656 research outputs found
Time-dependent simulation of particle and displacement currents in THz graphene transistors
Although time-independent models provide very useful dynamical information
with a reduced computational burden, going beyond the quasi-static
approximation provides enriched information when dealing with TeraHertz (THz)
frequencies. In this work, the THz noise of dual-gate graphene transistors with
DC polarization is analyzed from a careful simulation of the time-dependent
particle and displacement currents. From such currents, the power spectral
density (PSD) of the total current fluctuations are computed at the source,
drain and gate contacts. The role of the lateral dimensions of the transistors,
the Klein tunneling and the positive-negative energy injection on the PSD are
analyzed carefully. Through the comparison of the PSD with and without
Band-to-Band tunneling and graphene injection, it is shown that the unavoidable
Klein tunneling and positive-negative energy injection in graphene structures
imply an increment of noise without similar increment on the current, degrading
the (either low or high frequency) signal-to-noise ratio. Finally, it is shown
that the shorter the vertical height (in comparison with the length of the
active region in the transport direction), the larger the maximum frequency of
the PSD. As a byproduct of this result, an alternative strategy (without length
scaling) to optimize the intrinsic cut-off frequency of graphene transistors is
envisioned.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, proceeding of UPoN201
Detection of Multiple Pathways in the Spinal Cord White Matter Using Q-Ball Imaging
International audienceHigh angular resolution MRI such as q-ball imaging (QBI) allows to recover complex white matter architecture. We applied this technique to an ex vivo spinal cord of one cat using a 3T scanner, 100 directions and b-values varying from 1000 to 3000 s/mm2. As a result, QBI can retrieve crossing fibre information, where the diffusion tensor imaging approach is constrained to a single diffusion direction. To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating the benefits of QBI in observing longitudinal, commissural and dorso-ventral fibres in the spinal cord. It is a first step towards in vivo characterization of the healthy and injured spinal cord using high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) and QBI
Deciphering the components of regional net ecosystem fluxes following a bottom-up approach for the Iberian Peninsula
Quantification of ecosystem carbon pools is a fundamental requirement for estimating carbon fluxes and for addressing the dynamics and responses of the terrestrial carbon cycle to environmental drivers. The initial estimates of carbon pools in terrestrial carbon cycle models often rely on the ecosystem steady state assumption, leading to initial equilibrium conditions. In this study, we investigate how trends and inter-annual variability of net ecosystem fluxes are affected by initial non-steady state conditions. Further, we examine how modeled ecosystem responses induced exclusively by the model drivers can be separated from the initial conditions. For this, the Carnegie-Ames-Stanford Approach (CASA) model is optimized at set of European eddy covariance sites, which support the parameterization of regional simulations of ecosystem fluxes for the Iberian Peninsula, between 1982 and 2006. <br><br> The presented analysis stands on a credible model performance for a set of sites, that represent generally well the plant functional types and selected descriptors of climate and phenology present in the Iberian region – except for a limited Northwestern area. The effects of initial conditions on inter-annual variability and on trends, results mostly from the recovery of pools to equilibrium conditions; which control most of the inter-annual variability (IAV) and both the magnitude and sign of most of the trends. However, by removing the time series of pure model recovery from the time series of the overall fluxes, we are able to retrieve estimates of inter-annual variability and trends in net ecosystem fluxes that are quasi-independent from the initial conditions. This approach reduced the sensitivity of the net fluxes to initial conditions from 47% and 174% to −3% and 7%, for strong initial sink and source conditions, respectively. <br><br> With the aim to identify and improve understanding of the component fluxes that drive the observed trends, the net ecosystem production (NEP) trends are decomposed into net primary production (NPP) and heterotrophic respiration (<i>R</i><sub>H</sub>) trends. The majority (~97%) of the positive trends in NEP is observed in regions where both NPP and <i>R</i><sub>H</sub> fluxes show significant increases, although the magnitude of NPP trends is higher. Analogously, ~83% of the negative trends in NEP are also associated with negative trends in NPP. The spatial patterns of NPP trends are mainly explained by the trends in <i>f</i>APAR (<i>r</i>=0.79) and are only marginally explained by trends in temperature and water stress scalars (<i>r</i>=0.10 and <i>r</i>=0.25, respectively). Further, we observe the significant role of substrate availability (<i>r</i>=0.25) and temperature (<i>r</i>=0.23) in explaining the spatial patterns of trends in <i>R</i><sub>H</sub>. These results highlight the role of primary production in driving ecosystem fluxes. <br><br> Overall, our study illustrates an approach for removing the confounding effects of initial conditions and emphasizes the need to decompose the ecosystem fluxes into its components and drivers for more mechanistic interpretations of modeling results. We expect that our results are not only specific for the CASA model since it incorporates concepts of ecosystem functioning and modeling assumptions common to biogeochemical models. A direct implication of these results is the ability of this approach to detect climate and phenology induced trends regardless of the initial conditions
Stéatose hépatique aiguë gravidique avec une pyélonéphrite aiguë droite sur une grossesse gémellaire: une association très rare
La Stéatose hépatique aiguë gravidique est une complication rare de la grossesse, et l’association avec la pyélonéphrite aiguë est encore plus rarissime survenant le plus souvent dans le troisième trimestre. Le diagnostic est affirmé par un faisceau d’argument clinique et biologique si non par l'histologie hépatique en dehors de trouble de la crase sanguine. Autrefois régulièrement mortelle, cette pathologie bénéficie actuellement d'un meilleur pronostic maternel et foetal, du fait du diagnostic plus précoce, d'une délivrance rapide et du traitement symptomatique. Les auteurs ont jugé utile de rapporter une observation à travers d’un cas clinique d’une grossesse gémellaire associée à la pyélonéphrite aigue droite avec stéatose hépatique aiguë en milieu de réanimation.Key words: Grossesse gémellaire, pyélonéphrite aigue, stéatose hépatiqu
Noncovalent Interactions by QMC: Speedup by One-Particle Basis-Set Size Reduction
While it is empirically accepted that the fixed-node diffusion Monte-Carlo
(FN-DMC) depends only weakly on the size of the one-particle basis sets used to
expand its guiding functions, limits of this observation are not settled yet.
Our recent work indicates that under the FN error cancellation conditions,
augmented triple zeta basis sets are sufficient to achieve a benchmark level of
0.1 kcal/mol in a number of small noncovalent complexes. Here we report on a
possibility of truncation of the one-particle basis sets used in FN-DMC guiding
functions that has no visible effect on the accuracy of the production FN-DMC
energy differences. The proposed scheme leads to no significant increase in the
local energy variance, indicating that the total CPU cost of large-scale
benchmark noncovalent interaction energy FN-DMC calculations may be reduced.Comment: ACS book chapter, accepte
Research Paper Polyclonal antibodies production against Staphylococcus aureus protein A: ELISA technique optimization for milk quality control
The main aim of this project is to produce polyclonal antibodies directed against the Staphylococcus aureus protein A and their use to appreciate bacteriological analysis of milk quality. In this context, an immunization produce was set up to test and detect in a batch of animals the convenient responder to the injected antigen. Furthermore, to optimize all parameters of retained ELISA test, a cross-table was conceived by using various concentrations of different reagents and has allowed selecting the optimaldilutions as follows: 1) 1/1000 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus protein A mouse antibodies and 1/2000 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus protein A rabbit antibodies. 2) 1/4000 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus treated by heat mouse antibodies and 1/500 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus protein A rabbit antibodies. 3) 1/2000 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus treated by NaClO mouse antibodies and 1/500 for anti-Staphylococcus aureus protein A rabbit antibodies. The application of optimized ELISA test to searchand detect Staphylococcus aureus germs in different samples of milk has shown very satisfying results when compared to those obtained by bacteriological method. Indeed, the sensitiveness and the reproducibility, as well as the possibility to analyze a great number of samples in the same time at a reduced manner make the immunochemical method a best choice of test able to replace recent bacteriological methods
A survey of haptics in serious gaming
