854 research outputs found
70% efficiency of bistate molecular machines explained by information theory, high dimensional geometry and evolutionary convergence
The relationship between information and energy is key to understanding biological systems. We can display the information in DNA sequences specifically bound by proteins by using sequence logos, and we can measure the corresponding binding energy. These can be compared by noting that one of the forms of the second law of thermodynamics defines the minimum energy dissipation required to gain one bit of information. Under the isothermal conditions that molecular machines function this is joules per bit ( is Boltzmann's constant and T is the absolute temperature). Then an efficiency of binding can be computed by dividing the information in a logo by the free energy of binding after it has been converted to bits. The isothermal efficiencies of not only genetic control systems, but also visual pigments are near 70%. From information and coding theory, the theoretical efficiency limit for bistate molecular machines is ln 2â=â0.6931. Evolutionary convergence to maximum efficiency is limited by the constraint that molecular states must be distinct from each other. The result indicates that natural molecular machines operate close to their information processing maximum (the channel capacity), and implies that nanotechnology can attain this goal
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Revisiting global fossil fuel and biofuel emissions of ethane
Recent measurements over the Northern Hemisphere indicate that the long-term decline in the atmospheric burden of ethane (C2H6) has ended and the abundance increased dramatically between 2010 and 2014. The rise in C2H6 atmospheric abundances has been attributed to oil and natural gas extraction in North America. Existing global C2H6 emission inventories are based on outdated activity maps that do not account for current oil and natural gas exploitation regions. We present an updated global C2H6 emission inventory based on 2010 satellite-derived CH4 fluxes with adjusted C2H6 emissions over the U.S. from the National Emission Inventory (NEI 2011). We contrast our global 2010 C2H6 emission inventory with one developed for 2001. The C2H6 difference between global anthropogenic emissions is subtle (7.9 versus 7.2âTgâyrâ1), but the spatial distribution of the emissions is distinct. In the 2010 C2H6 inventory, fossil fuel sources in the Northern Hemisphere represent half of global C2H6 emissions and 95% of global fossil fuel emissions. Over the U.S., unadjusted NEI 2011 C2H6 emissions produce mixing ratios that are 14â50% of those observed by aircraft observations (2008â2014). When the NEI 2011 C2H6 emission totals are scaled by a factor of 1.4, the Goddard Earth Observing System Chem model largely reproduces a regional suite of observations, with the exception of the central U.S., where it continues to underpredict observed mixing ratios in the lower troposphere. We estimate monthly mean contributions of fossil fuel C2H6 emissions to ozone and peroxyacetyl nitrate surface mixing ratios over North America of ~1% and ~8%, respectively
The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
I first encountered Roland Barthesâs Camera Lucida (1980) in 2012 when I was developing a performance on falling and photography. Since then I have re-encountered Barthesâs book annually as part of my practice-as-research PhD project on the relationships between performance and photography. This research project seeks to make performance work in response to Barthesâs book â to practice with Barthes in an exploration of theatricality, materiality and affect. This photo-essay weaves critical discourse with performance documentation to explore my relationship to Barthesâs book. Responding to Michael Friedâs claim that Barthesâs Camera Lucida is an exercise in âantitheatrical critical thoughtâ (Fried 2008, 98) the essay seeks to re-view debates on theatricality and anti-theatricality in and around Camera Lucida. Specifically, by exploring Barthesâs conceptualisation of the pose I discuss how performance practice might re-theatricalise the punctum and challenge a supposed antitheatricalism in Barthesâs text. Additionally, I argue for Barthesâs book as an example of philosophy as performance and for my own work as an instance of performance philosophy
Environmental Effect on the Associations of Background Quasars with Foreground Objects: II. Numerical Simulations
Using numerical simulations of cluster formation in the standard CDM model
(SCDM) and in a low-density, flat CDM model with a cosmological constant
(LCDM), we investigate the gravitational lensing explanation for the reported
associations between background quasars and foreground clusters. Under the
thin-lens approximation and the unaffected background hypothesis , we show that
the recently detected quasar overdensity around clusters of galaxies on scales
of arcminutes cannot be interpreted as a result of the gravitational
lensing by cluster matter and/or by their environmental and projected matter
