12,827 research outputs found
Little Higgs Review
Recently there has been renewed interest in the possibility that the Higgs
particle of the Standard Model is a pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone boson. This
development was spurred by the observation that if certain global symmetries
are broken only by the interplay between two or more coupling constants, then
the Higgs mass-squared is free from quadratic divergences at one loop. This
"collective symmetry" breaking is the essential ingredient in little Higgs
theories, which are weakly coupled extensions of the Standard Model with little
or no fine tuning, describing physics up to an energy scale ~10 TeV. Here we
give a pedagogical introduction to little Higgs theories. We review their
structure and phenomenology, focusing mainly on the SU(3) theory, the Minimal
Moose, and the Littlest Higgs as concrete examples.Comment: To appear in Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science; contains
TASI'05 Little Higgs lecture notes, 44 page
A time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for the measurement of testosterone in saliva: Monitoring of testosterone replacement therapy with testosterone buciclate
Monitoring of testosterone replacement therapy requires a reliable method for testosterone measurement. Determination of salivary testosterone, which reflects the hormone's biologically active plasma fraction, is a superior technique for this purpose. The aim of the present study was to establish a new sensitive time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for the accurate measurement of testosterone levels in saliva and to validate it by monitoring testosterone replacement therapy in eight hypogonadal men. A clinical phase I- study with the new ester testosterone buciclate was performed to search for new testosterone preparations to produce constant serum levels in the therapy of male hypogonadism. After two control examinations eight male patients with primary hypogonadism were randomly assigned to two treatment groups (n = 2x4) and given single doses of either 200 mg (group I) or 600 mg (group II) testosterone buciclate intramuscularly. Saliva and blood samples were obtained 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 days post injection and then weekly for three months. The time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for salivary testosterone shows a detection limit of 16 pmol/l, an intra-assay CV of 8.9% (at a testosterone concentration of 302 pmol/l), an inter-assay CV of 8.7% (at a testosterone concentration of 305 pmol/l) and a good correlation with an established radioimmunsassay of r = 0.89. The sample volume required by this method is only 180 mu l for extraction and duplicate determination. The assay procedure requires no more than three hours. In group I (200 mg) testosterone did not increase to normal levels either in saliva or in serum. However, in group II, androgen levels increased significantly and were maintained in the normal range for up to 12 weeks with maximal salivary testosterone levels of 303 +/- 18 pmol/l (mean+/-SE) and maximal testosterone levels of 13.1 +/- 0.9 nmol/l (mean+/-SE) in serum in study week 6 and 7. The time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay for salivary testosterone provides a useful tool for monitoring androgen status in men and women and is well suited for the follow-up of testosterone replacement therapy on an outpatient basis. The long-acting ester testosterone buciclate is a promising agent for substitution therapy of male hypogonadism and in combination with testosterone monitoring in saliva offers an interesting new perspective for male contraception
Reconstitution of T cell receptor signaling in ZAP-70-deficient cells by retroviral transduction of the ZAP-70 gene.
A variant of severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome (SCID) with a selective inability to produce CD8 single positive T cells and a signal transduction defect in peripheral CD4+ cells has recently been shown to be the result of mutations in the ZAP-70 gene. T cell receptor (TCR) signaling requires the association of the ZAP-70 protein tyrosine kinase with the TCR complex. Human T cell leukemia virus type I-transformed CD4+ T cell lines were established from ZAP-70-deficient patients and normal controls. ZAP-70 was expressed and appropriately phosphorylated in normal T cell lines after TCR engagement, but was not detected in T cell lines from ZAP-70-deficient patients. To determine whether signaling could be reconstituted, wild-type ZAP-70 was introduced into deficient cells with a ZAP-70 retroviral vector. High titer producer clones expressing ZAP-70 were generated in the Gibbon ape leukemia virus packaging line PG13. After transduction, ZAP-70 was detected at levels equivalent to those observed in normal cells, and was appropriately phosphorylated on tyrosine after receptor engagement. The kinase activity of ZAP-70 in the reconstituted cells was also appropriately upregulated by receptor aggregation. Moreover, normal and transduced cells, but not ZAP-70-deficient cells, were able to mobilize calcium after receptor ligation, indicating that proximal TCR signaling was reconstituted. These results indicate that this form of SCID may be corrected by gene therapy
Sustainable farming with native rocks: the transition without revolution.
The development process which humanity passed through favored a series of conquests, reflected in the better quality of life and longevity, however, it also provoked upsets and severe transformation in the environment and in the human food security. Such process is driving the ecosystems to be homogeneous, and, therefore,the nutrients� supply, via nourishment. To change this panorama, the present work discusses the gains of incorporating the stonemeal technique as a strategic alternative to give back the essential fertile characteristics to the soils. This technology has the function of facilitating the rejuvenation of the soils and increasing the availability of the necessary nutrients to the full development of the plants which is a basic input for the proliferation of life in all its dimensions
Compressing web Geodata for real-time environmental applications
The advent of connected mobile devices has caused an unprecedented availability of geo-referenced user-generated content, which can be exploited for environment monitoring. In particular, Augmented Reality (AR) mobile applications can be designed to enable citizens collect observations, by overlaying relevant meta-data on their current view. This class of applications rely on multiple meta-data, which must be properly compressed for transmission and real-time usage. This paper presents a two-stage approach for the compression of Digital Elevation Model (DEM) data and geographic entities for a mountain environment monitoring mobile AR application. The proposed method is generic and could be applied to other types of geographical data
The characteristic blue spectra of accretion disks in quasars as uncovered in the infrared
Quasars are thought to be powered by supermassive black holes accreting
surrounding gas. Central to this picture is a putative accretion disk which is
believed to be the source of the majority of the radiative output. It is well
known, however, that the most extensively studied disk model -- an optically
thick disk which is heated locally by the dissipation of gravitational binding
energy -- is apparently contradicted by observations in a few major respects.
