13,874 research outputs found
High-resolution Satellite Imaging of the 2004 Transit of Venus and Asymmetries in the Cytherean Atmosphere
This paper presents the only space-borne optical-imaging observations of the 2004 June 8 transit of Venus, the first such transit visible from Earth since AD 1882. The high-resolution, high-cadence satellite images we arranged from NASA's Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE) reveal the onset of visibility of Venus's atmosphere and give further information about the black-drop effect, whose causes we previously demonstrated from TRACE observations of a transit of Mercury. The atmosphere is gradually revealed before second contact and after third contact, resulting from the changing depth of atmospheric layers refracting the photospheric surface into the observer's direction. We use Venus Express observations to relate the atmospheric arcs seen during the transit to the atmospheric structure of Venus. Finally, we relate the transit images to current and future exoplanet observations, providing a sort of ground truth showing an analog in our solar system to effects observable only with light curves in other solar systems with the Kepler and CoRoT missions and ground-based exoplanet-transit observations
Chameleon: A Hybrid Secure Computation Framework for Machine Learning Applications
We present Chameleon, a novel hybrid (mixed-protocol) framework for secure
function evaluation (SFE) which enables two parties to jointly compute a
function without disclosing their private inputs. Chameleon combines the best
aspects of generic SFE protocols with the ones that are based upon additive
secret sharing. In particular, the framework performs linear operations in the
ring using additively secret shared values and nonlinear
operations using Yao's Garbled Circuits or the Goldreich-Micali-Wigderson
protocol. Chameleon departs from the common assumption of additive or linear
secret sharing models where three or more parties need to communicate in the
online phase: the framework allows two parties with private inputs to
communicate in the online phase under the assumption of a third node generating
correlated randomness in an offline phase. Almost all of the heavy
cryptographic operations are precomputed in an offline phase which
substantially reduces the communication overhead. Chameleon is both scalable
and significantly more efficient than the ABY framework (NDSS'15) it is based
on. Our framework supports signed fixed-point numbers. In particular,
Chameleon's vector dot product of signed fixed-point numbers improves the
efficiency of mining and classification of encrypted data for algorithms based
upon heavy matrix multiplications. Our evaluation of Chameleon on a 5 layer
convolutional deep neural network shows 133x and 4.2x faster executions than
Microsoft CryptoNets (ICML'16) and MiniONN (CCS'17), respectively
DY determinants, possibly associated with novel class II molecules, stimulate autoreactive CD4+ T cells with suppressive activity
A set of T cell clones (TCC) isolated from HLA-DR-, Dw-, DQ-matched allogeneic MLCs was found to proliferate autonomously when stimulated with cells carrying a wide range of class I or II specificities. This apparently unrestricted proliferation was relatively weak, and only low levels of IL-2 were present in the supernatants of stimulated cells. Autologous as well as allogeneic PBMC and B lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL) were capable of stimulating such clones, which were also restimulated by suppressive, but not by helper, TCC. Moreover, such clones displayed the unusual property of autostimulation. mAb inhibition experiments suggested that class II- or class II-restricted antigens were involved in stimulation. Thus, certain "broad" mAbs (TU39, SG520) reacting with multiple locus products inhibited activation of these reagents, but none of those reacting more specifically with DR (TU34, TU37, L243, Q2/70, SG157), DQ (TU22, SPV- L3, Leu 10), or DP (B7/21), or mixtures of these mAbs, were able to do so. Evidence from sequential immunoprecipitation experiments suggested that mAb TU39 bound class II-like molecules other than DR, DQ, and DP on TCC and B-LCL, and it is therefore proposed that such putative novel class II-like molecules may carry the stimulating determinants for these autoreactive clones. DY-reactive clones lacked helper activity for B cells but mediated potent suppressive activity on T cell proliferative responses that was not restricted by the HLA type of the responding cells. Suppressive activity was induced in normal PBMC by such clones, as well as by independent suppressive clones, which was also inhibited only by mAb TU39. These findings lead to the proposal that DY-reactive autostimulatory cells may constitute a self- maintaining suppressive circuit, the level of activity of which would be regulated primarily by the availability of IL-2 in the microenvironmen
Liver Transplantation to Provide Low-Density-Lipoprotein Receptors and Lower Plasma Cholesterol in a Child with Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia
A six-year-old girl with severe hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis had two defective genes at the low-density-lipoprotein (LDL) receptor locus, as determined by biochemical studies of cultured fibroblasts. One gene, inherited from the mother, produced no LDL receptors; the other gene, inherited from the father, produced a receptor precursor that was not transported to the cell surface and was unable to bind LDL. The patient degraded intravenously administered 125I-LDL at an extremely low rate, indicating that her high plasma LDL-cholesterol level was caused by defective receptor-mediated removal of LDL from plasma. After transplantation of a liver and a heart from a normal donor, the patient's plasma LDL-cholesterol level declined by 81 per cent, from 988 to 184 mg per deciliter. The fractional catabolic rate for intravenously administered 125I-LDL, a measure of functional LDL receptors in vivo, increased by 2.5-fold. Thus, the transplanted liver, with its normal complement of LDL receptors, was able to remove LDL cholesterol from plasma at a nearly normal rate. We conclude that a genetically determined deficiency of LDL receptors can be largely reversed by liver transplantation. These data underscore the importance of hepatic LDL receptors in controlling the plasma level of LDL cholesterol in human beings. (N Engl J Med 1984; 311: 1658–64.). © 1984, Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved
Impact of tunnel barrier strength on magnetoresistance in carbon nanotubes
We investigate magnetoresistance in spin valves involving CoPd-contacted
carbon nanotubes. Both temperature and bias voltage dependence clearly indicate
tunneling magnetoresistance as the origin. We show that this effect is
significantly affected by the tunnel barrier strength, which appears to be one
reason for the variation between devices previously detected in similar
structures. Modeling the data by means of the scattering matrix approach, we
find a non-trivial dependence of the magnetoresistance on the barrier strength.