along the line of sight, which is consistent with the analytical result based
on the observed cluster and galaxy correlations (Wu, et al. 1996). It appears
very unlikely that uncertainties in the modeling of the gravitational lensing
can account for the disagreement between the theoretical predictions and the
observations. We conclude that either the detected signal of the quasar-cluster
associations is a statistical fluke or the associations are are generated by
mechanisms other than the magnification bias.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Brain processing of contagious itch in patients with atopic dermatitis
Several studies show that itch and scratching cannot only be induced by pruritogens like histamine or cowhage, but also by the presentation of certain (audio-) visual stimuli like pictures on crawling insects or videos showing other people scratching. This phenomenon is coined Contagious itch (CI). Due to the fact that CI is more profound in patients with the chronic itchy skin disease atopic dermatitis (AD), we believe that it is highly relevant to study brain processing of CI in this group. Knowledge on brain areas involved in CI in AD-patients can provide us with useful hints regarding non-invasive treatments that AD-patients could profit from when they are confronted with itch-inducing situations in daily life. Therefore, this study investigated the brain processing of CI in AD-patients. 11 AD-patients underwent fMRI scans during the presentation of an itch inducing experimental video (EV) and a non-itch inducing control video (CV). Perfusion based brain activity was measured using arterial spin labeling functional MRI. As expected, the EV compared to the CV led to an increase in itch and scratching (p \u3c 0.05). CI led to a significant increase in brain activity in the supplementary motor area, left ventral striatum and right orbitofrontal cortex (threshold: p \u3c 0.001; cluster size k \u3e 50). Moreover, itch induced by watching the EV was by trend correlated with activity in memory-related regions including the temporal cortex and the (pre-) cuneus as well as the posterior operculum, a brain region involved in itch processing (threshold: p \u3c 0.005; cluster size k \u3e 50). These findings suggest that the fronto-striatal circuit, which is associated with the desire to scratch, might be a target region for non-invasive treatments in AD patients. © 2017 Schut, Mochizuki, Grossman, Lin, Conklin, Mohamed, Gieler, Kupfer and Yosipovitch
Exact particle and kinetic energy densities for one-dimensional confined gases of non-interacting fermions
We propose a new method for the evaluation of the particle density and
kinetic pressure profiles in inhomogeneous one-dimensional systems of
non-interacting fermions, and apply it to harmonically confined systems of up
to N=1000 fermions. The method invokes a Green's function operator in
coordinate space, which is handled by techniques originally developed for the
calculation of the density of single-particle states from Green's functions in
the energy domain. In contrast to the Thomas-Fermi (local density)
approximation, the exact profiles under harmonic confinement show negative
local pressure in the tails and a prominent shell structure which may become
accessible to observation in magnetically trapped gases of fermionic alkali
atoms.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Vortex stability of interacting Bose-Einstein condensates confined in anisotropic harmonic traps
Vortex states of weakly-interacting Bose-Einstein condensates confined in
three-dimensional rotating harmonic traps are investigated numerically at zero
temperature. The ground state in the rotating frame is obtained by propagating
the Gross-Pitaevskii equation for the condensate in imaginary time. The total
energies between states with and without a vortex are compared, yielding
critical rotation frequencies that depend on the anisotropy of the trap and the
number of atoms. Vortices displaced from the center of nonrotating traps are
found to have long lifetimes for sufficiently large numbers of atoms. The
relationship between vortex stability and bound core states is explored.Comment: 5 pages, 2 embedded figures, revtex. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Results of a randomized trial of treatment modalities in patients with low or early-intermediate risk prostate cancer (PREFERE trial)
Purpose The optimal treatment for patients with low to early-intermediate risk prostate cancer (PCa) remains to be defned.
The randomized PREFERE trial (DRKS00004405) aimed to assess noninferiority of active surveillance (AS), externalbeam radiotherapy (EBRT), or brachytherapy by permanent seed implantation (PSI) vs. radical prostatectomy (RP) for
these patients.
Methods PREFERE was planned to enroll 7600 patients. The primary endpoint was disease specifc survival. Patients with
PCa stageâ€cT2a, cN0/X, M0, PSA â€10 ng/ml and Gleason-Scoreâ€3+4 at reference pathology were eligible. Patients
were allowed to exclude one or two of the four modalities, which yielded eleven combinations for randomization. Sixty-nine
German study centers were engaged in PREFERE.
