6,139 research outputs found
Measurement of the Gravity-Field Curvature by Atom Interferometry
We present the first direct measurement of the gravity-field curvature based
on three conjugated atom interferometers. Three atomic clouds launched in the
vertical direction are simultaneously interrogated by the same atom
interferometry sequence and used to probe the gravity field at three equally
spaced positions. The vertical component of the gravity-field curvature
generated by nearby source masses is measured from the difference between
adjacent gravity gradient values. Curvature measurements are of interest in
geodesy studies and for the validation of gravitational models of the
surrounding environment. The possibility of using such a scheme for a new
determination of the Newtonian constant of gravity is also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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Semantic and inferencing abilities in children with communication disorders
Background: Semantic and inferencing abilities have not been fully examined in children with communication difficulties.
Aims: To investigate the inferential and semantic abilities of children with communication difficulties using newly designed tasks.
Methods & Procedures: Children with different types of communication disorder were compared with each other and with three groups of typically developing children: those of the same chronological age and two groups of younger children. In total, 25 children aged 11 years with specific language impairment and 22 children, also 11 years of age, with primary pragmatic difficulties were recruited. Typically developing groups aged 11 (nâ=â35; ageâmatch), and those aged 9 (nâ=â40) and 7 (nâ=â37; language similar) also participated as comparisons.
Outcomes & Results: For Semantic Choices, children with specific language impairment performed significantly more poorly than 9â and 11âyearâolds, whilst the pragmatic difficulties group scored significantly lower than all the typically developing groups. Borderline differences between specific language impairment and pragmatic difficulties groups were found. For inferencing, children with communication impairments performed significantly below the 11âyearâold peers, but not poorer than 9â and 7âyearâolds, suggesting that this skill is in line with language ability. Six children in the pragmatic difficulties group who met diagnosis for autism performed more poorly than the other two clinical groups on both tasks, but not statistically significantly so.
Conclusions: Both tasks were more difficult for those with communication impairments compared with peers. Semantic but not inferencing abilities showed a nonâsignificant trend for differences between the two clinical groups and children with pragmatic difficulties performed more poorly than all typically developing groups. The tasks may relate to each other in varying ways according to type of communication difficulty
Inhibition of phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B signaling hampers the vasopressin-dependent stimulation of myogenic differentiation
Arginine-vasopressin (AVP) promotes muscle differentiation, hypertrophy, and regeneration through the combined activation of the calcineurin and Calcium/Calmodulin-dependent Protein Kinase (CaMK) pathways. The AVP system is impaired in several neuromuscular diseases, suggesting that AVP may act as a physiological factor in skeletal muscle. Since the Phosphoinositide 3-kinases/Protein Kinase B/mammalian Target Of Rapamycin (PI3K/Akt/mTOR) signaling plays a significant role in regulating muscle mass, we evaluated its role in the AVP myogenic effect. In L6 cells AKT1 expression was knocked down, and the AVP-dependent expression of mTOR and Forkhead box O3 (FoxO) was analyzed by Western blotting. The effect of the PI3K inhibitor LY294002 was evaluated by cellular and molecular techniques. Akt knockdown hampered the AVP-dependent mTOR expression while increased the levels of FoxO transcription factor. LY294002 treatment inhibited the AVP-dependent expression of Myocyte Enhancer Factor-2 (MEF2) and myogenin and prevented the nuclear translocation of MEF2. LY294002 also repressed the AVP-dependent nuclear export of histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4) interfering with the formation of multifactorial complexes on the myogenin promoter. We demonstrate that the PI3K/Akt pathway is essential for the full myogenic effect of AVP and that, by targeting this pathway, one may highlight novel strategies to counteract muscle wasting in aging or neuromuscular disorders
Long-lived Bloch oscillations with bosonic Sr atoms and application to gravity measurement at micrometer scale
We report on the observation of Bloch oscillations on the unprecedented time
scale of severalseconds. The experiment is carried out with ultra-cold bosonic
strontium-88 loaded into a vertical optical standing wave. The negligible
atom-atom elastic cross section and the absence of spin makes Sr an
almost ideal Bose gas insensitive to typical mechanisms of decoherence due to
thermalization and to external stray fields. The small size enables precision
measurements of forces at micrometer scale. This is a challenge in physics for
studies of surfaces, Casimir effects, and searches for deviations from
Newtonian gravity predicted by theories beyond the standard model
Quantum test of the equivalence principle for atoms in superpositions of internal energy eigenstates
The Einstein Equivalence Principle (EEP) has a central role in the
understanding of gravity and space-time. In its weak form, or Weak Equivalence
Principle (WEP), it directly implies equivalence between inertial and
gravitational mass. Verifying this principle in a regime where the relevant
properties of the test body must be described by quantum theory has profound
implications. Here we report on a novel WEP test for atoms. A Bragg atom
interferometer in a gravity gradiometer configuration compares the free fall of
rubidium atoms prepared in two hyperfine states and in their coherent
superposition. The use of the superposition state allows testing genuine
quantum aspects of EEP with no classical analogue, which have remained
completely unexplored so far. In addition, we measure the Eotvos ratio of atoms
in two hyperfine levels with relative uncertainty in the low ,
improving previous results by almost two orders of magnitude.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nature Communicatio
Case Study—Co-Creating School Meals Services
All children in Italy receive free, compulsory schooling and have all the rights to school and community education services, including school meals, according to constitutionally founded basic educational principles. To operate a school meals service, the municipal authorities must set up a School Meals Joint Committee (SMJC) composed of the Councillor for Education (CEd), pupil-parent representatives, teachers and a council expert. Mapping the experience of the SMJC set up in Abbiategrasso, a town in the Metropolitan City of Milan, Lombardy, northern Italy, identifies some interconnected drivers of co-production in a basic school and community education service. Hence, the SMJC has become a major enabling force in the school meals monitoring operations, allowing the council to take on education-related challenges that were previously beyond its limited capabilities. The involvement of the SMJC members in the diverse stages of the decision-making process has created a new institutional arena in which the actors play a central role in shaping the school meals service
Cooling of Sr to high phase-space density by laser and sympathetic cooling in isotopic mixtures
Based on an experimental study of two-body and three-body collisions in
ultracold strontium samples, a novel optical-sympathetic cooling method in
isotopic mixtures is demonstrated. Without evaporative cooling, a phase-space
density of is obtained with a high spatial density that should
allow to overcome the difficulties encountered so far to reach quantum
degeneracy for Sr atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Inhibition causes ceaseless dynamics in networks of excitable nodes
The collective dynamics of a network of excitable nodes changes dramatically
when inhibitory nodes are introduced. We consider inhibitory nodes which may be
activated just like excitatory nodes but, upon activating, decrease the
probability of activation of network neighbors. We show that, although the
direct effect of inhibitory nodes is to decrease activity, the collective
dynamics becomes self-sustaining. We explain this counterintuitive result by
defining and analyzing a "branching function" which may be thought of as an
activity-dependent branching ratio. The shape of the branching function implies
that for a range of global coupling parameters dynamics are self-sustaining.
Within the self-sustaining region of parameter space lies a critical line along
which dynamics take the form of avalanches with universal scaling of size and
duration, embedded in ceaseless timeseries of activity. Our analyses, confirmed
by numerical simulation, suggest that inhibition may play a counterintuitive
role in excitable networks.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
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