457 research outputs found
The properties of some substitute bearing alloys
A bearing is a means for supporting a load between rela-tively moving surfaces with as little friction as possible .' The plain bearings, used in the automobile , aircraft and other engineering industries, consist of
two surfaces, the shaft and the hearing, generally
separated by a film of lubricant. The so-called bear- ing alloys utilised for the purpose have to satisfy
some primary requirements such as suitable chemical
make up giving rise to a hard constituent embedded in
a soft matrix , and a certain range of physical
( melting point , density, thermal conductivity, etc.)
and mechanical (hardness , modulus of elasticity,
tensile strength, impact resistance and age-hardening characteristics) properties. Besides these, certain service properties such as wear, seizure-resistance , conformability , embeddability corrosion-resistance,
etc. are also to be complied with
Pure Cerebellar Ataxia with Homozygous Mutations in the PNPLA6 Gene
Autosomal-recessive cerebellar ataxias (ARCA) are clinically and genetically heterogeneous conditions primarily affecting the cerebellum. Mutations in the PNPLA6 gene have been identified as the cause of hereditary spastic paraplegia and complex forms of ataxia associated with retinal and endocrine manifestations in a field where the genotype-phenotype correlations are rapidly expanding. We identified two cousins from a consanguineous family belonging to a large Zoroastrian (Parsi) family residing in Mumbai, India, who presented with pure cerebellar ataxia without chorioretinal dystrophy or hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. We used a combined approach of clinical characterisation, homozygosity mapping, whole-exome and Sanger sequencing to identify the genetic defect in this family. The phenotype in the family was pure cerebellar ataxia. Homozygosity mapping revealed one large region of shared homozygosity at chromosome 19p13 between affected individuals. Within this region, whole-exome sequencing of the index case identified two novel homozygous missense variants in the PNPLA6 gene at c.3847G>A (p.V1283M) and c.3929A>T (p.D1310V) in exon 32. Both segregated perfectly with the disease in this large family, with only the two affected cousins being homozygous. We identified for the first time PNPLA6 mutations associated with pure cerebellar ataxia in a large autosomal-recessive Parsi kindred. Previous mutations in this gene have been associated with a more complex phenotype but the results here suggest an extension of the associated disease spectrum
Rolling tachyon solution of two-dimensional string theory
We consider a classical (string) field theory of matrix model which was
developed earlier in hep-th/9207011 and subsequent papers. This is a
noncommutative field theory where the noncommutativity parameter is the string
coupling . We construct a classical solution of this field theory and show
that it describes the complete time history of the recently found rolling
tachyon on an unstable D0 brane.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures, minor changes in text and additional references,
correction of decay time (version to appear in JHEP.
Nonperturbative effects and nonperturbative definitions in matrix models and topological strings
We develop techniques to compute multi-instanton corrections to the 1/N
expansion in matrix models described by orthogonal polynomials. These
techniques are based on finding trans-series solutions, i.e. formal solutions
with exponentially small corrections, to the recursion relations characterizing
the free energy. We illustrate this method in the Hermitian, quartic matrix
model, and we provide a detailed description of the instanton corrections in
the Gross-Witten-Wadia (GWW) unitary matrix model. Moreover, we use Borel
resummation techniques and results from the theory of resurgent functions to
relate the formal multi-instanton series to the nonperturbative definition of
the matrix model. We study this relation in the case of the GWW model and its
double-scaling limit, providing in this way a nice illustration of various
mechanisms connecting the resummation of perturbative series to nonperturbative
results, like the cancellation of nonperturbative ambiguities. Finally, we
argue that trans-series solutions are also relevant in the context of
topological string theory. In particular, we point out that in topological
string models with both a matrix model and a large N gauge theory description,
the nonperturbative, holographic definition involves a sum over the
multi-instanton sectors of the matrix modelComment: 50 pages, 12 figures, comments and references added, small
correction
Perinatal Bisphenol A Exposure Increases Estrogen Sensitivity of the Mammary Gland in Diverse Mouse Strains
