1,012 research outputs found
Growing Surface Tension of Amorphous-Amorphous Interfaces on Approaching the Colloidal Glass Transition
There is mounting evidence indicating that relaxation dynamics in liquids
approaching their glass transition not only becomes increasingly cooperative
(1,2) but the relaxing regions also become more compact in shape(3-7). While
the surface tension of the interface separating neighboring relaxing regions is
thought to play a crucial role in deciding both their size and
morphology(8-10), owing to the amorphous nature of these regions, even
identifying these interfaces has not been possible in bulk liquids. Here, by
devising a scheme to identify self-induced disorder sites in bulk colloidal
liquids, we directly quantified the dynamics of interfaces delineating regions
of high and low configurational overlap. This procedure also helped unveil a
non-monotonicity in dynamical correlations that has never been observed in bulk
supercooled liquids. Using the capillary fluctuation method (11,12), we
measured the surface tension of amorphous-amorphous interfaces with
supercooling and find that it increases rapidly across the mode-coupling area
fraction. Remarkably, a similar growth in the surface tension is also seen in
the presence of a pinned amorphous wall. Our observations help prune theories
of glass formation and opens up new research avenues aimed at tuning the
properties of amorphous-amorphous interfaces, and hence the glass itself, in a
manner analogous to grain boundary engineering in polycrystals (13)
Soil bacterial communities of a calcium-supplemented and a reference watershed at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (HBEF), New Hampshire, USA
Soil Ca depletion because of acidic deposition-related soil chemistry changes has led to the decline of forest productivity and carbon sequestration in the northeastern USA. In 1999, acidic watershed (WS) 1 at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (HBEF), NH, USA was amended with Ca silicate to restore soil Ca pools. In 2006, soil samples were collected from the Ca-amended (WS1) and reference watershed (WS3) for comparison of bacterial community composition between the two watersheds. The sites were about 125 m apart and were known to have similar stream chemistry and tree populations before Ca amendment. Ca-amended soil had higher Ca and P, and lower Al and acidity as compared with the reference soils. Analysis of bacterial populations by PhyloChip revealed that the bacterial community structure in the Ca-amended and the reference soils was significantly different and that the differences were more pronounced in the mineral soils. Overall, the relative abundance of 300 taxa was significantly affected. Numbers of detectable taxa in families such as Acidobacteriaceae, Comamonadaceae, and Pseudomonadaceae were lower in the Ca-amended soils, while Flavobacteriaceae and Geobacteraceae were higher. The other functionally important groups, e.g. ammonia-oxidizing Nitrosomonadaceae, had lower numbers of taxa in the Ca-amended organic soil but higher in the mineral soil
Automated calculations for massive fermion production with aITALC
The package aITALC has been developed for the automated calculation of
radiative corrections to two-fermion production at colliders. The
package uses Diana, Qgraf, Form, Fortran, FF, LoopTools, and further unix/linux
tools. Numerical results are presented for .Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of "Loops and Legs in Quantum Field
Theory 2004", Zinnowitz, Usedom Island, Germany, April 2004. 5 pages, latex,
espcrc2, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Universality-Breaking Effects in Leptonic Z Decays
We analyze the possibility of universality violation in diagonal leptonic
decays of the boson, in the context of interfamily "see-saw" models. In a
minimal extension of the Standard Model with right-handed neutrino fields, we
find that universality-breaking effects increase quadratically with the heavy
Majorana neutrino mass and may be observed in the running experiments.Comment: MZ-TH/93-04 #, LaTeX, 14 p. (2 Figs
R parity violating contribution to
In this article we consider the contribution of violating couplings to
the process at high energy lepton collider.
We show that the present upper bound on the relevant violating coulpings
obtained from low energy measurements would produce a few hundred to a thousand
top-charm events at the next linear collider. Hence, it
should be possible to observe the rare process at future lepton collider.Comment: LaTEX, 13 pages, one figure is removed. A brief discussion on
possible backgrounds is added. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Expression and DNA methylation of TNF, IFNG and FOXP3 in colorectal cancer and their prognostic significance.
BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer (CRC) progression is associated with suppression of host cell-mediated immunity and local immune escape mechanisms. Our aim was to assess the immune function in terms of expression of TNF, IFNG and FOXP3 in CRC.
METHODS: Sixty patients with CRC and 15 matched controls were recruited. TaqMan quantitative PCR and methylation-specific PCR was performed for expression and DNA methylation analysis of TNF, IFNG and FOXP3. Survival analysis was performed over a median follow-up of 48 months.
RESULTS: TNF was suppressed in tumour and IFNG was suppressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of patients with CRC. Tumours showed enhanced expression of FOXP3 and was significantly higher when tumour size was >38 mm (median tumour size; P=0.006, Mann-Whitney U-test). Peripheral blood mononuclear cell IFNG was suppressed in recurrent CRC (P=0.01). Methylated TNFpromoter (P=0.003) and TNFexon1 (P=0.001) were associated with significant suppression of TNF in tumours. Methylated FOXP3cpg was associated with significant suppression of FOXP3 in both PBMC (P=0.018) and tumours (P=0.010). Reduced PBMC FOXP3 expression was associated with significantly worse overall survival (HR=8.319, P=0.019).
CONCLUSIONS: We have detected changes in the expression of immunomodulatory genes that could act as biomarkers for prognosis and future immunotherapeutic strategies
Phenomenology of non-standard Z couplings in exclusive semileptonic b -> s transitions
The rare decays , and
are analyzed in a generic scenario where New Physics effects
enter predominantly via penguin contributions. We show that this
possibility is well motivated on theoretical grounds, as the vertex
is particularly susceptible to non-standard dynamics. In addition, such a
framework is also interesting phenomenologically since the coupling
is rather poorly constrained by present data. The characteristic features of
this scenario for the relevant decay rates and distributions are investigated.
We emphasize that both sign and magnitude of the forward-backward asymmetry of
the decay leptons in , , carry sensitive information on New Physics. The observable is proposed as a useful probe of
non-standard CP violation in couplings.Comment: Minor modifications; version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Charged Lepton Flavour Violation from Massive Neutrinos in Z Decays
Present evidences for neutrino masses and lepton flavour mixings allow to
predict, in the Standard Model with light neutrinos, branching rates for the
decays Z --> e mu, mu tau, e tau of less than 10^{-54}, while present
experimental exclusion limits from LEP 1 are of order 10^{-5}. The GigaZ option
of the TESLA Linear Collider project will extend the sensitivity down to about
10^{-8}. We study in a systematic way some minimal extensions of the Standard
Model and show that GigaZ might well be sensitive to the rates predicted from
these scenarios.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX, uses axodraw.st
Broken R Parity Contributions to Flavor Changing Rates and CP Asymmetries in Fermion Pair Production at Leptonic Colliders
We examine the effects of the R parity odd renormalizable interactions on
flavor changing rates and CP violation asymmetries in the production of
fermion-antifermion pairs at leptonic colliders. The produced
fermions may be leptons, down-quarks or up-quarks, and the center of mass
energies may range from the Z-boson pole up to GeV. Off the Z-boson
pole, the flavor changing rates are controlled by tree level amplitudes and the
CP asymmetries by interference terms between tree and loop level amplitudes. At
the Z-boson pole, both observables involve loop amplitudes. The lepton number
violating interactions, associated with the coupling constants, \l_{ijk},
\l'_{ijk}, are only taken into account. The consideration of loop amplitudes
is restricted to the photon and Z-boson vertex corrections. We briefly review
flavor violation physics at colliders. We present numerical results using a
single, species and family independent, mass parameter, , for all the
scalar superpartners and considering simple assumptions for the family
dependence of the R parity odd coupling constants.Comment: Latex File. 23 pages. 4 postscript figures. 1 table. Revised version
with new results and several corrections in numerical result
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