1,847 research outputs found
Tests of the Gravitational Inverse-Square Law
We review recent experimental tests of the gravitational inverse-square law
and the wide variety of theoretical considerations that suggest the law may
break down in experimentally accessible regions.Comment: 81 pages, 10 figures, submitted by permission of the Annual Review of
Nuclear and Particle Science. Final version of this material is scheduled to
appear in the Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science Vol. 53, to be
published in December 2003 by Annual Reviews, http://AnnualReviews.or
Mangarara Formation: exhumed remnants of a middle Miocene, temperate carbonate, submarine channel-fan system on the eastern margin of Taranaki Basin, New Zealand
The middle Miocene Mangarara Formation is a thin (1–60 m), laterally discontinuous unit of moderately to highly calcareous (40–90%) facies of sandy to pure limestone, bioclastic sandstone, and conglomerate that crops out in a few valleys in North Taranaki across the transition from King Country Basin into offshore Taranaki Basin. The unit occurs within hemipelagic (slope) mudstone of Manganui Formation, is stratigraphically associated with redeposited sandstone of Moki Formation, and is overlain by redeposited volcaniclastic sandstone of Mohakatino Formation. The calcareous facies of the Mangarara Formation are interpreted to be mainly mass-emplaced deposits having channelised and sheet-like geometries, sedimentary structures supportive of redeposition, mixed environment fossil associations, and stratigraphic enclosure within bathyal mudrocks and flysch. The carbonate component of the deposits consists mainly of bivalves, larger benthic foraminifers (especially Amphistegina), coralline red algae including rhodoliths (Lithothamnion and Mesophyllum), and bryozoans, a warm-temperate, shallow marine skeletal association. While sediment derivation was partly from an eastern contemporary shelf, the bulk of the skeletal carbonate is inferred to have been sourced from shoal carbonate factories around and upon isolated basement highs (Patea-Tongaporutu High) to the south. The Mangarara sediments were redeposited within slope gullies and broad open submarine channels and lobes in the vicinity of the channel-lobe transition zone of a submarine fan system. Different phases of sediment transport and deposition (lateral-accretion and aggradation stages) are identified in the channel infilling. Dual fan systems likely co-existed, one dominating and predominantly siliciclastic in nature (Moki Formation), and the other infrequent and involving the temperate calcareous deposits of Mangarara Formation. The Mangarara Formation is an outcrop analogue for middle Miocene-age carbonate slope-fan deposits elsewhere in subsurface Taranaki Basin, New Zealand
Retroperitoneal haemorrhage in renal angiomyolipoma causing hepatic functional decompensation: a case report
Renal angiomyolipomata usually present as incidental findings on routine imaging, but rarely they may give rise to significant haemorrhage. If bleeding occurs, first-line treatment is currently angiography with selective embolisation. Prophylactic embolisation may be considered in some cases, depending on lesion size and patient co-morbidities
A Predator from East Africa that Chooses Malaria Vectors as Preferred Prey
BACKGROUND: All vectors of human malaria, a disease responsible for more than one million deaths per year, are female mosquitoes from the genus Anopheles. Evarcha culicivora is an East African jumping spider (Salticidae) that feeds indirectly on vertebrate blood by selecting blood-carrying female mosquitoes as preferred prey. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: By testing with motionless lures made from mounting dead insects in lifelike posture on cork discs, we show that E. culicivora selects Anopheles mosquitoes in preference to other mosquitoes and that this predator can identify Anopheles by static appearance alone. Tests using active (grooming) virtual mosquitoes rendered in 3-D animation show that Anopheles' characteristic resting posture is an important prey-choice cue for E. culicivora. Expression of the spider's preference for Anopheles varies with the spider's size, varies with its prior feeding condition and is independent of the spider gaining a blood meal. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first experimental study to show that a predator of any type actively chooses Anopheles as preferred prey, suggesting that specialized predators having a role in the biological control of disease vectors is a realistic possibility
Entanglement entropy of black holes
The entanglement entropy is a fundamental quantity which characterizes the
correlations between sub-systems in a larger quantum-mechanical system. For two
sub-systems separated by a surface the entanglement entropy is proportional to
the area of the surface and depends on the UV cutoff which regulates the
short-distance correlations. The geometrical nature of the entanglement entropy
calculation is particularly intriguing when applied to black holes when the
entangling surface is the black hole horizon. I review a variety of aspects of
this calculation: the useful mathematical tools such as the geometry of spaces
with conical singularities and the heat kernel method, the UV divergences in
the entropy and their renormalization, the logarithmic terms in the
entanglement entropy in 4 and 6 dimensions and their relation to the conformal
anomalies. The focus in the review is on the systematic use of the conical
singularity method. The relations to other known approaches such as 't Hooft's
brick wall model and the Euclidean path integral in the optical metric are
discussed in detail. The puzzling behavior of the entanglement entropy due to
fields which non-minimally couple to gravity is emphasized. The holographic
