4,100 research outputs found
The fate of the Deep Western Boundary Current in the South Atlantic
The pathways of recently ventilated North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) are part of the lower limb of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). In the South Atlantic these pathways have been the subject of discussion for years, mostly due to the lack of observations. Knowledge of the pathways of the AMOC in the South Atlantic is a first order prerequisite for understanding the fluxes of climatically important properties. In this paper, historical and new observations, including hydrographic and oxygen sections, Argo data, and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), are examined together with two different analyzes of the Ocean general circulation model For the Earth Simulator (OFES) to trace the pathway of the recently ventilated NADW through the South Atlantic. CLIVAR-era CFCs, oxygen and salinity clearly show that the strongest NADW pathway in the South Atlantic is along the western boundary (similar to the North Atlantic). In addition to the western boundary pathway, tracers show an eastward spreading of NADW between ~17 and 25°S. Analyzed together with the results of earlier studies, the observations and model output presented here indicate that after crossing the equator, the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) transports water with the characteristics of NADW and a total volume transport of approximately 14Sv (1Sv=106m3s-1). It crosses 5°S as a narrow western boundary current and becomes dominated by eddies further south. When this very energetic eddying flow reaches the Vitória-Trindade Ridge (~20°S), the flow follows two different pathways. The main portion of the NADW flow continues along the continental shelf of South America in the form of a strong reformed DWBC, while a smaller portion, about 22% of the initial transport, flows towards the interior of the basin
Corner contributions to holographic entanglement entropy
The entanglement entropy of three-dimensional conformal field theories
contains a universal contribution coming from corners in the entangling
surface. We study these contributions in a holographic framework and, in
particular, we consider the effects of higher curvature interactions in the
bulk gravity theory. We find that for all of our holographic models, the corner
contribution is only modified by an overall factor but the functional
dependence on the opening angle is not modified by the new gravitational
interactions. We also compare the dependence of the corner term on the new
gravitational couplings to that for a number of other physical quantities, and
we show that the ratio of the corner contribution over the central charge
appearing in the two-point function of the stress tensor is a universal
function for all of the holographic theories studied here. Comparing this
holographic result to the analogous functions for free CFT's, we find fairly
good agreement across the full range of the opening angle. However, there is a
precise match in the limit where the entangling surface becomes smooth, i.e.,
the angle approaches , and we conjecture the corresponding ratio is a
universal constant for all three-dimensional conformal field theories. In this
paper, we expand on the holographic calculations in our previous letter
arXiv:1505.04804, where this conjecture was first introduced.Comment: 62 pages, 6 figures, 1 table; v2: minor modifications to match
published version, typos fixe
Star Formation Rate Indicators in Wide-Field Infrared Survey Preliminary Release
With the goal of investigating the degree to which theMIR luminosity in
theWidefield Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) traces the SFR, we analyze 3.4,
4.6, 12 and 22 {\mu}m data in a sample of {\guillemotright} 140,000
star-forming galaxies or star-forming regions covering a wide range in
metallicity 7.66 < 12 + log(O/H) < 9.46, with redshift z < 0.4. These
star-forming galaxies or star-forming regions are selected by matching the WISE
Preliminary Release Catalog with the star-forming galaxy Catalog in SDSS DR8
provided by JHU/MPA 1.We study the relationship between the luminosity at 3.4,
4.6, 12 and 22 {\mu}m from WISE and H\alpha luminosity in SDSS DR8. From these
comparisons, we derive reference SFR indicators for use in our analysis. Linear
correlations between SFR and the 3.4, 4.6, 12 and 22 {\mu}m luminosity are
found, and calibrations of SFRs based on L(3.4), L(4.6), L(12) and L(22) are
proposed. The calibrations hold for galaxies with verified spectral
observations. The dispersion in the relation between 3.4, 4.6, 12 and 22 {\mu}m
luminosity and SFR relates to the galaxy's properties, such as 4000 {\deg}A
break and galaxy color.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
