1,783 research outputs found
Closed geodesics in Alexandrov spaces of curvature bounded from above
In this paper, we show a local energy convexity of maps into
spaces. This energy convexity allows us to extend Colding and
Minicozzi's width-sweepout construction to produce closed geodesics in any
closed Alexandrov space of curvature bounded from above, which also provides a
generalized version of the Birkhoff-Lyusternik theorem on the existence of
non-trivial closed geodesics in the Alexandrov setting.Comment: Final version, 22 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Journal of
Geometric Analysi
Global Change Can Make Coastal Eutrophication Control in China More Difficult
Fast socio-economic development in agriculture and urbanization resulted in increasing nutrient export by rivers, causing coastal eutrophication in China. In addition, climate change may affect hydrology, and as a result, nutrient flows from land to sea. This study aims at a better understanding of how future socio-economic and climatic changes may affect coastal eutrophication in China. We modeled river export of total dissolved nitrogen (TDN) and phosphorus (TDP) in 2050 for six scenarios combining socio-economic pathways (SSPs) and Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs). We used the newly developed MARINA 2.0 (Model to Assess River Inputs of Nutrients to seAs) model. We found that global change can make coastal eutrophication control in China more difficult. In 2050 coastal waters may be considerably more polluted or considerably cleaner than today depending on the SSP-RCP scenarios. By 2050, river export of TDN and TDP is 52% and 56% higher than in 2012, respectively, in SSP3-RCP8.5 (assuming large challenges for sustainable socio-economic development, and severe climate change). In contrast, river export of nutrients could be 56% (TDN) and 85% (TDP) lower in 2050 than in 2012 in SSP1-RCP2.6 (assuming sustainable socio-economic development, and low climate change). Climate change alone may increase river export of nutrients considerably through hydrology: We calculate 24% higher river export of TDN and 16% higher TDP for the SSP2 scenario assuming severe climate change compared to the same scenario with low climate change (SSP2-RCP8.5 vs. SSP2-RCP2.6). Policies and relevant technologies combining improved nutrient management and climate mitigation may help to improve water quality in rivers and coastal waters of China.</p
Bound states of neutral particles in external electric fields
Neutral fermions of spin with magnetic moment can interact with
electromagnetic fields through nonminimal coupling. The Dirac--Pauli equation
for such a fermion coupled to a spherically symmetric or central electric field
can be reduced to two simultaneous ordinary differential equations by
separation of variables in spherical coordinates. For a wide variety of central
electric fields, bound-state solutions of critical energy values can be found
analytically. The degeneracy of these energy levels turns out to be numerably
infinite. This reveals the possibility of condensing infinitely many fermions
into a single energy level. For radially constant and radially linear electric
fields, the system of ordinary differential equations can be completely solved,
and all bound-state solutions are obtained in closed forms. The radially
constant field supports scattering solutions as well. For radially linear
fields, more energy levels (in addition to the critical one) are infinitely
degenerate. The simultaneous presence of central magnetic and electric fields
is discussed.Comment: REVTeX, 14 pages, no figur
The value of Tc-99m (V) dimercaptosuccinic acid in detecting intra-abdominal infection: compared with gallium scan
Objective Gallium-67 (Ga-67) and labeled leukocytes are useful in the detection of an unknown infectious source. However, the delay in the diagnosis of a Ga-67 citrate scan (gallium scan) and the complicated labeling technique of a leukocyte scan are major drawbacks to their clinical use. Recently, Tc-99m (V) dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) has been found to be very useful in the detection of infection. Tc-99m (V) DMSA is inexpensive, easy to prepare. and provides a result within hours. In this study. we evaluated the potential of Tc-99m (V) DMSA scan (DMSA scan) in the detection of intra-abdominal infection. Methods A total of 33 patients who suffered from an unknown cause of fever after colorectal surgery were enrolled in this study. All patients received both a gallium scan and a DMSA scan. DMSA scintigraphy was performed 3-4 h after an injection of 740 MBq (20 m Ci) of Tc-99m DMSA. After completion of the DMSA image, 111 M Bq (3 mCi) of Ga-67 citrate was injected intravenously. Gallium scintigraphy was performed after 24 h and later as needed. Results Of the 33 patients, 17 (51.5%) were diagnosed with intra-abdominal abscesses. For DMSA scans, the sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy were 88.2%, 93.7%, and 90.9%, respectively. For gallium scans, the diagnostic sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 100%, 87.5%, and 93.9%, respectively. No statistical difference was found in the diagnostic accuracy between these two diagnostic modalities using Fisher's exact test. Conclusions DMSA scan is a useful alternative to gallium scan in the detection of intra-abdominal infection in patients with colorectal surgery because Tc-99m DMSA is inexpensive, easy to prepare, and most importantly the result can be obtained within hours
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Fibre optic chloride sensor based on fluorescence quenching of an acridinium dye
In this paper, research into the fabrication and characterization of a new fibre optic sensor for chloride ion detection is reported. This sensor is based on the fluorescence quenching of an acridinium dye, which is covalently bound to polymer substrates, in presence of chloride ions. The active material is formed as a powder and packed in a tablet form. Calibration data shows that this fibre optic sensor shows a sensitivity to chloride at concentrations larger than 0.1M
