21,210 research outputs found
Electric Dipole Moments in the Generic Supersymmetric Standard Model
The generic supersymmetric standard model is a model built from a
supersymmetrized standard model field spectrum the gauge symmetries only. The
popular minimal supersymmetric standard model differs from the generic version
in having R-parity imposed by hand. We review an efficient formulation of the
model and some of the recently obtained interesting phenomenological features,
focusing on one-loop contributions to fermion electric dipole moments.Comment: 1+7 pages Revtex 3 figures incoporated; talk at NANP'0
Induced Growth of Asymmetric Nanocantilever Arrays on Polar Surfaces
©2003 The American Physical Society. The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.91.185502DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.91.185502We report that the Zn-terminated ZnO (0001) polar surface is chemically active and the oxygenterminated (0001) polar surface is inert in the growth of nanocantilever arrays. Longer and wider "comblike" nanocantilever arrays are grown from the (0001)-Zn surface, which is suggested to be a self-catalyzed process due to the enrichment of Zn at the growth front. The chemically inactive
(0001)-O surface typically does not initiate any growth, but controlling experimental conditions could lead to the growth of shorter and narrower nanocantilevers from the intersections between (0001)-O with (0110) surfaces
Characterization of the mesostructural organization of cement particles in fresh cement paste
Comparative study on the mesostructures of fresh cement paste (FCP) in different dispersion mediums was carried out aiming at characterizing the structural organization of cement particles in FCP at a mesoscopic scale and establishing the correlation of mesostructure with rheological properties. For the first time, Morphologi G3 was adopted to in-situ characterize the mesostructure of FCP. Several dispersion mediums including air, deionized water, ethanol and an aqueous solution of ethanol were chosen to study the dispersion of cement particles in the selected mediums. Superplasticizers, as dispersing aids for cement particles, were added to change the dispersion of cement particles. Results show that Morphologi G3 with the high sensitivity and the high resolution is a powerful tool for in-situ characterization of the mesostructure of FCP by providing high-quality images associated with structural parameters. The structural parameters including particle size, circularity and fractal dimension of particle spatial distribution (Dpd) allow to quantitatively characterize the organization of cement particles in FCP at a mesoscopic scale, through which the relationship between the mesostructure and the rheological behavior of FCP was established. Higher fluidity signifies larger Dpd and circularity but a lower mean particle size. Moreover, the mean particle size and Dpd are more sensitive to indicate the fluidity change
Double-peaked Narrow Emission-line Galaxies in LAMOST Survey
We outline a full-scale search for galaxies exhibiting double-peaked profiles
of promi- nent narrow emission lines, motivated by the prospect of finding
objects related to merging galaxies, and even dual active galactic nuclei
candidates as by-product, from the Large Sky Area Multi-object Fiber
Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST) Data Re- lease 4. We assemble a large sample
of 325 candidates with double-peaked or strong asymmetric narrow emission
lines, with 33 objects therein appearing optically resolved dual-cored
structures, close companions or signs of recent interaction on the Sloan Dig-
ital Sky Survey images. A candidate from LAMOST (J074810.95+281349.2) is also
stressed here based on the kinematic and spatial decompositions of the
double-peaked narrow emission line target, with analysis from the
cross-referenced Mapping Nearby Galaxies at the Apache Point Observatory
(MaNGA) survey datacube. MaNGA en- ables us to constrain the origin of double
peaks for these sources, and with the IFU data we infer that the most promising
origin of double-peaked profiles for LAMOST J074810.95+281349.2 is the
`Rotation Dominated + Disturbance' structure.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted by MNRA
Valosin-containing protein regulates the proteasome-mediated degradation of DNA-PKcs in glioma cells.
DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) has an important role in the repair of DNA damage and regulates the radiation sensitivity of glioblastoma cells. The VCP (valosine-containing protein), a chaperone protein that regulates ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation, is phosphorylated by DNA-PK and recruited to DNA double-strand break sites to regulate DNA damage repair. However, it is not clear whether VCP is involved in DNA-PKcs (DNA-PK catalytic subunit) degradation or whether it regulates the radiosensitivity of glioblastoma. Our data demonstrated that DNA-PKcs was ubiquitinated and bound to VCP. VCP knockdown resulted in the accumulation of the DNA-PKcs protein in glioblastoma cells, and the proteasome inhibitor MG132 synergised this increase. As expected, this increase promoted the efficiency of DNA repair in several glioblastoma cell lines; in turn, this enhanced activity decreased the radiation sensitivity and prolonged the survival fraction of glioblastoma cells in vitro. Moreover, the VCP knockdown in glioblastoma cells reduced the survival time of the xenografted mice with radiation treatment relative to the control xenografted glioblastoma mice. In addition, the VCP protein was also downregulated in ~25% of GBM tissues from patients (WHO, grade IV astrocytoma), and the VCP protein level was correlated with patient survival (R(2)=0.5222, P<0.05). These findings demonstrated that VCP regulates DNA-PKcs degradation and increases the sensitivity of GBM cells to radiation
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