321 research outputs found
Cyclic Variability of the Circumstellar Disc of the Be Star Tau. II. Testing the 2D Global Disc Oscillation Model
Aims. In this paper we model, in a self-consistent way, polarimetric,
photometric, spectrophotometric and interferometric observations of the
classical Be star Tauri. Our primary goal is to conduct a critical
quantitative test of the global oscillation scenario. Methods. We have carried
out detailed three-dimensional, NLTE radiative transfer calculations using the
radiative transfer code HDUST. For the input for the code we have used the most
up-to-date research on Be stars to include a physically realistic description
for the central star and the circumstellar disc. We adopt a rotationally
deformed, gravity darkened central star, surrounded by a disc whose unperturbed
state is given by a steady-state viscous decretion disc model. We further
assume that disc is in vertical hydrostatic equilibrium. Results. By adopting a
viscous decretion disc model for Tauri and a rigorous solution of the
radiative transfer, we have obtained a very good fit of the time-average
properties of the disc. This provides strong theoretical evidence that the
viscous decretion disc model is the mechanism responsible for disc formation.
With the global oscillation model we have successfully fitted spatially
resolved VLTI/AMBER observations and the temporal V/R variations of the
H and Br lines. This result convincingly demonstrates that the
oscillation pattern in the disc is a one-armed spiral. Possible model
shortcomings, as well as suggestions for future improvements, are also
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted to A&
Weak Glycolipid Binding of a Microdomain-Tracer Peptide Correlates with Aggregation and Slow Diffusion on Cell Membranes
10.1371/journal.pone.0051222PLoS ONE712
Relationship Between Isometric Inter-Limb Asymmetry and Strength of the Lower Extremity in Military Personnel
Low potency toxins reveal dense interaction networks in metabolism
Background
The chemicals of metabolism are constructed of a small set of atoms and bonds. This may be because chemical structures outside the chemical space in which life operates are incompatible with biochemistry, or because mechanisms to make or utilize such excluded structures has not evolved. In this paper I address the extent to which biochemistry is restricted to a small fraction of the chemical space of possible chemicals, a restricted subset that I call Biochemical Space. I explore evidence that this restriction is at least in part due to selection again specific structures, and suggest a mechanism by which this occurs.
Results
Chemicals that contain structures that our outside Biochemical Space (UnBiological groups) are more likely to be toxic to a wide range of organisms, even though they have no specifically toxic groups and no obvious mechanism of toxicity. This correlation of UnBiological with toxicity is stronger for low potency (millimolar) toxins. I relate this to the observation that most chemicals interact with many biological structures at low millimolar toxicity. I hypothesise that life has to select its components not only to have a specific set of functions but also to avoid interactions with all the other components of life that might degrade their function.
Conclusions
The chemistry of life has to form a dense, self-consistent network of chemical structures, and cannot easily be arbitrarily extended. The toxicity of arbitrary chemicals is a reflection of the disruption to that network occasioned by trying to insert a chemical into it without also selecting all the other components to tolerate that chemical. This suggests new ways to test for the toxicity of chemicals, and that engineering organisms to make high concentrations of materials such as chemical precursors or fuels may require more substantial engineering than just of the synthetic pathways involved
Environmental factors modulating the stability and enzymatic activity of the Petrotoga mobilis Esterase (PmEst)
Enzymes isolated from thermophilic organisms found in oil reservoirs can find applications in many fields, including the oleochemical, pharmaceutical, bioenergy, and food/dairy industries. In this study, in silico identification and recombinant production of an esterase from the extremophile bacteria Petrotoga mobilis (designated PmEst) were performed. Then biochemical, bioinformatics and structural characterizations were undertaken using a combination of synchrotron radiation circular dichroism (SRCD) and fluorescence spectroscopies to correlate PmEst stability and hydrolytic activity on different substrates. The enzyme presented a high Michaelis-Menten constant (KM 0.16 mM) and optimum activity at ~55°C for p-nitrophenyl butyrate. The secondary structure of PmEst was preserved at acid pH, but not under alkaline conditions. PmEst was unfolded at high concentrations of urea or guanidine through apparently different mechanisms. The esterase activity of PmEst was preserved in the presence of ethanol or propanol and its melting temperature increased ~8°C in the presence of these organic solvents. PmEst is a mesophilic esterase with substrate preference towards short-to medium-length acyl chains. The SRCD data of PmEst is in agreement with the prediction of an α/β protein, which leads us to assume that it displays a typical fold of esterases from this family. The increased enzyme stability in organic solvents may enable novel applications for its use in synthetic biology. Taken together, our results demonstrate features of the PmEst enzyme that indicate it may be suitable for applications in industrial processes, particularly, when the use of polar organic solvents is required