Submergence of the Sidebands in the Photon-assisted Tunneling through a Quantum Dot Weakly Coupled to Luttinger Liquid Leads
We study theoretically the photon-assisted tunneling through a quantum dot
weakly coupled to Luttinger liquids (LL) leads, and find that the zero bias dc
conductance is strongly affected by the interactions in the LL leads. In
comparison with the system with Fermi liquid (FL) leads, the sideband peaks of
the dc conductance become blurring for 1/2<g<1, and finally merge into the
central peak for g<1/2, (g is the interaction parameter in the LL leads). The
sidebands are suppressed for LL leads with Coulomb interactions strong enough,
and the conductance always appears as a single peak for any strength and
frequency of the external time-dependent field. Furthermore, the quenching
effect of the central peak for the FL case does not exist for g<1/2.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Comparative analysis of full genomic sequences among different genotypes of dengue virus type 3
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although the previous study demonstrated the envelope protein of dengue viruses is under purifying selection pressure, little is known about the genetic differences of full-length viral genomes of DENV-3. In our study, complete genomic sequencing of DENV-3 strains collected from different geographical locations and isolation years were determined and the sequence diversity as well as selection pressure sites in the DENV genome other than within the E gene were also analyzed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using maximum likelihood and Bayesian approaches, our phylogenetic analysis revealed that the Taiwan's indigenous DENV-3 isolated from 1994 and 1998 dengue/DHF epidemics and one 1999 sporadic case were of the three different genotypes – I, II, and III, each associated with DENV-3 circulating in Indonesia, Thailand and Sri Lanka, respectively. Sequence diversity and selection pressure of different genomic regions among DENV-3 different genotypes was further examined to understand the global DENV-3 evolution. The highest nucleotide sequence diversity among the fully sequenced DENV-3 strains was found in the nonstructural protein 2A (mean ± SD: 5.84 ± 0.54) and envelope protein gene regions (mean ± SD: 5.04 ± 0.32). Further analysis found that positive selection pressure of DENV-3 may occur in the non-structural protein 1 gene region and the positive selection site was detected at position 178 of the NS1 gene.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our study confirmed that the envelope protein is under purifying selection pressure although it presented higher sequence diversity. The detection of positive selection pressure in the non-structural protein along genotype II indicated that DENV-3 originated from Southeast Asia needs to monitor the emergence of DENV strains with epidemic potential for better epidemic prevention and vaccine development.</p
Branchial FXYD protein expression in response to salinity change and its interaction with Na+/K+-ATPase of the euryhaline teleost Tetraodon nigroviridis
Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) is a ubiquitous membrane-bound protein crucial for teleost osmoregulation. The enzyme is composed of two essential subunits, a catalytic alpha subunit and a glycosylated beta subunit which is responsible for membrane targeting of the enzyme. In mammals, seven FXYD members have been found. FXYD proteins have been identified as the regulatory protein of NKA in mammals and elasmobranchs, it is thus interesting to examine the expression and functions of FXYD protein in the euryhaline teleosts with salinity-dependent changes of gill NKA activity. The present study investigated the expression and distribution of the FXYD protein in gills of seawater (SW)- or freshwater (FW)-acclimated euryhaline pufferfish (Tetraodon nigroviridis). The full-length pufferfish FXYD gene (pFXYD) was confirmed by RT-PCR. pFXYD was found to be expressed in many organs including gills of both SW and FW pufferfish. pFXYD mRNA abundance in gills, determined by real-time PCR, was significantly higher in FW fish than in SW fish. An antiserum raised against a partial amino acid sequence of pFXYD was used for the immunoblots of gill homogenates and a major band at 13 kDa was detected. The relative amounts of pFXYD protein and mRNA in gills of SW and FW pufferfish were identical, but opposite to the expression levels of NKA. Immunofluorescent staining of frozen sections demonstrated that pFXYD was colocalized to NKA-immunoreactive cells in the gill filaments. In addition, interaction between pFXYD and NKA was demonstrated by co-immunoprecipitation. Taken together, salinity-dependent expression of pFXYD protein and NKA, as well as the evidence for their colocalization and interaction in pufferfish gills suggested that pFXYD regulates NKA activity in gills of euryhaline teleosts upon salinity challenge
Searching a bitstream in linear time for the longest substring of any given density
Given an arbitrary bitstream, we consider the problem of finding the longest
substring whose ratio of ones to zeroes equals a given value. The central
result of this paper is an algorithm that solves this problem in linear time.
The method involves (i) reformulating the problem as a constrained walk through
a sparse matrix, and then (ii) developing a data structure for this sparse
matrix that allows us to perform each step of the walk in amortised constant
time. We also give a linear time algorithm to find the longest substring whose
ratio of ones to zeroes is bounded below by a given value. Both problems have
practical relevance to cryptography and bioinformatics.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures; v2: minor edits and enhancement
Harmonic maps from degenerating Riemann surfaces
We study harmonic maps from degenerating Riemann surfaces with uniformly
bounded energy and show the so-called generalized energy identity. We find
conditions that are both necessary and sufficient for the compactness in
and modulo bubbles of sequences of such maps.Comment: 27 page
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