173 research outputs found
N=4 Gauged Supergravity from Duality-Twist Compactifications of String Theory
We investigate the lifting of half-maximal four-dimensional gauged
supergravities to compactifications of string theory. It is shown that a class
of such supergravities can arise from compactifications of IIA string theory on
manifolds of SU(2)-structure which may be thought of as K3 fibrations over T^2.
Examples of these SU(2)-structure backgrounds, as smooth K3 bundles and as
compactifications with H-flux, are given and we also find evidence for a class
of non-geometric, Mirror-fold backgrounds. By applying the duality between IIA
string theory on K3 and Heterotic string theory on T^4 fibrewise, we argue that
these SU(2)-structure backgrounds are dual to Heterotic compactifications on a
class T^4 fibrations over T^2. Examples of these fibrations as twisted tori,
H-flux and T-fold compactifications are given. We also construct a new set of
backgrounds, particular to Heterotic string theory, which includes a previously
unknown class of Heterotic T-folds. A sigma model description of these
backgrounds, from the Heterotic perspective, is presented in which we
generalize the Bosonic doubled formalism to Heterotic string theory.Comment: 59 pages, typos correcte
Orbital contribution to the magnetic properties of iron as a function of dimensionality
The orbital contribution to the magnetic properties of Fe in systems of
decreasing dimensionality (bulk, surfaces, wire and free clusters) is
investigated using a tight-binding hamiltonian in an and atomic
orbital basis set including spin-orbit coupling and intra-atomic electronic
interactions in the full Hartree-Fock (HF) scheme, i.e., involving all the
matrix elements of the Coulomb interaction with their exact orbital dependence.
Spin and orbital magnetic moments and the magnetocrystalline anisotropy energy
(MAE) are calculated for several orientations of the magnetization. The results
are systematically compared with those of simplified hamiltonians which give
results close to those obtained from the local spin density approximation. The
full HF decoupling leads to much larger orbital moments and MAE which can reach
values as large as 1 and several tens of meV, respectively, in the
monatomic wire at the equilibrium distance. The reliability of the results
obtained by adding the so-called Orbital Polarization Ansatz (OPA) to the
simplified hamiltonians is also discussed. It is found that when the spin
magnetization is saturated the OPA results for the orbital moment are in
qualitative agreement with those of the full HF model. However there are large
discrepancies for the MAE, especially in clusters. Thus the full HF scheme must
be used to investigate the orbital magnetism and MAE of low dimensional
systems
Genetic and phenotype analysis of Borrelia valaisiana sp.nov. (Borrelia genomic groups VS116 and M19)
To clarify the taxonomic status of two recently described Borrelia genomic groups, groups VS116 and M19, three group VS116 strains and eight group M19 strains isolated from Ixodes ricinus ticks in Switzerland, The Netherlands, and the United Kingdom were characterized. PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the 5S-23S intergenic spacer amplicon, rRNA gene restriction analysis, 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprinting, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and immunoblotting with monoclonal antibodies were used for genetic and phenotypic analysis. The PCR-RFLP and RAPD patterns of three group VS116 strains and eight group M19 strains were identical but differed from those of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia afzelii, and Borrelia japonica. DNAs from all group VS116 and M19 strains yielded three fragments (6.9, 3.2, and 1.4 kb) and four fragments (2.1, 1.2, 0.8, and 0.6 kb) after digestion with EcoRV and HindIII, respectively, hybridizing with an Escherichia coli 16S + 23S cDNA probe. The SDS-PAGE protein profiles of group VS116 and M19 strains were heterogeneous. Phylogenetic analysis of the partial 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that group VS116 and M19 spirochetes were members of a Borrelia species distinct from previously characterized members of the genus Borrelia. Based on our present study and data from previous DNA-DNA hybridizations, a new Borrelia species, Borrelia valaisiana sp.nov., in the B. burgdorferi complex, is proposed. Strain VS116 is the type strain of this new specie
Charge redistribution at Pd surfaces: ab initio grounds for tight-binding interatomic potentials
A simplified tight-binding description of the electronic structure is often
necessary for complex studies of surfaces of transition metal compounds. This
requires a self-consistent parametrization of the charge redistribution, which
is not obvious for late transition series elements (such as Pd, Cu, Au), for
which not only d but also s-p electrons have to be taken into account. We show
here, with the help of an ab initio FP-LMTO approach, that for these elements
the electronic charge is unchanged from bulk to the surface, not only per site
but also per orbital. This implies different level shifts for each orbital in
order to achieve this orbital neutrality rule. Our results invalidate any
neutrality rule which would allow charge redistribution between orbitals to
ensure a common rigid shift for all of them. Moreover, in the case of Pd, the
power law which governs the variation of band energy with respect to
coordination number, is found to differ significantly from the usual
tight-binding square root.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, Latex; Phys.Rev. B 56 (1997
Type II compactifications on manifolds with SU(2) x SU(2) structure
We study compactifications of type II theories on SU(2) x SU(2) structure
manifolds to six, five and four spacetime dimensions. We use the framework of
generalized geometry to describe the NS-NS sector of such compactifications and
derive the structure of their moduli spaces. We show that in contrast to SU(3)
x SU(3) structure compactifications, there is no dynamical SU(2) x SU(2)
structure interpolating between an SU(2) structure and an identity structure.
