4,780 research outputs found
Microsomal membrane subfractionation by a lectin affinity method
AbstractConcanavalin A-agarose treatment of rat liver post-mitochondrial supernatant removes a fraction rich in cholesterol and 5'-nucleotidase activity but low in glucose-6-phosphatase. At the same time, radiolabel associated with the cell surface is removed. We interpret these findings as evidence that concanavalin A binds to, and under these circumstances will remove, fragments of plasma membrane present in the microsomal fraction and believe that this may be of use in the gentle, and rapid subfractionation of microsomal membranes
On the Fluctuation Relation for Nose-Hoover Boundary Thermostated Systems
We discuss the transient and steady state fluctuation relation for a
mechanical system in contact with two deterministic thermostats at different
temperatures. The system is a modified Lorentz gas in which the fixed
scatterers exchange energy with the gas of particles, and the thermostats are
modelled by two Nos\'e-Hoover thermostats applied at the boundaries of the
system. The transient fluctuation relation, which holds only for a precise
choice of the initial ensemble, is verified at all times, as expected. Times
longer than the mesoscopic scale, needed for local equilibrium to be settled,
are required if a different initial ensemble is considered. This shows how the
transient fluctuation relation asymptotically leads to the steady state
relation when, as explicitly checked in our systems, the condition found in
[D.J. Searles, {\em et al.}, J. Stat. Phys. 128, 1337 (2007)], for the validity
of the steady state fluctuation relation, is verified. For the steady state
fluctuations of the phase space contraction rate \zL and of the dissipation
function \zW, a similar relaxation regime at shorter averaging times is
found. The quantity \zW satisfies with good accuracy the fluctuation relation
for times larger than the mesoscopic time scale; the quantity \zL appears to
begin a monotonic convergence after such times. This is consistent with the
fact that \zW and \zL differ by a total time derivative, and that the tails
of the probability distribution function of \zL are Gaussian.Comment: Major revision. Fig.10 was added. Version to appear in Journal of
Statistical Physic
158µJ pulses from a single transverse mode, large mode-area EDFA
We report the amplification of 10pJ-100pJ, semiconductor diode pulses up to an energy of 158µJ and peak powers >100kW in a multi-stage fibre amplifier chain based on a single-mode, large mode-area erbium doped amplifier design. These results represent the highest single-mode pulse energy ever extracted from any doped fibre system
Ferenc Kozár – A dedicated and prolific worker on scale insects
At the XII Meeting of the International Symposium on Scale Insect Studies, delegates and coccidologists worldwide congratulate Dr Ferenc Kozár for his work on scale insects during over 40 years of concentrated study. Ferenc is well known for his contributions to economic and taxonomic work on scale insects. He entered the Agricultural University in Budapest, Hungary, in 1962, and then the University of Leningrad (now St Petersburg) and returned to Hungary where he has been employed as Research Scientist and then Head of the Department of Zoology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest until 1990. He then became Research Consultant, a position he has held since. His list of publications includes nine books and about 220 papers in scientific journals. He has described 13 new family-group names, 32 new genera, and about 175 new species. Much of this work has been done since 1990. We expect a steady flow of publications in the future
Ostracods from freshwater and brackish environments of the Carboniferous of the Midland Valley of Scotland : the early colonization of terrestrial water bodies
The Mississippian Strathclyde Group of the Midland Valley of Scotland yields some of the earliest non-marine ostracods. The succession records shallow marine, deltaic, estuarine, lagoonal, lacustrine, fluvial and swamp environments representing a series of staging-posts between fully marine and limnetic settings. Macrofossils and ostracods are assigned to marine, marginal marine, brackish and freshwater environments based on their faunal assemblage patterns. Key brackish to freshwater ostracods are Geisina arcuata, Paraparchites circularis n. sp., Shemonaella ornata n. sp. and Silenites sp. A, associated with the bivalves Anthraconaia, Carbonicola, Cardiopteridium, Curvirimula, Naiadites, the microconchid ‘Spirorbis’, Spinicaudata and fish. Many Platycopina and Paraparchiticopina ostracods are interpreted as euryhaline, which corresponds with their occurrence in marine to coastal plain water bodies, and supports the ‘estuary effect’ hypothesis of non-marine colonization. The success of non-marine colonization by ostracods was dependent on the intrinsic adaptations of ostracod species to lower salinities, such as new reproductive strategies and the timing of extrinsic mechanisms to drive non-marine colonization, such as sea-level change. The genus Carbonita is the oldest and most common freshwater ostracod, and went on to dominate freshwater environments in the Late Palaeozoic
The Steady State Fluctuation Relation for the Dissipation Function
We give a proof of transient fluctuation relations for the entropy production