Furthermore, analysis of the spin precession observed in a nonlocal Hanle
measurement yields a spin lifetime of ns, a value comparable
with those found in silicon- or graphene-based spin valve devices.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Magnetic Fields in Dark Cloud Cores: Arecibo OH Zeeman Observations
We have carried out an extensive survey of magnetic field strengths toward
dark cloud cores in order to test models of star formation: ambipolar-diffusion
driven or turbulence driven. The survey involved hours of observing
with the Arecibo telescope in order to make sensitive OH Zeeman observations
toward 34 dark cloud cores. Nine new probable detections were achieved at the
2.5-sigma level; the certainty of the detections varies from solid to marginal,
so we discuss each probable detection separately. However, our analysis
includes all the measurements and does not depend on whether each position has
a detection or just a sensitive measurement. Rather, the analysis establishes
mean (or median) values over the set of observed cores for relevant
astrophysical quantities. The results are that the mass-to-flux ratio is
supercritical by , and that the ratio of turbulent to magnetic energies
is also . These results are compatible with both models of star
formation. However, these OH Zeeman observations do establish for the first
time on a statistically sound basis the energetic importance of magnetic fields
in dark cloud cores at densities of order cm, and they lay
the foundation for further observations that could provide a more definitive
test.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Weak gravitational lensing in the standard Cold Dark Matter model, using an algorithm for three-dimensional shear
We investigate the effects of weak gravitational lensing in the standard Cold
Dark Matter cosmology, using an algorithm which evaluates the shear in three
dimensions. The algorithm has the advantage of variable softening for the
particles, and our method allows the appropriate angular diameter distances to
be applied to every evaluation location within each three-dimensional
simulation box. We investigate the importance of shear in the distance-redshift
relation, and find it to be very small. We also establish clearly defined
values for the smoothness parameter in the relation, finding its value to be at
least 0.88 at all redshifts in our simulations. From our results, obtained by
linking the simulation boxes back to source redshifts of 4, we are able to
observe the formation of structure in terms of the computed shear, and also
note that the major contributions to the shear come from a very broad range of
redshifts. We show the probability distributions for the magnification, source
ellipticity and convergence, and also describe the relationships amongst these
quantities for a range of source redshifts. We find a broad range of
magnifications and ellipticities; for sources at a redshift of 4, 97{1/2}% of
all lines of sight show magnifications up to 1.3 and ellipticities up to 0.195.
