167 research outputs found

    A Robust Algorithm to Determine the Topology of Space from the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation

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    Satellite measurements of the cosmic microwave back-ground radiation will soon provide an opportunity to test whether the universe is multiply connected. This paper presents a new algorithm for deducing the topology of the universe from the microwave background data. Unlike an older algorithm, the new algorithm gives the curvature of space and the radius of the last scattering surface as outputs, rather than requiring them as inputs. The new algorithm is also more tolerant of errors in the observational data

    Cytokinesis is blocked in mammalian cells transfected with Chlamydia trachomatis gene CT223

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The chlamydiae alter many aspects of host cell biology, including the division process, but the molecular biology of these alterations remains poorly characterized. Chlamydial inclusion membrane proteins (Incs) are likely candidates for direct interactions with host cell cytosolic proteins, as they are secreted to the inclusion membrane and exposed to the cytosol. The <it>inc </it>gene <it>CT223 </it>is one of a sequential set of orfs that encode or are predicted to encode Inc proteins. CT223p is localized to the inclusion membrane in all tested <it>C. trachomatis </it>serovars.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A plasmid transfection approach was used to examine the function of the product of <it>CT223 </it>and other Inc proteins within uninfected mammalian cells. Fluorescence microscopy was used to demonstrate that <it>CT223</it>, and, to a lesser extent, adjacent <it>inc </it>genes, are capable of blocking host cell cytokinesis and facilitating centromere supranumeracy defects seen by others in chlamydiae-infected cells. Both phenotypes were associated with transfection of plasmids encoding the carboxy-terminal tail of CT223p, a region of the protein that is likely exposed to the cytosol in infected cells.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These studies suggest that certain Inc proteins block cytokinesis in <it>C. trachomatis</it>-infected cells. These results are consistent with the work of others showing chlamydial inhibition of host cell cytokinesis.</p

    Reconstructing the global topology of the universe from the cosmic microwave background

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    If the universe is multiply-connected and sufficiently small, then the last scattering surface wraps around the universe and intersects itself. Each circle of intersection appears as two distinct circles on the microwave sky. The present article shows how to use the matched circles to explicitly reconstruct the global topology of space.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, IOP format. To be published in the proceedings of the Cleveland Cosmology and Topology Workshop 17-19 Oct 1997. Submitted to Class. Quant. Gra

    Simulating Cosmic Microwave Background maps in multi-connected spaces

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    This article describes the computation of cosmic microwave background anisotropies in a universe with multi-connected spatial sections and focuses on the implementation of the topology in standard CMB computer codes. The key ingredient is the computation of the eigenmodes of the Laplacian with boundary conditions compatible with multi-connected space topology. The correlators of the coefficients of the decomposition of the temperature fluctuation in spherical harmonics are computed and examples are given for spatially flat spaces and one family of spherical spaces, namely the lens spaces. Under the hypothesis of Gaussian initial conditions, these correlators encode all the topological information of the CMB and suffice to simulate CMB maps.Comment: 33 pages, 55 figures, submitted to PRD. Higher resolution figures available on deman
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