(dissipation function) in nonequilibrium systems, which is valid for most time
reversible dynamics. We then consider the conditions under which a transient
fluctuation relation yields a steady state fluctuation relation for driven
nonequilibrium systems whose transients relax, producing a unique
nonequilibrium steady state. Although the necessary and sufficient conditions
for the production of a unique nonequilibrium steady state are unknown, if such
a steady state exists, the generation of the steady state fluctuation relation
from the transient relation is shown to be very general. It is essentially a
consequence of time reversibility and of a form of decay of correlations in the
dissipation, which is needed also for, e.g., the existence of transport
coefficients. Because of this generality the resulting steady state fluctuation
relation has the same degree of robustness as do equilibrium thermodynamic
equalities. The steady state fluctuation relation for the dissipation stands in
contrast with the one for the phase space compression factor, whose convergence
is problematic, for systems close to equilibrium. We examine some model
dynamics that have been considered previously, and show how they are described
in the context of this work.Comment: 30 pages, 1 figur
CO 2 storage: setting a simple bound on potential leakage through the overburden in the North Sea Basin
So-called ‘gas chimneys’ are likely to provide the main geological risk for out-of-reservoir CO2 migration in thick post-rift overburden successions such as typify the central and northern North Sea. Here we postulate that, in the North Sea, such chimneys formed in the geological past, with a likely peak activity at the end of the ice-age, and are currently rather dormant. With this postulate we set a bound on possible bulk migration rates considering both advective and diffusive flow and based on a hypothetical CO2 storage site at 800 m depth. Calculated migration velocities into the overburden, by either advection or diffusion, are very low, at less than one metre per thousand years. Consequently flux rates are also very low, several orders of magnitude below the leakage thresholds that have been suggested as ensuring effective mitigation performance. Time-lapse seismic reflection data from the Sleipner storage site, which is located beneath some small chimney features, show no evidence of CO2 migration into the overburden. This cannot prove the postulate, because the time interval spanned by the seismic surveys is just a few years, but it is nevertheless consistent with it
FLIC-Overlap Fermions and Topology
APE smearing the links in the irrelevant operators of clover fermions
(Fat-Link Irrelevant Clover (FLIC) fermions) provides significant improvement
in the condition number of the Hermitian-Dirac operator and gives rise to a
factor of two savings in computing the overlap operator. This report
investigates the effects of using a highly-improved definition of the lattice
field-strength tensor F_mu_nu in the fermion action, made possible through the
use of APE-smeared fat links in the construction of the irrelevant operators.
Spurious double-zero crossings in the spectral flow of the Hermitian-Wilson
Dirac operator associated with lattice artifacts at the scale of the lattice
spacing are removed with FLIC fermions composed with an O(a^4)-improved lattice
field strength tensor. Hence, FLIC-Overlap fermions provide an additional
benefit to the overlap formalism: a correct realization of topology in the
fermion sector on the lattice.Comment: Lattice2002(chiral
A systematic review of the nutritional consequences of esophagectomy
Background & aims
As improved outcomes after esophagectomy have been observed over the last two decades, the focus on care has shifted to survivorship and quality of life. The aim of this review was to determine changes in nutrition after esophagectomy and to assess the evidence for extended nutrition support.
Methods
A search strategy was developed to identify primary research reporting change in nutritional status a minimum of one month after esophagectomy.
Results
Changes in nutritional parameters reported by 18 studies indicated a weight loss of 5–12% at six months postoperatively. More than half of patients lost >10% of body weight at 12 months. One study reported a persistent weight loss of 14% from baseline three years after surgery. Three studies reporting on longer term follow up noted that 27%–95% of patients failed to regain their baseline weight. Changes in dietary intake (three studies) indicated inadequate energy and protein intake up to three years after surgery. Global quality of life scores reported in one study correlated with better weight preservation. There were a high frequency of gastrointestinal symptoms reported in six studies, most notably in the first year after surgery, but persisting up to 19 years. Extended enteral nutrition on a selective basis has been reported in several studies.
Conclusions
Nutritional status is compromised in the months/years following oesophagectomy and may never return to baseline levels. The causes/consequences of weight loss/impaired nutritional intake require further investigation. The role of extended nutritional support in this population remains unclear
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