6,742 research outputs found
End states, ladder compounds, and domain wall fermions
A magnetic field applied to a cross linked ladder compound can generate
isolated electronic states bound to the ends of the chain. After exploring the
interference phenomena responsible, I discuss a connection to the domain wall
approach to chiral fermions in lattice gauge theory. The robust nature of the
states under small variations of the bond strengths is tied to chiral symmetry
and the multiplicative renormalization of fermion masses.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures; final version for Phys. Rev. Let
A comparison of match demands using ball-in-play vs. whole match data in elite male youth soccer players
Effective playing time in soccer is typically 90 seconds. This data allows practitioners to gain a deeper understanding of the physical demands imposed on players and plan sessions using targets that better represent match demands
Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and LIF receptor expression in human endometrium suggests a potential autocrine/paracrine function in regulating embryo implantation.
The uterine expression of leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is essential for embryo implantation in the mouse. Here, we describe the expression of LIF, related members of this group of cytokines, oncostatin M and ciliary neurotrophic factor, and the LIF receptor beta and glycoprotein gp130 in normal human tissues and in the endometrium of fertile women. Our results show that LIF is the only one of these factors expressed at detectable levels in the endometrium of women of proven fertility. LIF expression is restricted to the endometrial glands during the secretory/postovulatory phase but is not present in the endometrium during the proliferative/preovulatory phase. The LIF receptor beta is expressed during the proliferative and secretory phases of the cycle and is restricted to the luminal epithelium. The associated signal-transducing component of the LIF receptor, gp130, is also expressed in both the luminal and glandular epithelium throughout the cycle. These results suggest that uterine expression of LIF in humans, like mice, may have a role in regulating embryo implantation, possibly through an autocrine/paracrine interaction between LIF and its receptor at the luminal epithelium
Primary physical education, coaches and continuing professional development
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Sport, Education and Society, 16(4), 485 - 505, 2011, copyright @ Taylor & Francis, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13573322.2011.589645.Physical education (PE) in primary schools has traditionally been taught by qualified primary teachers. More recently, some teaching of PE in primary schools has been undertaken by coaches (mostly football coaches). These coaches hold national governing body awards but do not hold teaching qualifications. Thus, coaches may not be adequately prepared to teach PE in curriculum time. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perceptions of a group of community-based football coaches working in primary schools for the impact of a Continuing Professional Development (CPD) programme on their ability to undertake ‘specified work’ to cover PE in primary schools. The programme focused on four areas identified as important to enable coaches to cover specified work: short- and medium-term planning, pedagogy, knowledge of the curriculum and reflection. Results showed that for the majority of coaches the CPD programme had made them more aware of the importance of these four areas and had helped to develop their knowledge and ability to put this into practice in covering planning, preparation and assessment time. However, further input is still required to develop coaches’ knowledge and understanding in all four areas, but especially their curriculum knowledge, as well as their ability to put these into practice consistently. These findings are discussed in relation to the implications of employing coaches to cover the teaching of PE in primary schools and, if employed, what CPD coaches need to develop the necessary knowledge, skill and understanding for covering specified work in schools
Analytical results for string propagation near a Kaluza-Klein black hole
This brief report presents analytical solutions to the equations of motion of
a null string. The background spacetime is a magnetically charged Kaluza-Klein
black hole. The string coordinates are expanded with the world-sheet velocity
of light as an expansion parameter. It is shown that the zeroth order solutions
can be expressed in terms of elementary functions in an appropriate large
distance approximation. In addition, a class of exact solutions corresponding
to the Pollard-Gross-Perry-Sorkin monopole case is also obtained.Comment: Revtex, 9 pages including two postscript figures, More detailed
discussion and new references adde
Pair Creation of Dilaton Black Holes
We consider dilaton gravity theories in four spacetime dimensions
parametrised by a constant , which controls the dilaton coupling, and
construct new exact solutions. We first generalise the C-metric of
Einstein-Maxwell theory () to solutions corresponding to oppositely
charged dilaton black holes undergoing uniform acceleration for general . We
next develop a solution generating technique which allows us to ``embed" the
dilaton C-metrics in magnetic dilaton Melvin backgrounds, thus generalising the
Ernst metric of Einstein-Maxwell theory. By adjusting the parameters
appropriately, it is possible to eliminate the nodal singularities of the
dilaton C-metrics. For (but not for ), it is possible to further
restrict the parameters so that the dilaton Ernst solutions have a smooth
euclidean section with topology , corresponding to
instantons describing the pair production of dilaton black holes in a magnetic
field. A different restriction on the parameters leads to smooth instantons for
all values of with topology .Comment: 22 pages, EFI-93-51, FERMILAB-Pub-93/272-A, UMHEP-393. (Asymptotics
of Ernst solutions clarified, typos repaired
MHz Unidirectional Rotation of Molecular Rotary Motors
A combination of cryogenic UV-vis and CD spectroscopy and transient absorption spectroscopy at ambient temperature is used to study a new class of unidirectional rotary molecular motors. Stabilization of unstable intermediates is achieved below 95 K in propane solution for the structure with the fastest rotation rate, and below this temperature measurements on the rate limiting step in the rotation cycle can be performed to obtain activation parameters. The results are compared to measurements at ambient temperature using transient absorption spectroscopy, which show that behavior of these motors is similar over the full temperature range investigated, thereby allowing a maximum rotation rate of 3 MHz at room temperature under suitable irradiation conditions
Plasma Proteomic Signature in Overweight Girls Closely Correlates with Homeostasis Model Assessment (HOMA), an Objective Measure of Insulin Resistance
Obesity is known to be associated with a large number of long-term morbidities,
and while in some cases the relationship of obesity and the consequences is
clear (for example, excess weight and lower extremity orthopedic problems) in
others the mechanism is not as clear. One common system of categorizing
overweight in terms of the likelihood of negative consequences involves using
the concept of “metabolic syndrome”. We hypothesized that the
development of a plasma protein profile of overweight adolescents with and
without the metabolic syndrome might give a more precise and informative picture
of the disease process than the current clinical categorization and permit early
targeted intervention. For this paper, we used antibody microarrays to analyze
the plasma proteome of a group of 15 overweight female adolescent patients. Upon
analysis of the proteome, the overweight patients diverged from the
nonoverweight female controls. Furthermore, the overweight patients were divided
by the analysis into two population clusters, each with distinctive protein
expression patterns. Interestingly, the clusters were characterized by
differences in insulin resistance, as measured by HOMA. Categorization according
to the presence or absence of the metabolic syndrome did not yield such
clusters
Random walks - a sequential approach
In this paper sequential monitoring schemes to detect nonparametric drifts
are studied for the random walk case. The procedure is based on a kernel
smoother. As a by-product we obtain the asymptotics of the Nadaraya-Watson
estimator and its as- sociated sequential partial sum process under
non-standard sampling. The asymptotic behavior differs substantially from the
stationary situation, if there is a unit root (random walk component). To
obtain meaningful asymptotic results we consider local nonpara- metric
alternatives for the drift component. It turns out that the rate of convergence
at which the drift vanishes determines whether the asymptotic properties of the
monitoring procedure are determined by a deterministic or random function.
Further, we provide a theoretical result about the optimal kernel for a given
alternative
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