teorico descrittivo, contribuisce alla letteratura sul marketing management nel settore della moda. Sulla scorta delle teorie della comunicazione di taglio semiotico viene offerta una chiave di lettura dei fenomeni di creazione di valore attraverso un approccio che enfatizzi l'interazione tra l'elevato contenuto semiotico della moda e l'importanza della distribuzione commerciale che coerentemente contribuisce al rafforzamento del valore della marca non solo dal di vista logistico. Emerge in tal senso la dimensione identitaria e quella d’immagine con riferimento al punto vendita, soprattutto nel comparto del lusso, nello stimolare il comportamento d'acquisto attraverso una comunicazione valoriale e simbolica che coinvolge il consumatore e amplifica i significati e i contenuti della sua esperienza di consumo di prodotto e dello stesso retail store
Selected papers from the 15th Annual Bio-Ontologies special interest group meeting
© 2013 Soldatova et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Over the 15 years, the Bio-Ontologies SIG at ISMB has provided a forum for discussion of the latest and most innovative research in the bio-ontologies development, its applications to biomedicine and more generally the organisation, presentation and dissemination of knowledge in biomedicine and the life sciences. The seven papers and the commentary selected for this supplement span a wide range of topics including: web-based querying over multiple ontologies, integration of data, annotating patent records, NCBO Web services, ontology developments for probabilistic reasoning and for physiological processes, and analysis of the progress of annotation and structural GO changes
Existence and uniqueness of limit cycles in a class of second order ODE's with inseparable mixed terms
We prove a uniqueness result for limit cycles of the second order ODE . Under mild additional conditions, we
show that such a limit cycle attracts every non-constant solution. As a special
case, we prove limit cycle's uniqueness for an ODE studied in \cite{ETA} as a
model of pedestrians' walk. This paper is an extension to equations with a
non-linear of the results presented in \cite{S}
Attosecond Streaking in the Water Window: A New Regime of Attosecond Pulse Characterization
We report on the first streaking measurement of water-window attosecond
pulses generated via high harmonic generation, driven by sub-2-cycle,
CEP-stable, 1850 nm laser pulses. Both the central photon energy and the energy
bandwidth far exceed what has been demonstrated thus far, warranting the
investigation of the attosecond streaking technique for the soft X-ray regime
and the limits of the FROGCRAB retrieval algorithm under such conditions. We
also discuss the problem of attochirp compensation and issues regarding much
lower photo-ionization cross sections compared with the XUV in addition to the
fact that several shells of target gases are accessed simultaneously. Based on
our investigation, we caution that the vastly different conditions in the soft
X-ray regime warrant a diligent examination of the fidelity of the measurement
and the retrieval procedure.Comment: 14 Pages, 12 figure
Pleiotropic and Novel Phenotypes in The \u3cem\u3eDrosophila\u3c/em\u3e Gut Caused by Mutation of \u3cem\u3eDrop-Dead\u3c/em\u3e
Normal gut function is vital for animal survival, and deviations from such function can contribute to malnutrition, inflammation, increased susceptibility to pathogens, diabetes, neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer. In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, mutation of the gene drop-dead (drd) results in defective gut function, as measured by enlargement of the crop and reduced food movement through the gut, and drd mutation also causes the unrelated phenotypes of neurodegeneration, early adult lethality and female sterility. In the current work, adult drd mutant flies are also shown to lack the peritrophic matrix (PM), an extracellular barrier that lines the lumen of the midgut and is found in many insects including flies, mosquitos and termites. The use of a drd-gal4 construct to drive a GFP reporter in late pupae and adults revealed drd expression in the anterior cardia, which is the site of PM synthesis in Drosophila. Moreover, the ability of drd knockdown or rescue with several gal4 drivers to recapitulate or rescue the gut phenotypes (lack of a PM, reduced defecation, and reduced adult survival 10–40 days post-eclosion) was correlated to the level of expression of each driver in the anterior cardia. Surprisingly, however, knocking down drd expression only in adult flies, which has previously been shown not to affect survival, eliminated the PM without reducing defecation rate. These results demonstrate that drd mutant flies have a novel phenotype, the absence of a PM, which is functionally separable from the previously described gut dysfunction observed in these flies. As the first mutant Drosophila strain reported to lack a PM, drd mutants will be a useful tool for studying the synthesis of this structure
Sufficient Conditions for Fast Switching Synchronization in Time Varying Network Topologies
In previous work, empirical evidence indicated that a time-varying network
could propagate sufficient information to allow synchronization of the
sometimes coupled oscillators, despite an instantaneously disconnected
topology. We prove here that if the network of oscillators synchronizes for the
static time-average of the topology, then the network will synchronize with the
time-varying topology if the time-average is achieved sufficiently fast. Fast
switching, fast on the time-scale of the coupled oscillators, overcomes the
descychnronizing decoherence suggested by disconnected instantaneous networks.
This result agrees in spirit with that of where empirical evidence suggested
that a moving averaged graph Laplacian could be used in the master-stability
function analysis. A new fast switching stability criterion here-in gives
sufficiency of a fast-switching network leading to synchronization. Although
this sufficient condition appears to be very conservative, it provides new
insights about the requirements for synchronization when the network topology
is time-varying. In particular, it can be shown that networks of oscillators
can synchronize even if at every point in time the frozen-time network topology
is insufficiently connected to achieve synchronization.Comment: Submitted to SIAD
Supersolid phase with cold polar molecules on a triangular lattice
We study a system of heteronuclear molecules on a triangular lattice and
analyze the potential of this system for the experimental realization of a
supersolid phase. The ground state phase diagram contains superfluid, solid and
supersolid phases. At finite temperatures and strong interactions there is an
additional emulsion region, in contrast to similar models with short-range
interactions. We derive the maximal critical temperature and the
corresponding entropy for supersolidity and find feasible
experimental conditions for its realization.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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