There is clear evidence that the magnification is not linear in the
convergence, as might be expected for weak lensing, but contains contributions
from higher order terms in both the convergence and the shear.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, 15 figures include
Risk Stratification in Post-MI Patients Based on Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction and Heart-Rate Turbulence
Objectives: Development of risk stratification criteria for predicting mortality in post-infarction patients taking into account LVEF and heart-rate turbulence (HRT). Methods: Based on previous results the two parameters LVEF (continuously) and turbulence slope (TS) as an indicator of the HRT were combined for risk stratification. The method has been applied within two independent data sets (the MPIP-trial and the EMIAT-study). Results: The criteria were defined in order to match the outcome of applying LVEF ( 30 % in sensitivity. In the MPIP trial the optimal criteria selected are TS normal and LVEF ( 21 % or TS abnormal and LVEF ( 40 %. Within the placebo group of the EMIAT-study the corresponding criteria are: TS normal and LVEF ( 23 % or TS abnormal and LVEF ( 40 %. Combining both studies the following criteria could be obtained: TS normal and LVEF ( 20 % or TS abnormal and LVEF ( 40 %. In the MPIP study 83 out of the 581 patients (= 14.3 %) are fulfilling these criteria. Within this group 30 patients have died during the follow-up. In the EMIAT-trial 218 out of the 591 patients (= 37.9 %) are classified as high risk patients with 53 deaths. Combining both studies the high risk group contains 301 patients with 83 deaths (ppv = 27.7 %). Using the MADIT-criterion as classification rule (LVEF ( 30 %) a sample of 375 patients with 85 deaths (ppv = 24 %) can be selected. Conclusions: The stratification rule based on LVEF and TS is able to select high risk patients suitable for implanting an ICD. The rule performs better than the classical one with LVEF alone. The high risk group applying the new criteria is smaller with about the same number of deaths and therefor with a higher positive predictive value. The classification criteria have been validated within a bootstrap study with 100 replications. In all samples the rule based on TS and LVEF (= NEW) was superior to LVEV alone, the high risk group has been smaller (( s: 301 ( 14.5 (NEW) vs. 375 ( 14.5 (LVEF)) and the positive predictive value was larger (( s: 27.2 ( 2.6 % (NEW) vs. 23.3 ( 2.2 % (LVEF)). The new criteria are less expensive due to a reduced number of high risk patients selected
"Tolerization" of human T-helper cell clones by chronic exposure to alloantigen
Induction of clonal anergy in T-helper (Th) cells may have a role in regulating immune responses. A model system for studying Th cell tolerization at the clonal level in vitro could be useful for investigating the mechanisms involved. Accordingly, alloreactive helper cells were maintained in culture with interleukin 2 (IL 2) by intermittent stimulation with specific antigen. Regardless of the frequency of antigen stimulation, clones of age less than ca. 35 population doublings (PD) were found to undergo antigen-specific autocrine clonal expansion in the absence of exogenous IL 2. Such young clones (designated as phase I) could therefore not be "tolerized" by frequent exposure to antigen. In contrast, most clones of age greater than ca. 35 PD could be tolerized by frequent exposure to antigen (designated as phase II clones). Their autocrine proliferation was then blocked, although they still recognized antigen specifically as shown by their retained ability to secrete interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF). The mechanism of response failure involved both an inability to upregulate IL 2 receptors in the absence of exogenous IL 2, as well as an inability to secrete IL 2. These defects were not overcome by stimulation with mitogens or calcium ionophore and phorbol esther in place of alloantigen. T-cell receptor, alpha, beta, and gamma-chain gene rearrangements remained identical in phase I and phase II clones. Tolerization of phase II clones could be avoided by increasing the period between antigen exposures. Despite this, whether or not phase II cells were capable of autocrine proliferation, they were found to have acquired the novel function of inducing suppressive activity in fresh lymphocytes. Suppressor-induction was blocked by the broadly reactive MHC class II-specific monoclonal antibody (moAb) TU39, but not by moAb preferentially reacting only with HLA-DR, DQ, or DP. Sequential immunoprecipitation on T-cell clones showed the presence of a putative non-DR, DQ, DP, TU39+ molecule on phase II clones. However, this molecule was also found on phase I clones. The nature of the TU39-blockable suppressor-inducing determinant present on phase II but not on (most) phase I clones thus remains to be clarified. In addition to suppressor-induction activity, phase II clones also acquired lytic potential as measured in a lectin approximation system. Cytotoxic (CTX) potential was also not influenced by the frequency of antigenic stimulation and could be viewed as a constitutive modulation of clonal functio
Measuring the three-dimensional shear from simulation data, with applications to weak gravitational lensing
We have developed a new three-dimensional algorithm, based on the standard
PM method, for computing deflections due to weak gravitational lensing. We
compare the results of this method with those of the two-dimensional planar
approach, and rigorously outline the conditions under which the two approaches
are equivalent. Our new algorithm uses a Fast Fourier Transform convolution
method for speed, and has a variable softening feature to provide a realistic
interpretation of the large-scale structure in a simulation. The output values
of the code are compared with those from the Ewald summation method, which we
describe and develop in detail. With an optimal choice of the high frequency
filtering in the Fourier convolution, the maximum errors, when using only a
single particle, are about 7 per cent, with an rms error less than 2 per cent.
For ensembles of particles, used in typical -body simulations, the rms
errors are typically 0.3 per cent. We describe how the output from the
algorithm can be used to generate distributions of magnification, source
ellipticity, shear and convergence for large-scale structure.Comment: 22 pages, latex, 11 figure
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