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Cell vs. bacterial viability in the presence of host defence peptides and RGD
yesMore than 2 million people/year suffer a bone fracture in the UK1. Reconstruction of bone defects represents a major clinical challenge and is addressed using a number of medical devices. Although medical device compositions and applications may differ widely, all attract microorganisms and represent niches for medical device associated infections. For open fractures, the risk of infection can be 55%2. These infections are often resistant to many of the currently available antibiotics and represent a huge and growing financial and healthcare burden. The aim of this study was a fundamental understanding of how the presence of host defence peptides (HDPs)3 and/or RGD can influence the outcome of cell vs. bacterial viability and proliferation.Presented at the conference: eCM XVI - Bone and Implant Infection
June 24-26, 2015, Convention Centre, Davos Platz, Switzerland
The Quark Propagator from the Dyson-Schwinger Equations: I. the Chiral Solution
Within the framework of the Dyson-Schwinger equations in the axial gauge, we
study the effect that non-perturbative glue has on the quark propagator. We
show that Ward-Takahashi identities, combined with the requirement of matching
perturbative QCD at high momentum transfer, guarantee the multiplicative
renormalisability of the answer. Technically, the matching with perturbation
theory is accomplished by the introduction of a transverse part to the
quark-gluon vertex. We show that this transverse vertex is crucial for chiral
symmetry breaking, and that massless solutions exist below a critical value of
the strong coupling constant. Using the gluon propagator that we previously
calculated, we obtain small corrections to the quark propagator, which keeps a
pole at the origin in the chiral phase.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures; McGill/94-24, SHEP 93/94-26 We generalise our
results by showing that they are not sensitive to the specific choice that we
make for the transverse vertex. We illustrate that fact in two new figure
Discovery of a radio transient in M81
We report the discovery of a radio transient in the spiral galaxy M81. The transient was detected in early 2015 as part of a two-year survey of M81 made up of 12 epochs using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array. While undetected on 2014 September 12, the source was first detected on 2015 January 2, from which point it remained visible at an approximately constant luminosity of LR, ν = 1.5 ± 0.1 × 1024 erg s−1 Hz−1 at the observing frequency of 6 GHz for at least 2 months. Assuming this is a synchrotron event with a rise-time between 2.6 and 112 d, the peak luminosity (at equipartition) corresponds to a minimum energy of 1044 ≾ Emin ≾ 1046 erg and jet power of Pmin ∼ 1039 erg s−1, which are higher than most known X-ray binaries. Given its longevity, lack of short-term radio variability, and the absence of any multiwavelength counterpart (X-ray luminosity Lx ≾ 1036 erg s−1), it does not behave like known Galactic or extragalactic X-ray binaries. The M81 transient radio properties more closely resemble the unidentified radio transient 43.78+59.3 discovered in M82, which has been suggested to be a radio nebula associated with an accreting source similar to SS 433. One possibility is that both the new M81 transient and the M82 transient may be the birth of a short-lived radio bubble associated with a discrete accretion event similar to those observed from the ULX Holmberg II X-1. However, it is not possible to rule out other identifications including long-term supernova shockwave interactions with the surrounding medium from a faint supernova or a background active galaxy
Legal Steps Outside the Climate Convention: Litigation as a Tool to Address Climate Change
This article examines the recent academic interest in litigation as a tool to address climate change, as well as the surge of legal actions worldwide to bring the problem to the attention of judiciaries. This new interest reveals the frustration of legal scholars and activists at the slow rate at which policy makers are addressing the climate change problem. This article shows the slow build-up of academic interest in litigation, before moving on to analyse the kinds of legal causes of action that are being used in different parts of the world. Most of these cases have not been fully resolved, and it is more than likely that the judgments may not always be favourable to the plaintiffs, but at least a first step has been made to involve yet another forum for addressing the climate change problem. © 2007 The Author. Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Generation of ultrabright beams in high energy Nd:glass and KrF laser systems
The development of ultrabright lasers is progressing rapidly particularly in the direction of table-top-terawatt systems operating at high pulse repetition rate with relatively low pulse energy. The highest pulse energies and highest absolute powers are being generated by the adaptation of larger-scale high energy laser systems operating in single pulse mode. The maximum focused intensity from either type of laser is determined by the beam brightness B which can be expressed in units of Watts cm where P is the power, lambda the wavelength and S the Strehl ratio, quantifying the ratio of brightness in a beam with less than diffraction limited quality to that in a diffraction limited beam
Social Order and Adaptability in Animal and Human Cultures as Analogues for Agent Communities: Toward a Policy-Based Approach
Abstract. In this paper we discuss some of the ways social order is maintained in animal and human realms, with the goal of enriching our thinking about mechanisms that might be employed in developing similar means of ordering communities of agents. We present examples from our current work in human-agent teamwork, and we speculate about some new directions this kind of research might take. Since communities also need to change over time to cope with changing circumstances, we also speculate on means that regulatory bodies can use to adapt. 1
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