School librarians as literacy educators within a complex role
Librarians in schools are expected to play an important role as literacy educators, and have a positive impact on young people’s literacy learning. However in the context of their diverse workload, relatively little is known about how this aspect of their role sits within its competing demands, and the exact scope of the literacy educator requirements. Using a hybrid approach to content analysis, this article analyses 40 recent job description documents to identify the nature and prevalence of different aspects of the role, and to explore the literacy educator aspect of this profession. Findings suggest that while the literacy educator aspect is one of the most common role requirements, it sits within a complex workload, and the literacy educator aspect is itself multi-faceted and demanding
Imaging the heart of astrophysical objects with optical long-baseline interferometry
The number of publications of aperture-synthesis images based on optical
long-baseline interferometry measurements has recently increased due to easier
access to visible and infrared interferometers. The interferometry technique
has now reached a technical maturity level that opens new avenues for numerous
astrophysical topics requiring milli-arcsecond model-independent imaging. In
writing this paper our motivation was twofold: 1) review and publicize
emblematic excerpts of the impressive corpus accumulated in the field of
optical interferometry image reconstruction; 2) discuss future prospects for
this technique by selecting four representative astrophysical science cases in
order to review the potential benefits of using optical long baseline
interferometers. For this second goal we have simulated interferometric data
from those selected astrophysical environments and used state-of-the-art codes
to provide the reconstructed images that are reachable with current or
soon-to-be facilities. The image reconstruction process was "blind" in the
sense that reconstructors had no knowledge of the input brightness
distributions. We discuss the impact of optical interferometry in those four
astrophysical fields. We show that image reconstruction software successfully
provides accurate morphological information on a variety of astrophysical
topics and review the current strengths and weaknesses of such reconstructions.
We investigate how to improve image reconstruction and the quality of the image
possibly by upgrading the current facilities. We finally argue that optical
interferometers and their corresponding instrumentation, existing or to come,
with 6 to 10 telescopes, should be well suited to provide images of complex
sceneries.Comment: Acccepted to Astronomy and Astrophysics Revie
Detection of a Hot Subdwarf Companion to the Be Star FY Canis Majoris
The rapid rotation of Be stars may be caused in some cases by past mass and
angular momentum accretion in an interacting binary in which the mass donor is
currently viewed as a small, hot subdwarf stripped of its outer envelope. Here
we report on the spectroscopic detection of such a subdwarf in the Be binary
system FY Canis Majoris from the analysis of data acquired by the IUE
spacecraft and KPNO Coude Feed Telescope over the course of 16 and 21 years,
respectively. We present a double-lined spectroscopic orbit for the binary
based upon radial velocities from the IUE spectra and use the orbital solutions
with a Doppler tomography algorithm to reconstruct the components' UV spectra.
The subdwarf is hot (T_eff = 45+/-5 kK) and has a mass of about 1.3 M_sun and a
radius of about 0.6 R_sun. It contributes about 4% as much flux as the Be star
does in the FUV. We also present observations of the H-alpha and He I 6678
emission features that are formed in the circumstellar disk of the Be star.
Orbital flux and velocity variations in the He I 6678 profile indicate that
much of the emission forms along the disk rim facing the hot subdwarf where the
disk is probably heated by the incident radiation from the subdwarf. A study of
the FUV infall shell lines discovered in the 1980s confirms their episodic
presence but reveals that they tend to be found around both quadrature phases,
unlike the pattern in Algol binaries. Phase-dependent variations in the UV N V
doublet suggest the presence of a N-enhanced wind from the subdwarf and a
possible shock-interaction region between the stars where the subdwarf's wind
collides with the disk of the Be star.Comment: 46 pages, 15 figures, ApJ in pres
A mass spectrometric investigation of novel quadruplex DNA-selective berberine derivatives
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