138 research outputs found
A thermodynamical model for non-extremal black p-brane
We show that the correct entropy, temperature (and absorption probability) of
non-extremal black p-brane can be reproduced by a certain thermodynamical model
when maximizing its entropy. We show that the form of the model is related to
the geometrical similarity of non-extremal and near extremal black p-brane at
near horizon region, and argue about the appropriateness of the model.Comment: Almost the same version as the paper appeared in Physical Review
TeV scale mirage mediation in NMSSM
We study the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model. We consider soft
supersymmetry breaking parameters, which are induced by the mirage mediation
mechanism of supersymmetry breaking. We concentrate on the mirage mediation,
where the so-called mirage scale is the TeV scale. In this scenario, we can
realize the up-type Higgs soft mass of O(200) GeV, while other masses such as
gaugino masses and stop masses are heavy such as 1 TeV or more. Cancellation
between the effective \mu-term and the down-type Higgs soft mass ameliorates
the fine-tuning in the electroweak symmetry breaking even for \mu=O(500) GeV.
The mixing between the doublet and singlet Higgs bosons is suppressed by
(\lambda/\kappa)/tan\beta. Then the lightest doublet Higgs mass naturally
reaches 125 GeV lifted by the new quartic coupling. The higgsino and singlino
are light and their linear combination is the lightest superparticle.Comment: 24 pages, 24 figures, Numerical analysis is replaced with the version
calculated by NMSSMTools. Comments and references are added on the suppressed
doublet-singlet mixing and cases in which the 125 GeV boson is the 2nd
lightest CP-even scalar. The version accepted by JHE
Gravitational Waves around a Naked Singularity -- Odd-Parity Perturbation of Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi Space-Time --
The motion of a spherical dust cloud is described by the
Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi solution and is completely specified by initial values of
distributions of the rest mass density and specific energy of the dust fluid.
From generic initial conditions of this spherically symmetric collapse, there
appears a naked singularity at the symmetric center in the course of the
gravitational collapse of the dust cloud. So this might be a counter example to
the cosmic censorship hypothesis. To investigate the genericity of this
example, we examine the stability of the `nakedness' of this singularity
against odd-parity modes of non-spherical linear perturbations for the metric,
i.e., linear gravitational waves. We find that the perturbations do not diverge
but are well-behaved even in the neighborhood of the central naked singularity.
This means that the naked singularity formation process is marginally stable
against the odd-parity modes of linear gravitational waves.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, to be published in Physical Review
and processes with polarized muons and supersymmetric grand unified theories
and processes are
analyzed in detail with polarized muons in supersymmetric grand unified
theories. We first present Dalitz plot distribution for decay based on effective Lagrangian with general
lepton-flavor-violating couplings and define various P- and T-odd asymmetries.
We calculate branching ratios and asymmetries in supersymmetric SU(5) and
SO(10) models taking into account complex soft supersymmetry breaking terms.
Imposing constraints from experimental bounds on the electron, neutron and
atomic electric dipole moments, we find that the T-odd asymmetry for can be 15% in the SU(5) case. P-odd asymmetry with respect
to muon polarization for varies from -20% to -100%
for the SO(10) model while it is in the SU(5) case. We also show that
the P-odd asymmetries in and the ratio of
and branching
fractions are useful to distinguish different models.Comment: 52 pages, 15 figure
γ-Aminobutyric Acid Transporter 2 Mediates the Hepatic Uptake of Guanidinoacetate, the Creatine Biosynthetic Precursor, in Rats
Guanidinoacetic acid (GAA) is the biosynthetic precursor of creatine which is involved in storage and transmission of phosphate-bound energy. Hepatocytes readily convert GAA to creatine, raising the possibility that the active uptake of GAA by hepatocytes is a regulatory factor. The purpose of this study is to investigate and identify the transporter responsible for GAA uptake by hepatocytes. The characteristics of [14C]GAA uptake by hepatocytes were elucidated using the in vivo liver uptake method, freshly isolated rat hepatocytes, an expression system of Xenopus laevis oocytes, gene knockdown, and an immunohistochemical technique. In vivo injection of [14C]GAA into the rat femoral vein and portal vein results in the rapid uptake of [14C]GAA by the liver. The uptake was markedly inhibited by γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and nipecotinic acid, an inhibitor of GABA transporters (GATs). The characteristics of Na+- and Cl−-dependent [14C]GAA uptake by freshly isolated rat hepatocytes were consistent with those of GAT2. The Km value of the GAA uptake (134 µM) was close to that of GAT2-mediated GAA transport (78.9 µM). GABA caused a marked inhibition with an IC50 value of 8.81 µM. The [14C]GAA uptake exhibited a significant reduction corresponding to the reduction in GAT2 protein expression. GAT2 was localized on the sinusoidal membrane of the hepatocytes predominantly in the periportal region. This distribution pattern was consistent with that of the creatine biosynthetic enzyme, S-adenosylmethionine∶guanidinoacetate N-methyltransferase. GAT2 makes a major contribution to the sinusoidal GAA uptake by periportal hepatocytes, thus regulating creatine biosynthesis in the liver
Muon anomalous magnetic moment, lepton flavor violation, and flavor changing neutral current processes in SUSY GUT with right-handed neutrino
Motivated by the large mixing angle solutions for the atmospheric and solar
neutrino anomalies, flavor changing neutral current processes and lepton flavor
violating processes as well as the muon anomalous magnetic moment are analyzed
in the framework of SU(5) SUSY GUT with right-handed neutrino. In order to
explain realistic mass relations for quarks and leptons, we take into account
effects of higher dimensional operators above the GUT scale. It is shown that
the supersymmetric (SUSY) contributions to the CP violation parameter in
mixing, , the branching ratio,
and the muon anomalous magnetic moment become large in a wide range of
parameter space. We also investigate correlations among these quantities.
