279 research outputs found
The Grizzly, April 28, 1992
Earth Day 1992: Fun for All • CoreStates Grants Grant • UC History Majors Present Papers • U.C. a hit at U.N. • Holocaust Survivor Speaks • Scholarly Hat Trick in Biology • Political Cartoonist To Speak • Strunk Runs for Office • Spring Weekend Great Success • Concert Band & Jazz Ensemble Perform • Exam Schedule • Student Art Exhibition Opens, Awards Presented • Wismer\u27s Modern Art Spy • First Friends First • Sophomore Chats Tell All • Letter: Strunk Thanks Democrats • Men\u27s Lacrosse Splits Weekendhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1296/thumbnail.jp
The Grizzly, April 14, 1992
Ursinus Chooses Its Leaders • Viking Fiasco • Sieger Speaks • Economics Conference Held, Gilmour Wins Top Award • Songfest 1992 • Room Selection and Housing Update • The Perfect Day in Upper Perk • Carrot Top Captivates Crowd • Metallica Mosh Mania • French Speaks on Beethoven • The Sensual Sunbathers and Condom Machines • Choir Sings • Grubb\u27s Last Word • Viking Fest: The Other Side • Opinions Section Seeks New Assistants • Letter: What\u27s Done is Done • Men\u27s Lacrosse Starts Season with Three Straight Wins • Six UC Athletes Named Academic All-Conference • Baseball Wins Two Out of Threehttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1295/thumbnail.jp
The Extended Environment of M17: A Star Formation History
M17 is one of the youngest and most massive nearby star-formation regions in
the Galaxy. It features a bright H II region erupting as a blister from the
side of a giant molecular cloud (GMC). Combining photometry from the Spitzer
GLIMPSE survey with complementary infrared (IR) surveys, we identify candidate
young stellar objects (YSOs) throughout a 1.5 deg x 1 deg field that includes
the M17 complex. The long sightline through the Galaxy behind M17 creates
significant contamination in our YSO sample from unassociated sources with
similar IR colors. Removing contaminants, we produce a highly-reliable catalog
of 96 candidate YSOs with a high probability of association with the M17
complex. We fit model spectral energy distributions to these sources and
constrain their physical properties. Extrapolating the mass function of 62
intermediate-mass YSOs (M >3 Msun), we estimate that >1000 stars are in the
process of forming in the extended outer regions of M17.
From IR survey images from IRAS and GLIMPSE, we find that M17 lies on the rim
of a large shell structure ~0.5 deg in diameter (~20 pc at 2.1 kpc). We present
new maps of CO and 13CO (J=2-1) emission, which show that the shell is a
coherent, kinematic structure associated with M17 at v = 19 km/s. The shell is
an extended bubble outlining the photodissociation region of a faint, diffuse H
II region several Myr old. We provide evidence that massive star formation has
been triggered by the expansion of the bubble. The formation of the massive
cluster ionizing the M17 H II region itself may have been similarly triggered.
We conclude that the star formation history in the extended environment of M17
has been punctuated by successive waves of massive star formation propagating
through a GMC complex.Comment: 31 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. For a version
with higher-quality figures, see
http://www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse/Povich2009_M17.pd
The Grizzly, February 2, 1993
Cowboys Tame Buffalo, 52-17 • Upsilon Phi Delta Approved • AIDS Quilt • Al Eaton\u27s We Are the Dream • Day For a King • Power Plays • Bernie Bernie Headflap Wins Battle of the Bands • Lorelei at Chateau Granieri • Ice Skating Fun • The Case of the Disappearing Sevs (Or: Why Collegeville\u27s Most Famous Convenient Mart Upped & Left) • Senior Profile: Chris Kakacek • The New Zack\u27s: Why Hike to WaWa? • What\u27s Up in Wellness • Character was an Issue, Again • The Importance of Effort and A Dream • UC Baseball Preview \u2793 • Gymnasts Hoping For Powerful Season • Lady Bears Make Playoffs • Swimmers Working Hard • Football Awards Banquet Held • Wrestlers Continue Excellence • Men\u27s Basketball Split Twohttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1308/thumbnail.jp
A Conformally Invariant Holographic Two-Point Function on the Berger Sphere
We apply our previous work on Green's functions for the four-dimensional
quaternionic Taub-NUT manifold to obtain a scalar two-point function on the
homogeneously squashed three-sphere (otherwise known as the Berger sphere),
which lies at its conformal infinity. Using basic notions from conformal
geometry and the theory of boundary value problems, in particular the
Dirichlet-to-Robin operator, we establish that our two-point correlation
function is conformally invariant and corresponds to a boundary operator of
conformal dimension one. It is plausible that the methods we use could have
more general applications in an AdS/CFT context.Comment: 1+49 pages, no figures. v2: Several typos correcte
Randomized Phase II trial assessing estramustine and vinblastine combination chemotherapy vs estramustine alone in patients with progressive hormone-escaped metastatic prostate cancer
Abstract