In particular, the model predicts a specific blue spectral shape asymptotically
from the visible to the near-infrared, but this is not generally seen in the
visible wavelength region where the disk spectrum is observable. A crucial
difficulty was that, toward the infrared, the disk spectrum starts to be hidden
under strong hot dust emission from much larger but hitherto unresolved scales,
and thus has essentially been impossible to observe. Here we report
observations of polarized light interior to the dust-emiting region that enable
us to uncover this near-infrared disk spectrum in several quasars. The revealed
spectra show that the near-infrared disk spectrum is indeed as blue as
predicted. This indicates that, at least for the outer near-infrared-emitting
radii, the standard picture of the locally heated disk is approximately
correct. The model problems at shorter wavelengths should then be directed
toward a better understanding of the inner parts of the revealed disk. The
newly uncovered disk emission at large radii, with more future measurements,
will also shed totally new light on the unanswered critical question of how and
where the disk ends.Comment: published in Nature, 24 July 2008 issue. Supplementary Information
can be found at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/div/ir-interferometry/suppl_info.pdf Published
version can be accessed from
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v454/n7203/pdf/nature07114.pd
Transference of Transport Anisotropy to Composite Fermions
When interacting two-dimensional electrons are placed in a large
perpendicular magnetic field, to minimize their energy, they capture an even
number of flux quanta and create new particles called composite fermions (CFs).
These complex electron-flux-bound states offer an elegant explanation for the
fractional quantum Hall effect. Furthermore, thanks to the flux attachment, the
effective field vanishes at a half-filled Landau level and CFs exhibit
Fermi-liquid-like properties, similar to their zero-field electron
counterparts. However, being solely influenced by interactions, CFs should
possess no memory whatever of the electron parameters. Here we address a
fundamental question: Does an anisotropy of the electron effective mass and
Fermi surface (FS) survive composite fermionization? We measure the resistance
of CFs in AlAs quantum wells where electrons occupy an elliptical FS with large
eccentricity and anisotropic effective mass. Similar to their electron
counterparts, CFs also exhibit anisotropic transport, suggesting an anisotropy
of CF effective mass and FS.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Protection of cerebral microcirculation, mitochondrial function and electrocortical activity by small-volume resuscitation with terlipressin in a model of haemorrhagic shock
Background
During early treatment of haemorrhagic shock, cerebral perfusion pressure can be restored by small-volume resuscitation with vasopressors. Whether this therapy is improved with additional fluid remains unknown. We assessed the value of terlipressin and lactated Ringer’s solution (LR) on the early recovery of the microcirculation, tissue oxygenation, and mitochondrial and electrophysiological function in the rat cerebral cortex.
Methods
Animals treated with LR replacing three times (3x) the volume bled (n=26), terlipressin (n=27), terlipressin plus LR of 1x (n=26), 2x (n=16), or 3x (n=15) were compared with untreated (n=36) and sham-operated rats (n=17). In vivo confocal microscopy was used to assess cortical capillary perfusion, changes in tissue oxygen concentration, and mitochondrial membrane potential and redox state. Electrophysiological function was assessed by cortical somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs), spinal cord dorsum potential, and peripheral electromyography.
Results
Compared with sham, the mean (SD) area of perfused vessels was lower in rats subjected to haemorrhagic shock: 82 (10)% vs. 38 (12)%; P<0.001) and impaired oxygen concentration, mitochondrial redox state (99±4 vs. 59±15 % of baseline; P<0.001), and SEPs (97±13% vs. 27±19% of baseline). Adminstration of terlipressin plus 1X or 2X LR was able to recover these measures, but terlipressin+3LR or 3LR alone were not as effective. Spinal cord dorsum potential was preserved in all groups, but no therapy protected electromyographic function.
Conclusion
Resuscitation from haemorrhagic shock using terlipressin with small-volume LR was superior to high-volume LR, with regard to cerebral microcirculation, and mitochondrial and electrophysiological function
Moisture transport by Atlantic tropical cyclones onto the North American continent
Tropical Cyclones (TCs) are an important source of freshwater for the North American continent. Many studies have tried to estimate this contribution by identifying TC-induced precipitation events, but few have explicitly diagnosed the moisture fluxes across continental boundaries. We design a set of attribution schemes to isolate the column-integrated moisture fluxes that are directly associated with TCs and to quantify the flux onto the North American Continent due to TCs. Averaged over the 2004–2012 hurricane seasons and integrated over the western, southern and eastern coasts of North America, the seven schemes attribute 7 to 18 % (mean 14 %) of total net onshore flux to Atlantic TCs. A reduced contribution of 10 % (range 9 to 11 %) was found for the 1980–2003 period, though only two schemes could be applied to this earlier period. Over the whole 1980–2012 period, a further 8 % (range 6 to 9 % from two schemes) was attributed to East Pacific TCs, resulting in a total TC contribution of 19 % (range 17 to 22 %) to the ocean-to-land moisture transport onto the North American continent between May and November. Analysis of the attribution uncertainties suggests that incorporating details of individual TC size and shape adds limited value to a fixed radius approach and TC positional errors in the ERA-Interim reanalysis do not affect the results significantly, but biases in peak wind speeds and TC sizes may lead to underestimates of moisture transport. The interannual variability does not appear to be strongly related to the El Nino-Southern Oscillation phenomenon
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