205 research outputs found
Twisted Alexander polynomials and a partial order on the set of prime knots
We give a survey of some recent papers by the authors and Masaaki Wada
relating the twisted Alexander polynomial with a partial order on the set of
prime knots. We also give examples and pose open problems.Comment: This is the version published by Geometry & Topology Monographs on 25
February 200
Twisted Alexander polynomials and surjectivity of a group homomorphism
If phi: G-->G' is a surjective homomorphism, we prove that the twisted
Alexander polynomial of G is divisible by the twisted Alexander polynomial of
G'. As an application, we show non-existence of surjective homomorphism between
certain knot groups.Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol5/agt-5-51.abs.htm
Therapeutic Efficacy of Adoptive Cell Transfer on Survival of Patients with Glioblastoma Multiforme: Case Reports
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), which occurs mostly in individuals over the age of 40, accounts for 12–15% of all primary brain tumors. Patients with GBM have a poor prognosis, even after aggressive upfront therapies. The present study documents that in 5 of these patients, the use of a novel immunotherapeutic approach combined with standard initial therapies resulted in a prolonged survival of over 3 years, which is significantly longer than the expected survival time with conventional therapies. During the course of intravenous cell-transfer immunotherapy, axial magnetic resonance images of the tumor region were monitored for over 5 years. The discontinuation of adoptive transfer regimens resulted in the rapid deterioration of patients with development of Gd-enhancing regions, indicating the initiation of tumor recurrence. Among patients with recurrence, the reinstatement of adoptive cell regimens with more frequent cell-transfers resulted in an apparent re-regression of tumors. Significantly longer survival times were seen in patients receiving transferred autologous lymphoid cells which were expanded in vitro, and which had a considerable proportion of γδT cells. We conclude that immunotherapy, combined with standard treatment, plays a significant role in the management of GBM patients and provides patients with a better prognosis
Genomic Approaches Reveal Unexpected Genetic Divergence Within Ciona intestinalis
Abstract. The invertebrate chordate Ciona intestinalis is a widely used model organism in biological research. Individuals from waters ranging from arctic to temperate are morphologically almost indistinguishable. However, we found significant differences in whole genomic DNA sequence between northern European and Pacific C. intestinalis. Intronic and transposon sequences often appear unrelated between these geographic origins and amino acid substitutions in protein coding sequences indicate a divergence time in excess of 20 MYA. This finding suggests the existence of two cryptic species within the present C. intestinalis species. We found five marker loci which distinguish the two genetic forms by PCR. This analysis revealed that specimens from Naples, Italy, have the Pacific-type genome, perhaps due to humanmediated marine transport of species. Despite major genomic divergence, the two forms could be hybridized in the laboratory
On Two-Dimensional Compound Codes
ランダム誤りを訂正する符号として,複合符号がある.本稿では,複合符号を2次元に拡張した2次元複合符号について論ずる
Axial anomaly in the reduced model: Higher representations
The axial anomaly arising from the fermion sector of \U(N) or \SU(N)
reduced model is studied under a certain restriction of gauge field
configurations (the ``\U(1) embedding'' with ). We use the
overlap-Dirac operator and consider how the anomaly changes as a function of a
gauge-group representation of the fermion. A simple argument shows that the
anomaly vanishes for an irreducible representation expressed by a Young tableau
whose number of boxes is a multiple of (such as the adjoint
representation) and for a tensor-product of them. We also evaluate the anomaly
for general gauge-group representations in the large limit. The large
limit exhibits expected algebraic properties as the axial anomaly.
Nevertheless, when the gauge group is \SU(N), it does not have a structure
such as the trace of a product of traceless gauge-group generators which is
expected from the corresponding gauge field theory.Comment: 21 pages, uses JHEP.cls and amsfonts.sty, the final version to appear
in JHE
Detection of a bright burst from the repeating FRB 20201124A at 2 GHz
We present a detection of a bright burst from FRB 20201124A, which is one of
the most active repeating FRBs, based on S-band observations with the 64-m
radio telescope at the Usuda Deep Space Center/JAXA. This is the first FRB
observed by using a Japanese facility. Our detection at 2 GHz in February 2022
is the highest frequency for this FRB and the fluence of 189 Jy ms is one
of the brightest bursts from this FRB source. We place an upper limit on the
spectral index = -2.14 from the detection of the S band and
non-detection of the X band at the same time. We compare an event rate of the
detected burst with ones of the previous research, and suggest that the
power-law of the luminosity function might be broken at lower fluence, and the
fluences of bright FRBs distribute up to over 2 GHz with the power-law against
frequency. In addition, we show the energy density of the burst detected in
this work was comparable to the bright population of one-off FRBs. We propose
that repeating FRBs can be as bright as one-off FRBs, and only their brightest
bursts could be detected so some of repeating FRBs intrinsically might have
been classified as one-off FRBs.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Japan (PASJ
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