Results Of 2251 patients prescreened between 2012 and 2016, 459 agreed to participate in PREFERE. Due to this poor
accrual, the trial was stopped. In 345 patients reference pathology confrmed inclusion criteria. Sixty-nine men were assigned
to RP, 53 to EBRT, 93 to PSI, and 130 to AS. Forty patients changed treatment shortly after randomization, 21 to AS. Fortyeight AS patients with follow-up received radical treatment. Median follow-up was 19 months. Five patients died, none due
to PCa; 8 had biochemical progression after radical therapy. Treatment-related acute grade 3 toxicity was reported in 3 RP
patients and 2 PSI patients.
Conclusions In this prematurely closed trial, we observed an unexpected high rate of termination of AS and an increased
toxicity related to PSI. Patients hesitated to be randomized in a multi-arm trial. The optimal treatment of low and earlyintermediate risk PCa remains unclear
Termination rates and histological reclassification of active surveillance patients with low- and early intermediate-risk prostate cancer : results of the PREFERE trial
Purpose
Active surveillance (AS) strategies for patients with low- and early intermediate-risk prostate cancer are still not consistently defined. Within a controlled randomized trial, active surveillance was compared to other treatment options for patients with prostate cancer. Aim of this analysis was to report on termination rates of patients treated with AS including different grade groups.
Methods
A randomized trial comparing radical prostatectomy, active surveillance, external beam radiotherapy and brachytherapy was performed from 2013 to 2016 and included 345 patients with low- and early intermediate-risk prostate cancer (ISUP grade groups 1 and 2). The trial was prematurely stopped due to slow accrual. A total of 130 patients were treated with active surveillance. Among them, 42 patients were diagnosed with intermediate-risk PCA. Reference pathology and AS quality control were performed throughout.
Results
After a median follow-up time of 18.8 months, 73 out of the 130 patients (56%) terminated active surveillance. Of these, 56 (77%) patients were histologically reclassified at the time of rebiopsy, including 35% and 60% of the grade group 1 and 2 patients, respectively. No patients who underwent radical prostatectomy at the time of reclassification had radical prostatectomy specimensââ„âgrade group 3.
Conclusion
In this prospectively analyzed subcohort of patients with AS and conventional staging within a randomized trial, the 2-year histological reclassification rates were higher than those previously reported. Active surveillance may not be based on conventional staging alone, and patients with grade group 2 cancers may be recommended for active surveillance in carefully controlled trials only
HS 0139+0559, HS 0229+8016, HS 0506+7725, and HS 0642+5049 : four new long-period cataclysmic variables
We present time-resolved optical spectroscopy and photometry of four relatively bright (V ⌠14.0â15.5) long-period cataclysmic variables(CVs) discovered in the Hamburg Quasar Survey: HS 0139+0559, HS 0229+8016, HS 0506+7725, and HS 0642+5049. Their respective orbital periods, 243.69
± 0.49 min, 232.550 ± 0.049 min, 212.7 ± 0.2 min, and 225.90
± 0.23 min are determined from radial velocity and photometric variability studies. HS 0506+7725 is characterised by strong Balmer and He emission lines, short-period (âŒ10â20 min) flickering, and weak X-ray emission in the ROSAT All Sky Survey. The detection of a deep low state (B 18.5) identifies HS 0506+7725 as a member of the VY Scl
stars. HS 0139+0559, HS 0229+8016, and HS 0642+5049 display thick-disc like spectra and no or only weak flickering activity. HS 0139+0559 and HS 0229+8016 exhibit clean quasi-sinusoidal radial velocity variations of their emission lines but no or very little orbital photometricvariability. In contrast, we detect no radial velocity variation in HS 0642+5049 but a noticeable orbital brightness variation. We identify all three systems either as UX UMa-type novalike variables or as Z Cam-type dwarf novae. Our identification of these four new systems underlines that the currently known sample of CVs is rather incomplete even for bright objects. The four new systems add to the clustering of orbital periods in the 3â4 h range found in the sample of HQS selected CVs, and we discuss the large incidence of magnetic CVs and VY Scl/SW Sex stars found in this period range among the known population of CVs
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