1,015 research outputs found
A T-type channel-calmodulin complex triggers αCaMKII activation
Abstract Calmodulin (CaM) is an important signaling molecule that regulates a vast array of cellular functions by activating second messengers involved in cell function and plasticity. Low voltage-activated calcium channels of the Cav3 family have the important role of mediating low threshold calcium influx, but were not believed to interact with CaM. We find a constitutive association between CaM and the Cav3.1 channel at rest that is lost through an activity-dependent and Cav3.1 calcium-dependent CaM dissociation. Moreover, Cav3 calcium influx is sufficient to activate αCaMKII in the cytoplasm in a manner that depends on an intact Cav3.1 C-terminus needed to support the CaM interaction. Our findings thus establish that T-type channel calcium influx invokes a novel dynamic interaction between CaM and Cav3.1 channels to trigger a signaling cascade that leads to αCaMKII activation
A New Observational Upper Limit to the Low Redshift Ionizing Background Radiation
We report a new Fabry-Perot search for Halpha emission from the intergalactic
cloud HI 1225+01 in an attempt to measure the low redshift ionizing background
radiation. We set a new 2 sigma upper limit on Halpha emission of 8 mR (5 x
10^{-20} ergs cm^{-2} s^{-1} arcsec^{-2}). Conversion of this limit to limits
on the strength of the ionizing background requires knowledge of the ratio of
the projected to total surface area of this cloud, which is uncertain. We
discuss the plausible range of this ratio, and within this range find that the
strength of the ionizing backround is in the lower range of, but consistent
with, previous observational and theoretical estimates.Comment: 46 pages including 9 figures (7 ps, 2 gif
Further X-ray observations of EXO 0748-676 in quiescence: evidence for a cooling neutron star crust
In late 2008, the quasi-persistent neutron star X-ray transient and eclipsing
binary EXO 0748-676 started a transition from outburst to quiescence, after it
had been actively accreting for more than 24 years. In a previous work, we
discussed Chandra and Swift observations obtained during the first five months
after this transition. Here, we report on further X-ray observations of EXO
0748-676, extending the quiescent monitoring to 1.6 years. Chandra and
XMM-Newton data reveal quiescent X-ray spectra composed of a soft, thermal
component that is well-fitted by a neutron star atmosphere model. An additional
hard powerlaw tail is detected that changes non-monotonically over time,
contributing between 4 and 20 percent to the total unabsorbed 0.5-10 keV flux.
The combined set of Chandra, XMM-Newton and Swift data reveals that the thermal
bolometric luminosity fades from ~1E34 to 6E33 (D/7.4 kpc)^2 erg/s, whereas the
inferred neutron star effective temperature decreases from ~124 to 109 eV. We
interpret the observed decay as cooling of the neutron star crust and show that
the fractional quiescent temperature change of EXO 0748-676 is markedly smaller
than observed for three other neutron star X-ray binaries that underwent
prolonged accretion outbursts.Comment: Moderate textual revisions according to referee report, accepted for
publication in MNRA
The NANOGrav 11-Year Data Set: Limits on Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries
Observations indicate that nearly all galaxies contain supermassive black
holes (SMBHs) at their centers. When galaxies merge, their component black
holes form SMBH binaries (SMBHBs), which emit low-frequency gravitational waves
(GWs) that can be detected by pulsar timing arrays (PTAs). We have searched the
recently-released North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves
(NANOGrav) 11-year data set for GWs from individual SMBHBs in circular orbits.
As we did not find strong evidence for GWs in our data, we placed 95\% upper
limits on the strength of GWs from such sources as a function of GW frequency
and sky location. We placed a sky-averaged upper limit on the GW strain of at nHz. We also developed a
technique to determine the significance of a particular signal in each pulsar
using ``dropout' parameters as a way of identifying spurious signals in
measurements from individual pulsars. We used our upper limits on the GW strain
to place lower limits on the distances to individual SMBHBs. At the
most-sensitive sky location, we ruled out SMBHBs emitting GWs with
nHz within 120 Mpc for , and
within 5.5 Gpc for . We also determined that
there are no SMBHBs with emitting
GWs in the Virgo Cluster. Finally, we estimated the number of potentially
detectable sources given our current strain upper limits based on galaxies in
Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) and merger rates from the Illustris
cosmological simulation project. Only 34 out of 75,000 realizations of the
local Universe contained a detectable source, from which we concluded it was
unsurprising that we did not detect any individual sources given our current
sensitivity to GWs.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journal. Please send
any comments/questions to S. J. Vigeland ([email protected]
Plane-symmetric inhomogeneous magnetized viscous fluid universe with a variable
The behavior of magnetic field in plane symmetric inhomogeneous cosmological
models for bulk viscous distribution is investigated. The coefficient of bulk
viscosity is assumed to be a power function of mass density . The values of cosmological constant for these models are
found to be small and positive which are supported by the results from recent
supernovae Ia observations. Some physical and geometric aspects of the models
are also discussed.Comment: 18 pages, LaTex, no figur
First Observation of the decay KL -> pi0 e e gamma
We report on the first observation of the decay KL -> pi0 ee gamma by the
KTeV E799 experiment at Fermilab. Based upon a sample of 48 events with an
estimated background of 3.6 +/- 1.1 events, we measure the KL -> pi0 ee gamma
branching ratio to be (2.34 +/- 0.35 +/- 0.13)x10^{-8}. Our data agree with
recent O(p^6) calculations in chiral perturbation theory that include
contributions from vector meson exchange through the parameter a_V. A fit was
made to the KL -> pi0 ee gamma data for a_V with the result -0.67 +/- 0.21 +/-
0.12, which is consistent with previous results from KTeV.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters, 5 pages, 5 figure
Vortices in Superfluid Films on Curved Surfaces
We present a systematic study of how vortices in superfluid films interact
with the spatially varying Gaussian curvature of the underlying substrate. The
Gaussian curvature acts as a source for a geometric potential that attracts
(repels) vortices towards regions of negative (positive) Gaussian curvature
independently of the sign of their topological charge. Various experimental
tests involving rotating superfluid films and vortex pinning are first
discussed for films coating gently curved substrates that can be treated in
perturbation theory from flatness. An estimate of the experimental regimes of
interest is obtained by comparing the strength of the geometrical forces to the
vortex pinning induced by the varying thickness of the film which is in turn
caused by capillary effects and gravity. We then present a non-perturbative
technique based on conformal mappings that leads an exact solution for the
geometric potential as well as the geometric correction to the interaction
between vortices. The conformal mapping approach is illustrated by means of
explicit calculations of the geometric effects encountered in the study of some
strongly curved surfaces and by deriving universal bounds on their strength.Comment: 50 pages, 38 figure
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