The first microbial colonizers of the human gut: composition, activities, and health implications of the infant gut microbiota
The human gut microbiota is engaged in multiple interactions affecting host health during the host's entire life span. Microbes colonize the neonatal gut immediately following birth. The establishment and interactive development of this early gut microbiota are believed to be (at least partially) driven and modulated by specific compounds present in human milk. It has been shown that certain genomes of infant gut commensals, in particular those of bifidobacterial species, are genetically adapted to utilize specific glycans of this human secretory fluid, thus representing a very intriguing example of host-microbe coevolution, where both partners are believed to benefit. In recent years, various metagenomic studies have tried to dissect the composition and functionality of the infant gut microbiome and to explore the distribution across the different ecological niches of the infant gut biogeography of the corresponding microbial consortia, including those corresponding to bacteria and viruses, in healthy and ill subjects. Such analyses have linked certain features of the microbiota/microbiome, such as reduced diversity or aberrant composition, to intestinal illnesses in infants or disease states that are manifested at later stages of life, including asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, and metabolic disorders. Thus, a growing number of studies have reported on how the early human gut microbiota composition/development may affect risk factors related to adult health conditions. This concept has fueled the development of strategies to shape the infant microbiota composition based on various functional food products. In this review, we describe the infant microbiota, the mechanisms that drive its establishment and composition, and how microbial consortia may be molded by natural or artificial interventions. Finally, we discuss the relevance of key microbial players of the infant gut microbiota, in particular bifidobacteria, with respect to their role in health and disease
Evaluation method of human upper limb movement function based on Fitts′ law
2001-2002 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
The problematic backreaction of SUSY-breaking branes
In this paper we investigate the localisation of SUSY-breaking branes which,
in the smeared approximation, support specific non-BPS vacua. We show, for a
wide class of boundary conditions, that there is no flux vacuum when the branes
are described by a genuine delta-function. Even more, we find that the smeared
solution is the unique solution with a regular brane profile. Our setup
consists of a non-BPS AdS_7 solution in massive IIA supergravity with smeared
anti-D6-branes and fluxes T-dual to ISD fluxes in IIB supergravity.Comment: 27 pages, Latex2e, 5 figure
Can disordered mobile phone use be considered a behavioral addiction? An update on current evidence and a comprehensive model for future research
Despite the many positive outcomes, excessive mobile phone use is now often associated with potentially harmful and/or disturbing behaviors (e.g., symptoms of deregulated use, negative impact on various aspects of daily life such as relationship problems, and work intrusion). Problematic mobile phone use (PMPU) has generally been considered as a behavioral addiction that shares many features with more established drug addictions. In light of the most recent data, the current paper reviews the validity of the behavioral addiction model when applied to PMPU. On the whole, it is argued that the evidence supporting PMPU as an addictive behavior is scarce. In particular, it lacks studies that definitively show behavioral and neurobiological similarities between mobile phone addiction and other types of legitimate addictive behaviors. Given this context, an integrative pathway model is proposed that aims to provide a theoretical framework to guide future research in the field of PMPU. This model highlights that PMPU is a heterogeneous and multi-faceted condition
Moduli Spaces of Cold Holographic Matter
We use holography to study (3+1)-dimensional N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills
theory with gauge group SU(Nc), in the large-Nc and large-coupling limits,
coupled to a single massless (n+1)-dimensional hypermultiplet in the
fundamental representation of SU(Nc), with n=3,2,1. In particular, we study
zero-temperature states with a nonzero baryon number charge density, which we
call holographic matter. We demonstrate that a moduli space of such states
exists in these theories, specifically a Higgs branch parameterized by the
expectation values of scalar operators bilinear in the hypermultiplet scalars.
