5,582 research outputs found
Progress Report on Iowa State University Burroughs Endowment Activities
Faculty in the Department of Animal Science initiated soliciting of funds in 1987 to establish a permanent endowment to recognize the distinguished career and major contributions of Dr. Wise Burroughs, a distinguished professor in animal science at Iowa State University. The endowment was established in the Iowa State University Foundation in 1991. The purpose of the fund is to support research and graduate education in the areas of fundamental factors regulating growth in food-producing animals, with emphasis on ruminants; to enhance growth of animals with the goal of improving the competitive position of ruminants as food-producing animals; and to develop innovative approaches to ruminant nutrition and/or growth enhancement as a means to improve desirability of meat produced by food animals. Dr. Burroughs’ research resulted in important and significant developments in technology for modern production systems for beef cattle. He was widely known for his ability to communicate complex ideas and research results for use by those involved in the animal industry. The current Burroughs Team has established three research projects: 1) Ghrelin--How does ghrelin affect blood and body composition in rats?; 2) Use of 25- hydroxyvitamin D3 to improve tenderness of beef; 3) Redesigning beef cattle to have a more healthful fatty acid composition
Interaction of quasilocal harmonic modes and boson peak in glasses
The direct proportionality relation between the boson peak maximum in
glasses, , and the Ioffe-Regel crossover frequency for phonons,
, is established. For several investigated materials . At the frequency the mean free path of the
phonons becomes equal to their wavelength because of strong resonant
scattering on quasilocal harmonic oscillators. Above this frequency phonons
cease to exist. We prove that the established correlation between
and holds in the general case and is a direct consequence of
bilinear coupling of quasilocal oscillators with the strain field.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 1 figur
The Paper Industry: Strategic Alliances, Joint Ventures, and Electronic Commerce Are Reshaping Our Business Models
J. Ben Reeves, MBA, is a wood and fiber procurement manager, Georgia-Pacific Corperation, Lynchburg, VA 24503.
Deanna S. Stepp, MBA, CRP, is a marketing director, Lawrence Transportation, Roanoke, VA 24012.
Lewis E. Wertz, Jr., MBA, MSCE, P.E., is an engineer-planner, R & K Engineering Inc., Roanoke, VA 24012.
Dale A. Henderson, Ph.D., is assistant professor of management, Department of Management, Radford University, Radford, VA 24142
Estimation of Spin-Spin Interaction by Weak Measurement Scheme
Precisely knowing an interaction Hamiltonian is crucial to realize quantum
information tasks, especially to experimentally demonstrate a quantum computer
and a quantum memory. We propose a scheme to experimentally evaluate the
spin-spin interaction for a two-qubit system by the weak measurement technique
initiated by Yakir Aharonov and his colleagues. Furthermore, we numerically
confirm our proposed scheme in a specific system of a nitrogen vacancy center
in diamond. This means that the weak measurement can also be taken as a
concrete example of the quantum process tomography.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, 2 figures, to appear in Europhysics Letter
PIKES Analysis Reveals Response to Degraders and Key Regulatory Mechanisms of the CRL4 Network
Co-opting Cullin4 RING ubiquitin ligases (CRL4s) to inducibly degrade pathogenic proteins is emerging as a promising therapeutic strategy. Despite intense efforts to rationally design degrader molecules that co-opt CRL4s, much about the organization and regulation of these ligases remains elusive. Here, we establish protein interaction kinetics and estimation of stoichiometries (PIKES) analysis, a systematic proteomic profiling platform that integrates cellular engineering, affinity purification, chemical stabilization, and quantitative mass spectrometry to investigate the dynamics of interchangeable multiprotein complexes. Using PIKES, we show that ligase assemblies of Cullin4 with individual substrate receptors differ in abundance by up to 200-fold and that Cand1/2 act as substrate receptor exchange factors. Furthermore, degrader molecules can induce the assembly of their cognate CRL4, and higher expression of the associated substrate receptor enhances degrader potency. Beyond the CRL4 network, we show how PIKES can reveal systems level biochemistry for cellular protein networks important to drug development
Superconducting properties of nanocrystalline MgB thin films made by an in situ annealing process
We have studied the structural and superconducting properties of MgB thin
films made by pulsed laser deposition followed by in situ annealing. The
cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy reveals a nanocrystalline
mixture of textured MgO and MgB with very small grain sizes. A
zero-resistance transition temperature () of 34 K and a zero-field
critical current density () of A/cm were obtained.
The irreversibility field was 8 T at low temperatures, although severe
pinning instability was observed. These bulk-like superconducting properties
show that the in situ deposition process can be a viable candidate for MgB
Josephson junction technologies
Radiation Induced Degradation of the White Thermal Control Paints Z-93 and Z-93P
This paper details a comparison analysis of the zinc oxide pigmented white thermal control paints Z-93 and Z-93P. Both paints were simultaneously exposed to combined space environmental effects and analyzed using an in-vacuo reflectance technique. The dose applied to the paints was approximately equivalent to 5 years in a geosynchronous orbit. This comparison analysis showed that Z-93P is an acceptable substitute for Z-93. Irradiated samples of Z-93 and Z-93P were subjected to additional exposures of ultraviolet (UV) radiation and analyzed using the in-vacuo reflectance technique to investigate UV activated reflectance recovery. Both samples showed minimal UV activated reflectance recovery after an additional 190 equivalent sun hour (ESH) exposure. Reflectance response utilizing nitrogen as a repressurizing gas instead of air was also investigated. This investigation found the rates of reflectance recovery when repressurized with nitrogen are slower than when repressurized with air
- …