Serious gaming often requires high level of realism for training and learning purposes. Haptic technology has been proved to be useful in many applications with an additional perception modality complementary to the audio and the vision. It provides novel user experience to enhance the immersion of virtual reality with a physical control-layer. This survey focuses on the haptic technology and its applications in serious gaming. Several categories of related applications are listed and discussed in details, primarily on haptics acts as cognitive aux and main component in serious games design. We categorize haptic devices into tactile, force feedback and hybrid ones to suit different haptic interfaces, followed by description of common haptic gadgets in gaming. Haptic modeling methods, in particular, available SDKs or libraries either for commercial or academic usage, are summarized. We also analyze the existing research difficulties and technology bottleneck with haptics and foresee the future research directions
Wildfires in Europe: Burned soils require attention
Annually, millions of hectares of land are affected by wildfires worldwide, disrupting ecosystems functioning by
affecting on-site vegetation, soil, and above- and belowground biodiversity, but also triggering erosive off-site
impacts such as water-bodies contamination or mudflows. Here, we present a soil erosion assessment
following the 2017’s wildfires at the European scale, including an analysis of vegetation recovery and soil erosion
mitigation potential. Results indicate a sharp increase in soil losses with 19.4 million Mg additional erosion in the
first post-fire year when compared to unburned conditions. Over five years, 44 million Mg additional soil losses
were estimated, and 46% of the burned area presented no signs of full recovery. Post-fire mitigation could
attenuate these impacts by 63–77%, reducing soil erosion to background levels by the 4th post-fire year. Our
insights may help identifying target policies to reduce land degradation, as identified in the European Union Soil,
Forest, and Biodiversity strategies.Annually, millions of hectares of land are affected by wildfires worldwide, disrupting ecosystems functioning by
affecting on-site vegetation, soil, and above- and belowground biodiversity, but also triggering erosive off-site
impacts such as water-bodies contamination or mudflows. Here, we present a soil erosion assessment
following the 2017’s wildfires at the European scale, including an analysis of vegetation recovery and soil erosion
mitigation potential. Results indicate a sharp increase in soil losses with 19.4 million Mg additional erosion in the
first post-fire year when compared to unburned conditions. Over five years, 44 million Mg additional soil losses
were estimated, and 46% of the burned area presented no signs of full recovery. Post-fire mitigation could
attenuate these impacts by 63–77%, reducing soil erosion to background levels by the 4th post-fire year. Our
insights may help identifying target policies to reduce land degradation, as identified in the European Union Soil,
Forest, and Biodiversity strategies.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Promoter Hypermethylation-Related Reduced Somatostatin Production Promotes Uncontrolled Cell Proliferation in Colorectal Cancer.
BACKGROUND: Somatostatin (SST) has anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects. Our aims were to analyze and compare the SST expression during normal aging and colorectal carcinogenesis at mRNA and protein levels. Furthermore, we tested the methylation status of SST in biopsy samples, and the cell growth inhibitory effect of the SST analogue octreotide in human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line. METHODS: Colonic samples were collected from healthy children (n1 = 6), healthy adults (n2 = 41) and colorectal cancer patients (CRCs) (n3 = 34) for SST mRNA expression analysis, using HGU133 Plus2.0 microarrays. Results were validated both on original (n1 = 6; n2 = 6; n3 = 6) and independent samples ((n1 = 6; n2 = 6; n3 = 6) by real-time PCR. SST expressing cells were detected by immunohistochemistry on colonic biopsy samples (n1 = 14; n2 = 20; n3 = 23). The effect of octreotide on cell growth was tested on Caco-2 cell line. SST methylation percentage in biopsy samples (n1 = 5; n2 = 5; n3 = 9) was defined using methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme digestion. RESULTS: In case of normal aging SST mRNA expression did not alter, but decreased in cancer (p<0.05). The ratio of SST immunoreactive cells was significantly higher in children (0.70%+/-0.79%) compared to CRC (0%+/-0%) (p<0.05). Octreotide significantly increased the proportion of apoptotic Caco-2 cells. SST showed significantly higher methylation level in tumor samples (30.2%+/-11.6%) compared to healthy young individuals (3.5%+/-1.9%) (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In cancerous colonic mucosa the reduced SST production may contribute to the uncontrolled cell proliferation. Our observation that in colon cancer cells octreotide significantly enhanced cell death and attenuated cell proliferation suggests that SST may act as a regulator of epithelial cell kinetics. The inhibition of SST expression in CRC can be epigenetically regulated by promoter hypermethylation
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