5,373 research outputs found
Dielectric versus magnetic pairing mechanisms in high-temperature cuprate superconductors investigated using Raman scattering
We suggest, and demonstrate, a systematic approach to the study of cuprate
superconductors, namely, progressive change of ion size in order to
systematically alter the interaction strength and other key parameters.
R(Ba,Sr)CuO (R={La, ... Lu,Y}) is such a system where potentially
obscuring structural changes are minimal. We thereby systematically alter both
dielectric and magnetic properties. Dielectric fluctuation is characterized by
ionic polarizability while magnetic fluctuation is characterized by exchange
interactions measurable by Raman scattering. The range of transition
temperatures is 70 to 107 K and we find that these correlate only with the
dielectric properties, a behavior which persists with external pressure. The
ultimate significance may remain to be proven but it highlights the role of
dielectric screening in the cuprates and adds support to a previously proposed
novel pairing mechanism involving exchange of quantized waves of electronic
polarization.Comment: Manuscript: 5 pages, 4 figures. Supplemental material included (9
pages, 5 figures
Comparative economics of different soybean based cropping systems in North-Eastern Karnataka
The research study was conducted in Bidar and Kalaburagi Districts of Karnataka. To study the comparative economics of different soybean cropping systems. A sample size of 160 farmers was selected using multistage random sampling method. Field level data were elicited for the agricultural year 2013-14 through personal interview method. Soybean + Redgram, Soybean + Jowar, Soybean + Bajra, and sole Soybean were the major cropping systems identified. Study revealed that, the average age of the sample respondents was 43, 45, 41, 44 and 43 years, respectively in CS-I, CS-II, CS-III, CS-IV and overall cropping system. The literacy percentage was highest in CS-I followed by CS-IV, CS-II and CS-III respectively. The net returns realized in these major cropping systems were ` 54443.20, ` 34108.18, ` 21047.27 and ` 13503.06 respectively. The gross returns realized in CS-I was highest, as compared CS-II, CS-III and CS-IV respectively. Similarly, the net returns obtained in CS-I was found to be the highest followed by CS-II, CS-III and CS-IV respectively. Returns per rupee spent was found to be the highest in CS-I. Among the studied soybean based cropping systems, CS-I (soybean + redgram) and CS-II (soybean + jowar) were found to be the most profitable system under rainfed condition in the study area
Phylogenetic Diversity of Bacterial Community Associated with the Marine Sponge Halichondira nigrocutis Collected off Southwest Indian Coast
This study aimed to evaluate the bacterial communities associated with the marine sponge Halichondria nigrocutis present in Indian waters by both cultivation and cultivation-independent techniques. Results using cultivation method showed that bacteria belonging to Bacillus, Acinetobacter and Vibrio spp. to be the predominant groups. Metagenomic study of sponge-associated bacteria by cultivation independent approach, involving cloning and sequencing of the 16S rDNA gene generated sequences that were subjected to phylogenetic analysis. Results demonstrated the community structure to be represented by the phyla Proteobacteria (alpha-, gamma- and delta-classes), Cyanobacteria, Actinobacteria and Firmicutes, with isolates belonging to alpha-proteobacterial group to be predominating. To our knowledge this study appears to be the first to record cultivable and uncultivable bacterial groups associated with H.nigrocutis from Indian waters
First On-Sky High Contrast Imaging with an Apodizing Phase Plate
We present the first astronomical observations obtained with an Apodizing
Phase Plate (APP). The plate is designed to suppress the stellar diffraction
pattern by 5 magnitudes from 2-9 lambda/D over a 180 degree region. Stellar
images were obtained in the M' band (4.85 microns) at the MMTO 6.5m telescope,
with adaptive wavefront correction made with a deformable secondary mirror
designed for low thermal background observations. The measured PSF shows a halo
intensity of 0.1% of the stellar peak at 2 lambda/D (0.36 arcsec), tapering off
as r^{-5/3} out to radius 9 lambda/D. Such a profile is consistent with
residual errors predicted for servo lag in the AO system.
We project a 5 sigma contrast limit, set by residual atmospheric
fluctuations, of 10.2 magnitudes at 0.36 arcsec separation for a one hour
exposure. This can be realised if static and quasi-static aberrations are
removed by differential imaging, and is close to the sensitivity level set by
thermal background photon noise for target stars with M'>3. The advantage of
using the phase plate is the removal of speckle noise caused by the residuals
in the diffraction pattern that remain after PSF subtraction. The APP gives
higher sensitivity over the range 2-5 lambda/D compared to direct imaging
techniques.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, ApJ accepte
Loss of the mechanotransducer zyxin promotes a synthetic phenotype of vascular smooth muscle cells.
BACKGROUND: Exposure of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) to excessive cyclic stretch such as in hypertension causes a shift in their phenotype. The focal adhesion protein zyxin can transduce such biomechanical stimuli to the nucleus of both endothelial cells and VSMCs, albeit with different thresholds and kinetics. However, there is no distinct vascular phenotype in young zyxin-deficient mice, possibly due to functional redundancy among other gene products belonging to the zyxin family. Analyzing zyxin function in VSMCs at the cellular level might thus offer a better mechanistic insight. We aimed to characterize zyxin-dependent changes in gene expression in VSMCs exposed to biomechanical stretch and define the functional role of zyxin in controlling the resultant VSMC phenotype.