Based on the results of combined data from three North American Phase II studies, a randomised Phase II study in the same patient population was performed, using combination chemotherapy with estramustine phosphate (EMP) and vinblastine (VBL) in hormone refractory prostate cancer patients. In all, 92 patients were randomised into a Phase II study of oral EMP (10 mg kg day continuously) or oral EMP in combination with intravenous VBL (4 mg m(2) week for 6 weeks, followed by 2 weeks rest). The end points were toxicity and PSA response in both groups, with the option to continue the trial as a Phase III study with time to progression and survival as end points, if sufficient responses were observed. Toxicity was unexpectedly high in both treatment arms and led to treatment withdrawal or refusal in 49% of all patients, predominantly already during the first treatment cycle. The mean treatment duration was 10 and 14 weeks, median time to PSA progression was 27.2 and 30.8 weeks, median survival time was 44 and 50.9 weeks, and PSA response rate was only 24.6 and 28.9% in the EMP/VBL and EMP arms, respectively. There was no correlation between PSA response and survival. While the PSA response in the patients tested was less than half that recorded in the North American studies, the toxicity of EMP monotherapy or in combination with VBL was much higher than expected. Further research on more effective and less toxic treatment strategies for hormone refractory prostate cancer is mandatory
Reference genes for gene expression studies in wheat flag leaves grown under different farming conditions
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Internal control genes with highly uniform expression throughout the experimental conditions are required for accurate gene expression analysis as no universal reference genes exists. In this study, the expression stability of 24 candidate genes from <it>Triticum aestivum </it>cv. Cubus flag leaves grown under organic and conventional farming systems was evaluated in two locations in order to select suitable genes that can be used for normalization of real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR (RT-qPCR) reactions. The genes were selected among the most common used reference genes as well as genes encoding proteins involved in several metabolic pathways.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>Individual genes displayed different expression rates across all samples assayed. Applying geNorm, a set of three potential reference genes were suitable for normalization of RT-qPCR reactions in winter wheat flag leaves cv. Cubus: <it>TaFNRII </it>(ferredoxin-NADP(H) oxidoreductase; AJ457980.1), <it>ACT2 </it>(actin 2; TC234027), and <it>rrn26 </it>(a putative homologue to RNA 26S gene; AL827977.1). In addition of these three genes that were also top-ranked by NormFinder, two extra genes: <it>CYP18-2 </it>(Cyclophilin A, AY456122.1) and <it>TaWIN1 </it>(14-3-3 like protein, AB042193) were most consistently stably expressed.</p> <p>Furthermore, we showed that <it>TaFNRII, ACT2</it>, and <it>CYP18-2 </it>are suitable for gene expression normalization in other two winter wheat varieties (Tommi and Centenaire) grown under three treatments (organic, conventional and no nitrogen) and a different environment than the one tested with cv. Cubus.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study provides a new set of reference genes which should improve the accuracy of gene expression analyses when using wheat flag leaves as those related to the improvement of nitrogen use efficiency for cereal production.</p
Using indirect methods to constrain symbiotic nitrogen fixation rates : a case study from an Amazonian rain forest
© The Authors 2009. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License. The definitive version was published in Biogeochemistry 99 (2010): 1-13, doi:10.1007/s10533-009-9392-y.Human activities have profoundly altered the global nitrogen (N) cycle. Increases in anthropogenic N have had multiple effects on the atmosphere, on terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems, and even on human health. Unfortunately, methodological limitations challenge our ability to directly measure natural N inputs via biological N fixation (BNF)—the largest natural source of new N to ecosystems. This confounds efforts to quantify the extent of anthropogenic perturbation to the N cycle. To address this gap, we used a pair of indirect methods—analytical modeling and N balance—to generate independent estimates of BNF in a presumed hotspot of N fixation, a tropical rain forest site in central Rondônia in the Brazilian Amazon Basin. Our objectives were to attempt to constrain symbiotic N fixation rates in this site using indirect methods, and to assess strengths and weaknesses of this approach by looking for areas of convergence and disagreement between the estimates. This approach yielded two remarkably similar estimates of N fixation. However, when compared to a previously published bottom-up estimate, our analysis indicated much lower N inputs via symbiotic BNF in the Rondônia site than has been suggested for the tropics as a whole. This discrepancy may reflect errors associated with extrapolating bottom-up fluxes from plot-scale measures, those resulting from the indirect analyses, and/or the relatively low abundance of legumes at the Rondônia site. While indirect methods have some limitations, we suggest that until the technological challenges of directly measuring N fixation are overcome, integrated approaches that employ a combination of model-generated and empirically-derived data offer a promising way of constraining N inputs via BNF in natural ecosystems.We acknowledge and are grateful for financial support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (C.C. and B.H.), the National Science Foundation (NSF DEB-0515744 to C.C. and A.T. and DEB-0315656 to C.N.), and the NASA LBA Program (NCC5-285 to C.N.)
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