968 research outputs found
Effects of Noise on Galaxy Isophotes
The study of shapes of the images of objects is an important issue not only
because it reveals its dynamical state but also it helps to understand the
object's evolutionary history. We discuss a new technique in cosmological image
analysis which is based on a set of non-parametric shape descriptors known as
the Minkowski Functionals (MFs). These functionals are extremely versatile and
under some conditions give a complete description of the geometrical properties
of objects. We believe that MFs could be a useful tool to extract information
about the shapes of galaxies, clusters of galaxies and superclusters. The
information revealed by MFs can be utilized along with the knowledge obtained
from currently popular methods and thus could improve our understanding of the
true shapes of cosmological objects.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, to appear in "The IGM/Galaxy Connection - The
Distribution of Baryons at z=0" Conference Proceeding
Topology and Geometry of the CfA2 Redshift Survey
We analyse the redshift space topology and geometry of the nearby Universe by
computing the Minkowski functionals of the Updated Zwicky Catalogue (UZC). The
UZC contains the redshifts of almost 20,000 galaxies, is 96% complete to the
limiting magnitude m_Zw=15.5 and includes the Center for Astrophysics (CfA)
Redshift Survey (CfA2). From the UZC we can extract volume limited samples
reaching a depth of 70 hMpc before sparse sampling dominates. We quantify the
shape of the large-scale galaxy distribution by deriving measures of planarity
and filamentarity from the Minkowski functionals. The nearby Universe shows a
large degree of planarity and a small degree of filamentarity. This quantifies
the sheet-like structure of the Great Wall which dominates the northern region
(CfA2N) of the UZC. We compare these results with redshift space mock
catalogues constructed from high resolution N-body simulations of two Cold Dark
Matter models with either a decaying massive neutrino (tauCDM) or a non-zero
cosmological constant (LambdaCDM). We use semi-analytic modelling to form and
evolve galaxies in these dark matter-only simulations. We are thus able, for
the first time, to compile redshift space mock catalogues which contain
galaxies, along with their observable properties, rather than dark matter
particles alone. In both models the large scale galaxy distribution is less
coherent than the observed distribution, especially with regard to the large
degree of planarity of the real survey. However, given the small volume of the
region studied, this disagreement can still be a result of cosmic variance.Comment: 14 pages including 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly
Notice
Activation and Desensitization of the Recombinant P2X1 Receptor at Nanomolar ATP Concentrations
Activation and desensitization kinetics of the rat P2X1 receptor at nanomolar ATP concentrations were studied in Xenopus oocytes using two-electrode voltage-clamp recording. The solution exchange system used allowed complete and reproducible solution exchange in <0.5 s. Sustained exposure to 1–100 nM ATP led to a profound desensitization of P2X1 receptors. At steady-state, desensitization could be described by the Hill equation with a K1/2 value of 3.2 ± 0.1 nM. Also, the ATP dependence of peak currents could be described by a Hill equation with an EC50 value of 0.7 μM. Accordingly, ATP dose-effect relationships of activation and desensitization practically do not overlap. Recovery from desensitization could be described by a monoexponential function with the time-constant τ = 11.6 ±1.0 min. Current transients at 10–100 nM ATP, which elicited 0.1–8.5% of the maximum response, were compatible with a linear three-state model, C-O-D (closed-open-desensitized), with an ATP concentration-dependent activation rate and an ATP concentration-independent (constant) desensitization rate. In the range of 18–300 nM ATP, the total areas under the elicited current transients were equal, suggesting that P2X1 receptor desensitization occurs exclusively via the open conformation. Hence, our results are compatible with a model, according to which P2X1 receptor activation and desensitization follow the same reaction pathway, i.e., without significant C to D transition. We assume that the K1/2 of 3.2 nM for receptor desensitization reflects the nanomolar ATP affinity of the receptor found by others in agonist binding experiments. The high EC50 value of 0.7 μM for receptor activation is a consequence of fast desensitization combined with nonsteady-state conditions during recording of peak currents, which are the basis of the dose-response curve. Our results imply that nanomolar extracellular ATP concentrations can obscure P2X1 receptor responses by driving a significant fraction of the receptor pool into a long-lasting refractory closed state
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