METHODS AND RESULTS: DNA microarray analysis was used to identify genes and pathways that were zyxin regulated in static and stretched human umbilical artery-derived and mouse aortic VSMCs. Zyxin-null VSMCs showed a remarkable shift to a growth-promoting, less apoptotic, promigratory and poorly contractile phenotype with ≈90% of the stretch-responsive genes being zyxin dependent. Interestingly, zyxin-null cells already seemed primed for such a synthetic phenotype, with mechanical stretch further accentuating it. This could be accounted for by higher RhoA activity and myocardin-related transcription factor-A mainly localized to the nucleus of zyxin-null VSMCs, and a condensed and localized accumulation of F-actin upon stretch.
CONCLUSIONS: At the cellular level, zyxin is a key regulator of stretch-induced gene expression. Loss of zyxin drives VSMCs toward a synthetic phenotype, a process further consolidated by exaggerated stretch
Air-Sea Interaction in the Bay of Bengal
Recent observations of surface meteorology and exchanges of heat, freshwater, and momentum between the ocean and the atmosphere in the Bay of Bengal are presented. These observations characterize air-sea interaction at 18°N, 89.5°E from December 2014 to January 2016 and also at other locations in the northern Bay of Bengal. Monsoonal variability dominated the records, with winds to the northeast in summer and to the southwest in winter. This variability included a strong annual cycle in the atmospheric forcing of the ocean in the Bay of Bengal, with the winter monsoon marked by sustained ocean heat loss resulting in ocean cooling, and the summer monsoon marked by strong storm events with dark skies and rain that also resulted in ocean cooling. The spring intermonsoon was a period of clear skies and low winds, when strong solar heating and weak wind-driven mixing led to ocean warming. The fall intermonsoon was a transitional period, with some storm events but also with enough clear skies and sunlight that ocean surface temperature rose again. Mooring and shipboard observations are used to examine the ability of model-based surface fluxes to represent air-sea interaction in the Bay of Bengal; the model-based fluxes have significant errors. The surface forcing observed at 18°N is also used together with a one-dimensional ocean model to illustrate the potential for local air-sea interaction to drive upper-ocean variability in the Bay of Bengal
Symplectic potentials and resolved Ricci-flat ACG metrics
We pursue the symplectic description of toric Kahler manifolds. There exists
a general local classification of metrics on toric Kahler manifolds equipped
with Hamiltonian two-forms due to Apostolov, Calderbank and Gauduchon(ACG). We
derive the symplectic potential for these metrics. Using a method due to Abreu,
we relate the symplectic potential to the canonical potential written by
Guillemin. This enables us to recover the moment polytope associated with
metrics and we thus obtain global information about the metric. We illustrate
these general considerations by focusing on six-dimensional Ricci flat metrics
and obtain Ricci flat metrics associated with real cones over L^{pqr} and
Y^{pq} manifolds. The metrics associated with cones over Y^{pq} manifolds turn
out to be partially resolved with two blowup parameters taking special
(non-zero)values. For a fixed Y^{pq} manifold, we find explicit metrics for
several inequivalent blow-ups parametrised by a natural number k in the range
0<k<p. We also show that all known examples of resolved metrics such as the
resolved conifold and the resolution of C^3/Z_3 also fit the ACG
classification.Comment: LaTeX, 34 pages, 4 figures (v2)presentation improved, typos corrected
and references added (v3)matches published versio
Note on the unusual landings of Amblygaster sirm off Vizhinjam coast
Unusual landings of the clupeid Amblygaster sirm(spotted sardinella), was noticed during the October– December 2016 along the Vizhinjam coast. Locallyknown as Keerichala, regular landings of A. sirmwas observed in all the major landing centres alongthe Thiruvananthapuram coast like Mampally,Anjengo, Perumathura, Thazhampally, Marianad,Valiyathura, Poonthura etc
Bridging the data gaps in the epidemiology of hepatitis C virus infection in Malaysia using multi-parameter evidence synthesis
BACKGROUND: Collecting adequate information on key epidemiological indicators is a prerequisite to informing a public health response to reduce the impact of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in Malaysia. Our goal was to overcome the acute data shortage typical of low/middle income countries using statistical modelling to estimate the national HCV prevalence and the distribution over transmission pathways as of the end of 2009. METHODS: Multi-parameter evidence synthesis methods were applied to combine all available relevant data sources - both direct and indirect - that inform the epidemiological parameters of interest. RESULTS: An estimated 454,000 (95% credible interval [CrI]: 392,000 to 535,000) HCV antibody-positive individuals were living in Malaysia in 2009; this represents 2.5% (95% CrI: 2.2-3.0%) of the population aged 15-64 years. Among males of Malay ethnicity, for 77% (95% CrI: 69-85%) the route of probable transmission was active or a previous history of injecting drugs. The corresponding proportions were smaller for male Chinese and Indian/other ethnic groups (40% and 71%, respectively). The estimated prevalence in females of all ethnicities was 1% (95% CrI: 0.6 to 1.4%); 92% (95% CrI: 88 to 95%) of infections were attributable to non-drug injecting routes of transmission. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalent number of persons living with HCV infection in Malaysia is estimated to be very high. Low/middle income countries often lack a comprehensive evidence base; however, evidence synthesis methods can assist in filling the data gaps required for the development of effective policy to address the future public health and economic burden due to HCV. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12879-014-0564-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users
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