description of the entanglement entropy of the black hole horizon is
illustrated on the two- and four-dimensional examples. Finally, I examine the
possibility to interpret the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy entirely as the
entanglement entropy.Comment: 89 pages; an invited review to be published in Living Reviews in
Relativit
Bilateral acute angle closure glaucoma as a presentation of isolated microspherophakia in an adult: case report
BACKGROUND: Bilateral simultaneous angle closure glaucoma is a rare entity. To our knowledge this is the first reported case of bilateral acute angle-closure glaucoma secondary to isolated microspherophakia in an adult. CASE PRESENTATION: A 45-year-old woman presented with bilateral acute angle closure glaucoma, with a patent iridotomy in one eye. Prolonged miotic use prior to presentation had worsened the pupillary block. The diagnosis was not initially suspected, and the patient was subjected to pars-plana lensectomy and anterior vitrectomy for a presumed ciliary block glaucoma. The small spherical lens was detected intraoperatively, and spherophakia was diagnosed in retrospect. She had no systemic features of any of the known conditions associated with spherophakia. Pars-plana lensectomy both eyes controlled the intraocular pressure successfully. CONCLUSION: This case demonstrates the importance of considering the diagnosis of isolated microspherophakia in any case of bilateral acute angle closure glaucoma. Lensectomy appears to be an effective first-line strategy for managing these patients
Liposomes in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Liposomes are vesicular structures made of lipids that are formed in aqueous solutions. Structurally, they resemble the lipid membrane of living cells. Therefore, they have been widely investigated, since the 1960s, as models to study the cell membrane, and as carriers for protection and/or delivery of bioactive agents. They have been used in different areas of research including vaccines, imaging, applications in cosmetics and tissue engineering. Tissue engineering is defined as a strategy for promoting the regeneration of tissues for the human body. This strategy may involve the coordinated application of defined cell types with structured biomaterial scaffolds to produce living structures. To create a new tissue, based on this strategy, a controlled stimulation of cultured cells is needed, through a systematic combination of bioactive agents and mechanical signals. In this review, we highlight the potential role of liposomes as a platform for the sustained and local delivery of bioactive agents for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine approaches. liposomesscaffoldsdelivery systemsbioactive agentsstem cellsThe authors thank the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology for the PhD grant to N.S.M. (SFRH/BD/62465/2009), the post-doctoral grants of A.M. (SFRH/BPD/73663/2010). This study was also partly supported by POLARIS (FP7-REGPOT-2012-2013-1), RL3-TECT-NORTE-01-0124-FEDER-000020, co-financed by the North Portugal Regional Operational Programme (ON.2-O Novo Norte), under the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF), through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the OsteoGraphy (PTDC/EME-MFE/2008) and MaxBone (PTDC/SAU-ENB/115179/2009) projects
Multiple Cellular Responses to Serotonin Contribute to Epithelial Homeostasis
Epithelial homeostasis incorporates the paradoxical concept of internal change (epithelial turnover) enabling the maintenance of anatomical status quo. Epithelial cell differentiation and cell loss (cell shedding and apoptosis) form important components of epithelial turnover. Although the mechanisms of cell loss are being uncovered the crucial triggers that modulate epithelial turnover through regulation of cell loss remain undetermined. Serotonin is emerging as a common autocrine-paracine regulator in epithelia of multiple organs, including the breast. Here we address whether serotonin affects epithelial turnover. Specifically, serotonin's roles in regulating cell shedding, apoptosis and barrier function of the epithelium. Using in vivo studies in mouse and a robust model of differentiated human mammary duct epithelium (MCF10A), we show that serotonin induces mammary epithelial cell shedding and disrupts tight junctions in a reversible manner. However, upon sustained exposure, serotonin induces apoptosis in the replenishing cell population, causing irreversible changes to the epithelial membrane. The staggered nature of these events induced by serotonin slowly shifts the balance in the epithelium from reversible to irreversible. These finding have very important implications towards our ability to control epithelial regeneration and thus address pathologies of aberrant epithelial turnover, which range from degenerative disorders (e.g.; pancreatitis and thyrioditis) to proliferative disorders (e.g.; mastitis, ductal ectasia, cholangiopathies and epithelial cancers)
Hunting for Dynamical Supersymmetry Breaking in Theories That S-confine
The s-confining theories are a class of supersymmetric gauge theories with
infrared dynamics which are well-understood. Perturbing such theories can give
rise to dynamical supersymmetry breaking. We realize simple models of dynamical
supersymmetry breaking by perturbing two of the 10 SU(N) s-confining gauge
theories by a single trilinear operator. These examples have locally stable
vacua with spontaneous supersymmetry breaking. The first is SU(5) with two
generations (consisting of an antisymmetric tensor and an antifundamental) plus
two flavors. The second is SU(5) with three generations. The properties of the
former vacuum are calculable while those of the latter vacuum are not. We
briefly discuss the other SU(N) models.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
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