At a generic point on the Higgs branch, the R-symmetry and gauge group are
spontaneously broken to subgroups. Our holographic calculation consists of
introducing a single probe Dp-brane into AdS5 times S^5, with p=2n+1=7,5,3,
introducing an electric flux of the Dp-brane worldvolume U(1) gauge field, and
then obtaining explicit solutions for the worldvolume fields dual to the scalar
operators that parameterize the Higgs branch. In all three cases, we can
express these solutions as non-singular self-dual U(1) instantons in a
four-dimensional space with a metric determined by the electric flux. We
speculate on the possibility that the existence of Higgs branches may point the
way to a counting of the microstates producing a nonzero entropy in holographic
matter. Additionally, we speculate on the possible classification of
zero-temperature, nonzero-density states described holographically by probe
D-branes with worldvolume electric flux.Comment: 56 pages, 8 PDF images, 4 figure
Phenotypic covariance of longevity, immunity and stress resistance in the Caenorhabditis nematodes
Background \ud
Ageing, immunity and stresstolerance are inherent characteristics of all organisms. In animals, these traits are regulated, at least in part, by forkhead transcription factors in response to upstream signals from the Insulin/Insulin– like growth factor signalling (IIS) pathway. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, these phenotypes are molecularly linked such that activation of the forkhead transcription factor DAF-16 both extends lifespan and simultaneously increases immunity and stress resistance. It is known that lifespan varies significantly among the Caenorhabditis species but, although DAF-16 signalling is highly conserved, it is unclear whether this phenotypic linkage occurs in other species. Here we investigate this phenotypic covariance by comparing longevity, stress resistance and immunity in four \ud
Caenorhabditis species. \ud
\ud
Methodology/Principal Findings \ud
We show using phenotypic analysis of DAF-16 influenced phenotypes that among four closely related Caenorhabditis nematodes, the gonochoristic species (Caenorhabditis remanei and Caenorhabditis brenneri) have diverged \ud
significantly with a longer lifespan, improved stress resistance and higher immunity than the hermaphroditic species (C. elegans and Caenorhabditis briggsae). Interestingly, we also observe significant differences in expression levels between the daf-16 homologues in these species using Real-Time PCR, which positively correlate with the observed phenotypes. Finally, we provide additional evidence in support of a role for DAF-16 in regulating phenotypic coupling by using a combination of wildtype isolates, constitutively active daf-16 mutants and bioinformatic analysis. \ud
\ud
Conclusions \ud
The gonochoristic species display a significantly longer lifespan (p < 0.0001)and more robust immune and stress response (p<0.0001, thermal stress; p<0.01, heavy metal stress; p<0.0001, pathogenic stress) than the hermaphroditic species. Our data suggests that divergence in DAF-16 mediated phenotypes may underlie many of the differences observed between these four species of Caenorhabditis nematodes. These findings are further supported by the correlative higher daf-16 expression levels among the gonochoristic species and significantly higher lifespan, immunity and stress tolerance in the constitutively active daf-16 hermaphroditic mutants
Aspects of holography for theories with hyperscaling violation
We analyze various aspects of the recently proposed holographic theories with
general dynamical critical exponent z and hyperscaling violation exponent
. We first find the basic constraints on from the gravity
side, and compute the stress-energy tensor expectation values and scalar
two-point functions. Massive correlators exhibit a nontrivial exponential
behavior at long distances, controlled by . At short distance, the
two-point functions become power-law, with a universal form for .
Next, the calculation of the holographic entanglement entropy reveals the
existence of novel phases which violate the area law. The entropy in these
phases has a behavior that interpolates between that of a Fermi surface and
that exhibited by systems with extensive entanglement entropy. Finally, we
describe microscopic embeddings of some metrics into full
string theory models -- these metrics characterize large regions of the
parameter space of Dp-brane metrics for . For instance, the theory of
N D2-branes in IIA supergravity has z=1 and over a wide range
of scales, at large .Comment: 35 pages; v2: new references added; v3: proper reference [14] added;
v4: minor clarification
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