Within the current experimental bound of , large
SUSY contributions are possible either in the muon anomalous magnetic moment or
in . In the former case, the favorable value of the recent muon
anomalous magnetic moment measurement at the BNL E821 experiment can be
accommodated. In the latter case, the allowed region of the Kobayashi-Maskawa
phase can be different from the prediction within the Standard Model (SM) and
therefore the measurements of the CP asymmetry of mode and
could discriminate this case from the SM. We also show that
the branching ratio can be close to the current
experimental upperbound and the mixing induced CP asymmetry of the radiative B
decay can be enhanced in the case where the neutrino parameters correspond to
the Mikheyev-Smirnov-Wolfenstein small mixing angle solution.Comment: 70 pages, 14 figure
CP violation in the process and supersymmetric grand unified theory
A triple vector correlation in the decay with
polarized muons is investigated as a probe to CP violating coupling constants
in supersymmetric models. A sizable triple correlation can be induced due to a
complex phase in the supersymmetric soft-breaking terms in the SU(5) grand
unified theory. Correlation with the electric dipole moments of electron and
neutron are investigated and it is shown that these quantities give independent
information on possible CP violating sources.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Fig.2(a), fig.2(b) and fig.3 are changed due to
an error of our numerical calculation but main conclusion unchanged. Also
added some discussions and figures of the neutron EDM. Version to appear in
Physical Review D, Rapid Communication
Quantitative Analysis of Viral Load per Haploid Genome Revealed the Different Biological Features of Merkel Cell Polyomavirus Infection in Skin Tumor
Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) has recently been identified in Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), an aggressive cancer that occurs in sun-exposed skin. Conventional technologies, such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and immunohistochemistry, have produced conflicting results for MCPyV infections in non-MCC tumors. Therefore, we performed quantitative analyses of the MCPyV copy number in various skin tumor tissues, including MCC (n = 9) and other sun exposure-related skin tumors (basal cell carcinoma [BCC, n = 45], actinic keratosis [AK, n = 52], Bowen’s disease [n = 34], seborrheic keratosis [n = 5], primary cutaneous anaplastic large-cell lymphoma [n = 5], malignant melanoma [n = 5], and melanocytic nevus [n = 6]). In a conventional PCR analysis, MCPyV DNA was detected in MCC (9 cases; 100%), BCC (1 case; 2%), and AK (3 cases; 6%). We then used digital PCR technology to estimate the absolute viral copy number per haploid human genome in these tissues. The viral copy number per haploid genome was estimated to be around 1 in most MCC tissues, and there were marked differences between the MCC (0.119–42.8) and AK (0.02–0.07) groups. PCR-positive BCC tissue showed a similar viral load as MCC tissue (0.662). Immunohistochemistry with a monoclonal antibody against the MCPyV T antigen (CM2B4) demonstrated positive nuclear localization in most of the high-viral-load tumor groups (8 of 9 MCC and 1 BCC), but not in the low-viral-load or PCR-negative tumor groups. These results demonstrated that MCPyV infection is possibly involved in a minority of sun-exposed skin tumors, including BCC and AK, and that these tumors display different modes of infection
LASER PHYSICS LETTERS
Abstract: Raman spectroscopy offers a powerful alternative analytical method for the detection and identification of lipids/oil in biological samples, such as algae and fish. Recent research in the authors' groups, and experimental data only very recently published by us and a few other groups suggest that Raman spectroscopy can be exploited in instances where fast and accurate determination of the iodine value (associated with the degree of lipid unsaturation) is required. Here the current status of Raman spectroscopy applications on algae is reviewed, and particular attention is given to the efforts of identifying and selecting oil-rich algal strains for the potential mass production of commercial biofuels and for utilization in the food industry. Normalized intensity, a.u
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