Furthermore, we formulate type II compactifications on SU(2) x SU(2) structures
in the context of exceptional generalized geometry which makes the U-duality
group manifest and naturally incorporates the scalar degrees of freedom arising
in the Ramond-Ramond sector. Via this formalism we derive the structure of the
moduli spaces as it is expected from N=4 supergravity.Comment: 69 pages, v2 published versio
Surface Core Level Shifts of Clean and Oxygen Covered Ru(0001)
We have performed high resolution XPS experiments of the Ru(0001) surface,
both clean and covered with well-defined amounts of oxygen up to 1 ML coverage.
For the clean surface we detected two distinct components in the Ru 3d_{5/2}
core level spectra, for which a definite assignment was made using the high
resolution Angle-Scan Photoelectron Diffraction approach. For the p(2x2),
p(2x1), (2x2)-3O and (1x1)-O oxygen structures we found Ru 3d_{5/2} core level
peaks which are shifted up to 1 eV to higher binding energies. Very good
agreement with density functional theory calculations of these Surface Core
Level Shifts (SCLS) is reported. The overriding parameter for the resulting Ru
SCLSs turns out to be the number of directly coordinated O atoms. Since the
calculations permit the separation of initial and final state effects, our
results give valuable information for the understanding of bonding and
screening at the surface, otherwise not accessible in the measurement of the
core level energies alone.Comment: 16 pages including 10 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. B. Related
publications can be found at http://www.fhi-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
Simulated effect of pneumococcal vaccination in the Netherlands on existing rules constructed in a non-vaccinated cohort predicting sequelae after bacterial meningitis
BACKGROUND: Previously two prediction rules identifying children at risk of hearing loss and academic or behavioral limitations after bacterial meningitis were developed. Streptococcus pneumoniae as causative pathogen was an important risk factor in both. Since 2006 Dutch children receive seven-valent conjugate vaccination against S. pneumoniae. The presumed effect of vaccination was simulated by excluding all children infected by S. pneumoniae with the serotypes included in the vaccine, from both previous collected cohorts (between 1990-1995). METHODS: Children infected by one of the vaccine serotypes were excluded from both original cohorts (hearing loss: 70 of 628 children; academic or behavioral limitations: 26 of 182 children). All identified risk factors were included in multivariate logistic regression models. The discriminative ability of both new models was calculated. RESULTS: The same risk factors as in the original models were significant. The discriminative ability of the original hearing loss model was 0.84 and of the new model 0.87. In the academic or behavioral limitations model it was 0.83 and 0.84 respectively. CONCLUSION: It can be assumed that the prediction rules will also be applicable on a vaccinated population. However, vaccination does not provide 100% coverage and evidence is available that serotype replacement will occur. The impact of vaccination on serotype replacement needs to be investigated, and the prediction rules must be validated externally
The development of a 16S rRNA gene based PCR for the identification of Streptococcus pneumoniae and comparison with four other species specific PCR assays
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p><it>Streptococcus pneumoniae </it>is one of the most frequently encountered pathogens in humans but its differentiation from closely related but less pathogenic streptococci remains a challenge.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This report describes a newly-developed PCR assay (Spne-PCR), amplifying a 217 bp product of the 16S rRNA gene of <it>S. pneumoniae</it>, and its performance compared to other genotypic and phenotypic tests.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The new PCR assay designed in this study, proved to be specific at 57°C for <it>S. pneumoniae</it>, not amplifying <it>S. pseudopneumoniae </it>or any other streptococcal strain or any strains from other upper airway pathogenic species. PCR assays (psaA, LytA, ply, spn9802-PCR) were previously described for the specific amplification of <it>S. pneumoniae</it>, but <it>psaA</it>-PCR was the only one found not to cross-react with <it>S. pseudopneumoniae</it>.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Spne-PCR, developed for this study, and psaA-PCR were the only two assays which did not mis-identify <it>S. pseudopneumoniae </it>as <it>S. pneumoniae</it>. Four other PCR assays and the AccuProbe assay were unable to distinguish between these species.</p
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