BACKGROUND: Studies of low-dose effects of xenoestrogens have yielded conflicting results that may be attributed to differences in estrogen sensitivity between the rodent strains examined. Perinatal exposure of CD-1 mice to low doses of the xenoestrogen bisphenol A (BPA) alters peripubertal mammary gland development. Future studies to assess the role of estrogen receptors as mediators of BPA action require estrogen receptor knock-out mice that were generated on a C57Bl6 background. The sensitivity of the C57Bl6 strain to estradiol and BPA is unknown. OBJECTIVES: In the present study we examined whether the mammary glands of CD-1 and C57Bl6 mice exhibited similar responses to 17β-estradiol (E(2)) and whether perinatal exposure to BPA equally enhanced sensitivity of the mammary glands to E(2) at puberty. METHODS: Immature mice were ovariectomized and treated for 10 days with one of eight doses of E(2). Morphological mammary gland parameters were examined to identify doses producing half-maximal effects. Mice were exposed perinatally to 0 or 250 ng BPA/kg body weight (bw)/day from gestational day 8 until postnatal day (PND) 2. On PND25, female offspring were ovariectomized and given an estrogen challenge of 0, 0.5, or 1 μg E(2)/kg bw/day for 10 days. Morphometric parameters of the mammary gland were compared between strains. RESULTS: Both strains exhibited similar responses to E(2). Perinatal BPA exposure altered responses to E(2) at puberty for several parameters in both strains, although the effect in CD-1 was slightly more pronounced. CONCLUSION: Both mouse strains provide adequate models for the study of perinatal exposure to xenoestrogens
Fermions in the harmonic potential and string theory
We explicitly derive collective field theory description for the system of
fermions in the harmonic potential. This field theory appears to be a coupled
system of free scalar and (modified) Liouville field. This theory should be
considered as an exact bosonization of the system of non-relativistic fermions
in the harmonic potential. Being surprisingly similar to the world-sheet
formulation of c=1 string theory, this theory has quite different physical
features and it is conjectured to give space-time description of the string
theory, dual to the fermions in the harmonic potential. A vertex operator in
this theory is shown to be a field theoretical representation of the local
fermion operator, thus describing a D0 brane in the string language. Possible
generalization of this result and its derivation for the case of c=1 string
theory (fermions in the inverse harmonic potential) is discussed.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX2e. v2 - minor correction
Periodontal diagnosis in the context of the 2017 classification system of periodontal diseases and conditions: Presentation of a middle-aged patient with localised periodontitis
The objective of this case report is to illustrate the diagnosis and classification of periodontitis according to the 2017 classification system as recommended in the British Society of Periodontology (BSP) implementation plan. We describe a case of a patient who was diagnosed with 'localised periodontitis; stage II, grade B; currently unstable'. The present case report presents an example for the application of the new classification system and illustrates how the new classification system captures disease severity, extent and disease susceptibility by staging and grading periodontitis
Geometrodynamics of spherically symmetric Lovelock gravity
We derive the Hamiltonian for spherically symmetric Lovelock gravity using
the geometrodynamics approach pioneered by Kucha\v{r} in the context of
four-dimensional general relativity. When written in terms of the areal radius,
the generalized Misner-Sharp mass and their conjugate momenta, the generic
Lovelock action and Hamiltonian take on precisely the same simple forms as in
general relativity. This result supports the interpretation of Lovelock gravity
as the natural higher-dimensional extension of general relativity. It also
provides an important first step towards the study of the quantum mechanics,
Hamiltonian thermodynamics and formation of generic Lovelock black holes.Comment: 10 pages, references and derivation details added, final version
accepted by CQG (Fast Track
Non-perturbative equivalences among large N gauge theories with adjoint and bifundamental matter fields
We prove an equivalence, in the large N limit, between certain U(N) gauge
theories containing adjoint representation matter fields and their orbifold
projections. Lattice regularization is used to provide a non-perturbative
definition of these theories; our proof applies in the strong coupling, large
mass phase of the theories. Equivalence is demonstrated by constructing and
comparing the loop equations for a parent theory and its orbifold projections.
Loop equations for both expectation values of single-trace observables, and for
connected correlators of such observables, are considered; hence the
demonstrated non-perturbative equivalence applies to the large N limits of both
string tensions and particle spectra.Comment: 40 pages, JHEP styl
Effect of water deficit at different growth phases of peanut. II. Response to drought during preflowering phase
In the 1980-81 and 1981-82 post-rainy seasons, a study was conducted on a medium deep Alfisol at ICRISAT in central India, to examine the responses of groundnuts cv. Robut 33-1 to 3 levels of soil water deficit during preflowering phase relative to an adequately irrigated control. Moderate water deficits during the preflowering phase increased subsequent crop growth and pod growth rates in 1980-81 but not in 1981-82. Differences in flowering and total pod numbers between treatments were relatively small compared with the subsequent differences in pod setting and maturity. In both seasons, greater synchrony of pod set in the moderately stressed plots resulted in a greater proportion of mature pods at final harvest. The most severely stressed plot had lower yields despite adequate irrigation subsequent to the preflowering water deficit
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