168 research outputs found

    Correlation effects for semiconducting single wall carbon nanotube: a density matrix renormalization group study

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    In this paper, we report the applicability of the density matrix renormalization group(DMRG) approach to the cylindrical single wall carbon nanotube (SWCN) for purpose of its correlation effect. By applying the DMRG approach to the tt+UU+VV model, with tt and VV being the hopping and Coulomb energies between the nearest neighboring sites, respectively, and UU the onsite Coulomb energy, we calculate the phase diagram for the SWCN with chiral numbers (n1=3,n2=2n_{1}=3, n_{2}=2), which reflects the competition between the correlation energy UU and VV. Within reasonable parameter ranges, we investigate possible correlated groundstates, the lowest excitations and the corresponding correlation functions in which the connection with the excitonic insulator is particularly addressed.Comment: 1 source files, 5 figure

    Research on the E-commerce Model in Textile Industry

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    E-commerce will play an important role in textile industry. Yet the proper e-commerce model in textile industry has not been solved up till now. It is necessary to study the model as soon as possible, so that we may get together with the advanced countries

    MAGEA1 inhibits the expression of BORIS via increased promoter methylation

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    Melanoma-associated antigen A1 (MAGEA1) and BORIS (also known as CTCFL) are members of the cancer testis antigen (CTA) family. Their functions and expression-regulation mechanisms are not fully understood. In this study, we reveal new functions and regulatory mechanisms of MAGEA1 and BORIS in breast cancer cells, which we investigated in parental and genetically manipulated breast cancer cells via gene overexpression or siRNA-mediated downregulation. We identified the interaction between MAGEA1 and CTCF, which is required for the binding of MAGEA1 to the BORIS promoter and is critical for the recruitment of DNMT3a. A protein complex containing MAGEA1, CTCF and DNMT3a was formed before or after conjunction with the BORIS promoter. The binding of this complex to the BORIS promoter accounts for the hypermethylation and repression of BORIS expression, which results in cell death in the breast cancer cell lines tested. Multiple approaches were employed, including co-immunoprecipitation, glutathione S-transferase pull-down assay, co-localization and cell death analyses using annexin V-FITC/propidium iodide double-staining and caspase 3 activation assays, chromatin immunoprecipitation and bisulfite sequencing PCR assays for methylation. Our results have implications for the development of strategies in CTA-based immune therapeutics

    Online Customer Service System Using Hybrid Model

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    In a traditional customer service support environment, service engineers typically provide a worldwide customer base support through the use of telephone calls. Such a mode of support is inefficient, ineffective and generally results in high costs, long service cycles, and poor quality of service. The rapid growth of the World Wide Web and Intelligent Agent technology, with its widespread acceptance and accessibility, have resulted in the emergence of Web-based and AI Agent-based systems. Depending on the functionality provided by such systems, most of the associated disadvantages of the traditional customer service support environment can be eliminated. This paper describes a framework for Web-based and AI Agent-based online customer service support system, and discusses the method to use Rough Set Theory and Neural Network Theory to support intelligent fault diagnosis by customers or service engineers

    Midgap States in Antiferromagnetic Heisenberg Chains with A Staggered Field

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    We study low-energy excitations in antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chains with a staggered field which splits the spectrum into a longitudinal and a transverse branch. Bound states are found to exist inside the field induced gap in both branches. They originate from the edge effects and are inherent to spin-chain materials. The sine-Gordon scaling hs2/3loghs1/6h_s^{2/3}|\log h_s|^{1/6} (hsh_s: the staggered field) provides an accurate description for the gap and midgap energies in the transverse branch for S=1/2S=1/2 and the midgap energies in both branches for S=3/2S=3/2 over a wide range of magnetic field; however, it can fit other low-energy excitations only at much lower field. Moreover, the integer-spin S=1 chain displays scaling behavior that does not fit this scaling law. These results reveal intriguing features of magnetic excitations in spin-chain materials that deserve further investigation.Comment: 4 pages, 4figure

    The Effect of Different Laser Irradiation on Cyclophosphamide-Induced Leucopenia in Rats

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    Objective. To assess the effect of different lasers on cyclophosphamide- (CTX-) induced leucopenia in rats. Methods. 11 rats were normal control and 55 rats were injected with a dose of 80 mg/kg CTX for the first time and 40 mg/kg on the 6th and the 11th days to establish a leucopenia model. Rats of the irradiation groups received a 5-minute laser irradiation with either single 10.6 μm or 650 nm laser or alternatively 10.6 μm–650 nm laser irradiation, besides a sham treatment on acupoint Dazhui (DU 14) and acupoint Zusanli (ST 36) of both sides, 8 times for 16 days. Normal and model control group received no treatment. Results. On day 16 after the first CTX injection, the WBC counts from all the laser irradiation groups were significantly higher than those from the model control and the sham group (P<0.05), while there were no significant differences compared with the normal control (P>0.05). The TI of 10.6 μm–650 nm laser irradiation group was significantly higher than that of the model control group (P<0.05). Conclusions. The single and combined 10.6 μm and 650 nm laser irradiation on ST36 and DU14 accelerated the recovery of the WBC count in the rats with leucopenia

    Zonal Soil Type Determines Soil Microbial Responses to Maize Cropping and Fertilization.

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    Soil types heavily influence ecological dynamics. It remains controversial to what extent soil types shape microbial responses to land management changes, largely due to lack of in-depth comparison across various soil types. Here, we collected samples from three major zonal soil types spanning from cold temperate to subtropical climate zones. We examined bacterial and fungal community structures, as well as microbial functional genes. Different soil types had distinct microbial biomass levels and community compositions. Five years of maize cropping (growing corn or maize) changed the bacterial community composition of the Ultisol soil type and the fungal composition of the Mollisol soil type but had little effect on the microbial composition of the Inceptisol soil type. Meanwhile, 5 years of fertilization resulted in soil acidification. Microbial compositions of the Mollisol and Ultisol, but not the Inceptisol, were changed and correlated (P &lt; 0.05) with soil pH. These results demonstrated the critical role of soil type in determining microbial responses to land management changes. We also found that soil nitrification potentials correlated with the total abundance of nitrifiers and that soil heterotrophic respiration correlated with the total abundance of carbon degradation genes, suggesting that changes in microbial community structure had altered ecosystem processes. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities are essential drivers of soil functional processes such as nitrification and heterotrophic respiration. Although there is initial evidence revealing the importance of soil type in shaping microbial communities, there has been no in-depth, comprehensive survey to robustly establish it as a major determinant of microbial community composition, functional gene structure, or ecosystem functioning. We examined bacterial and fungal community structures using Illumina sequencing, microbial functional genes using GeoChip, microbial biomass using phospholipid fatty acid analysis, as well as functional processes of soil nitrification potential and CO2 efflux. We demonstrated the critical role of soil type in determining microbial responses to land use changes at the continental level. Our findings underscore the inherent difficulty in generalizing ecosystem responses across landscapes and suggest that assessments of community feedback must take soil types into consideration. Author Video: An author video summary of this article is available
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