1,840 research outputs found

    Recent highlights from BaBar

    Get PDF
    We report on recent results from the BaBar experiment using the complete dataset collected at the Υ(4S). Three of the analyses presented here are time-dependent: the first observation of time-reversal violation, a new measurement of CP violation in B0 → D∗+D∗− decays, and the search for CP violation in B0-¯B0 mixing by partially reconstructing B0 → D∗lν decays. Three time-independent analyses search for new physics in the decays: B → K(∗)ν¯ν, B → π/ηl+l−, and B → D(∗)τν

    Watersheds are Schramm-Loewner Evolution curves

    Full text link
    We show that in the continuum limit watersheds dividing drainage basins are Schramm-Loewner Evolution (SLE) curves, being described by one single parameter κ\kappa. Several numerical evaluations are applied to ascertain this. All calculations are consistent with SLEκ_\kappa, with κ=1.734±0.005\kappa=1.734\pm0.005, being the only known physical example of an SLE with κ<2\kappa<2. This lies outside the well-known duality conjecture, bringing up new questions regarding the existence and reversibility of dual models. Furthermore it constitutes a strong indication for conformal invariance in random landscapes and suggests that watersheds likely correspond to a logarithmic Conformal Field Theory (CFT) with central charge c7/2c\approx-7/2.Comment: 5 pages and 4 figure

    Watersheds in disordered media

    Get PDF
    This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2015.00005/full#h11.What is the best way to divide a rugged landscape? Since ancient times, watersheds separating adjacent water systems that flow, for example, toward different seas, have been used to delimit boundaries. Interestingly, serious and even tense border disputes between countries have relied on the subtle geometrical properties of these tortuous lines. For instance, slight and even anthropogenic modifications of landscapes can produce large changes in a watershed, and the effects can be highly nonlocal. Although the watershed concept arises naturally in geomorphology, where it plays a fundamental role in water management, landslide, and flood prevention, it also has important applications in seemingly unrelated fields such as image processing and medicine. Despite the far-reaching consequences of the scaling properties on watershed-related hydrological and political issues, it was only recently that a more profound and revealing connection has been disclosed between the concept of watershed and statistical physics of disordered systems. This review initially surveys the origin and definition of a watershed line in a geomorphological framework to subsequently introduce its basic geometrical and physical properties. Results on statistical properties of watersheds obtained from artificial model landscapes generated with long-range correlations are presented and shown to be in good qualitative and quantitative agreement with real landscapes.We acknowledge financial support from the European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant 319968-FlowCCS, the Brazilian Agencies CNPq, CAPES, FUNCAP and FINEP, the FUNCAP/CNPq Pronex grant, the National Institute of Science and Technology for Complex Systems in Brazil, the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under contracts no. IF/00255/2013, PEst-OE/FIS/UI0618/2014, and EXCL/FIS-NAN/0083/2012, and the Swiss National Science Foundation under Grant No. P2EZP2-152188

    Gut acellular matrix for the in vitro study of Enteric Nervous System cells

    Get PDF
    Enteric nervous system (ENS) cells respond to the intestinal extracellular matrix (ECM) signals changing their proliferation rate, migration and differentiation. In this study, we explored in vitro the adaptive response of primary ENS cell cultures to the stimulation of gut acellular matrix (AM) defining the gene expression profile of neuronal functionality markers. Scanning electron microscopy was used to detect the acquisition of specific morphological features. Intestinal AM was prepared using an enzyme-detergent treatment. Primary rat enteric cells were isolated from the myenteric plexus of postnatal rats using an enzymatic method and seeded on intestinal AM in the presence of exogenous neurotrophic factors. The morphological properties and the expression of specific differentiation markers were evaluated by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and wholemount fluorescent staining. In order to verify the synergic activity of soluble factors and AM, the gene expression of neurotransmitter receptors was evaluated by qPCR in ENS cells cultured in SM conditions in the presence or not of AM. The development of interconnected ganglion-like structures and the expression of neurotransmitter receptors suggested that gut matrix engineered with ENS cells could be useful for medical applications of regenerative medicine or for the in vitro assessment of tridimensional culture system of ENS

    Abiotic and biotic processes that drive carboxylation and decarboxylation reactions

    Get PDF
    © 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston 2020. Carboxylation and decarboxylation are two fundamental classes of reactions that impact the cycling of carbon in and on Earth's crust. These reactions play important roles in both long-term (primarily abiotic) and short-term (primarily biotic) carbon cycling. Long-term cycling is important in the subsurface and at subduction zones where organic carbon is decomposed and outgassed or recycled back to the mantle. Short-term reactions are driven by biology and have the ability to rapidly convert CO2 to biomass and vice versa. For instance, carboxylation is a critical reaction in primary production and metabolic pathways like photosynthesis in which sunlight provides energy to drive carbon fixation, whereas decarboxylation is a critical reaction in metabolic pathways like respiration and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Early life and prebiotic chemistry on Earth likely relied heavily upon the abiotic synthesis of carboxylic acids. Over time, life has diversified (de)carboxylation reactions and incorporated them into many facets of cellular metabolism. Here we present a broad overview of the importance of carboxylation and decarboxylation reactions from both abiotic and biotic perspectives to highlight the importance of these reactions and compounds to planetary evolution

    Subchronic Exposure to TCDD, PeCDF, PCB126, and PCB153: Effect on Hepatic Gene Expression

    Get PDF
    We employed DNA microarray to identify unique hepatic gene expression patterns associated with subchronic exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and other halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons (HAHs). Female Harlan Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed for 13 weeks to toxicologically equivalent doses of four different HAHs based on the toxic equivalency factor of each chemical: TCDD (100 ng/kg/day), 2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran (PeCDF; 200 ng/kg/day), 3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl (PCB126; 1,000 ng/kg/day), or 2,2′,4,4′,5,5′-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB153; 1,000 μg/kg/day). Global gene expression profiles for each exposure, which account for 8,799 gene probe sets contained on Affymetrix RGU34A GeneChips, were compared by principal components analysis. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligands TCDD, PeCDF, and PCB126 produced very similar global gene expression profiles that were unique from the nonAhR ligand PCB153, underscoring the extensive impact of AhR activation and/or the resulting hepatic injury on global gene expression in female rat liver. Many genes were co-expressed during the 13-week TCDD, PeCDF, or PCB126 exposures, including classical AhR-regulated genes and some genes not previously characterized as being AhR regulated, such as carcinoembryonic-cell adhesion molecule 4 (C-CAM4) and adenylate cyclase-associated protein 2 (CAP2). Real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction confirmed the increased expression of these genes in TCDD-, PeCDF-, and PCB126-exposed rats as well as the up- or down-regulation of several other novel dioxin-responsive genes. In summary, DNA microarray successfully identified dioxin-responsive genes expressed after exposure to AhR ligands (TCDD, PeCDF, PCB126) but not after exposure to the non-AhR ligand PCB153. Together, these findings may help to elucidate some of the fundamental features of dioxin toxicity and may further clarify the biologic role of the AhR signaling pathway

    Quaternary TDM-PAM as upgrade path of access PON beyond 10Gb/s

    Get PDF
    A 20 Gb/s quaternary TDM-PAM passive optical network with chirped and non-linear optical transmitters is experimentally demonstrated. The migration from legacy TDM-PONs and the implications of using available 10 Gb/s components are analyzed. We show that a loss budget of 27.3 dB is compatible together with a packet power ratio of 10 dB between loud and soft optical network units. (c) 2012 Optical Society of Americ
    corecore