20,763 research outputs found
GM crops and gender issues
Correspondence in the December issue by Jonathan Gressel not only states that gender issues in rural settings have not been adequately addressed with respect to weed control biotech but also asserts that such technology can increase the quality of life of rural women in developing countries. Improved weed control is a labor-saving technology that can result in less employment in a labor surplus rural economy. Often in rural areas, wage income is the main source of income and an important determinant of the quality of life, particularly where employment opportunities are generally limited. Apart from soil preparation, planting and weeding, harvesting is also 'femanual' work that can generate more employment if yields are higher. Biotech can enhance the quality of life of women but only if the technology is associated with overall generation of rural employment
The structure of dark matter halos in hierarchical clustering theories
During hierarchical clustering, smaller masses generally collapse earlier
than larger masses and so are denser on the average. The core of a small mass
halo could be dense enough to resist disruption and survive undigested, when it
is incorporated into a bigger object. We explore the possibility that a nested
sequence of undigested cores in the center of the halo, which have survived the
hierarchical, inhomogeneous collapse to form larger and larger objects,
determines the halo structure in the inner regions. For a flat universe with
, scaling arguments then suggest that the core density
profile is, with . But
whether such behaviour obtains depends on detailed dynamics. We first examine
the dynamics using a fluid approach to the self-similar collapse solutions for
the dark matter phase space density, including the effect of velocity
dispersions. We highlight the importance of tangential velocity dispersions to
obtain density profiles shallower than in the core regions. If
tangential velocity dispersions in the core are constrained to be less than the
radial dispersion, a cuspy core density profile shallower than 1/r cannot
obtain, in self-similar collapse. We then briefly look at the profiles of the
outer halos in low density cosmological models where the total halo mass is
convergent. Finally, we analyze a suite of dark halo density and velocity
dispersion profiles obtained in cosmological N-body simulations of models with
n= 0, -1 and -2. We find that the core-density profiles of dark halos, show
considerable scatter in their properties, but nevertheless do appear to reflect
a memory of the initial power spectrum, with steeper initial spectra producing
flatter core profiles. (Abridged)Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Ap
Stochastic dynamics of active swimmers in linear flows
Most classical work on the hydrodynamics of low-Reynolds-number swimming
addresses deterministic locomotion in quiescent environments. Thermal
fluctuations in fluids are known to lead to a Brownian loss of the swimming
direction. As most cells or synthetic swimmers are immersed in external flows,
we consider theoretically in this paper the stochastic dynamics of a model
active particle (a self-propelled sphere) in a steady general linear flow. The
stochasticity arises both from translational diffusion in physical space, and
from a combination of rotary diffusion and run-and-tumble dynamics in
orientation space. We begin by deriving a general formulation for all
components of the long-time mean square displacement tensor for a swimmer with
a time-dependent swimming velocity and whose orientation decorrelates due to
rotary diffusion alone. This general framework is applied to obtain the
convectively enhanced mean-squared displacements of a steadily-swimming
particle in three canonical linear flows (extension, simple shear, and
solid-body rotation). We then show how to extend our results to the case where
the swimmer orientation also decorrelates on account of run-and-tumble
dynamics. Self-propulsion in general leads to the same long-time temporal
scalings as for passive particles in linear flows but with increased
coefficients. In the particular case of solid-body rotation, the effective
long-time diffusion is the same as that in a quiescent fluid, and we clarify
the lack of flow-dependence by briefly examining the dynamics in elliptic
linear flows. By comparing the new active terms with those obtained for passive
particles we see that swimming can lead to an enhancement of the mean-square
displacements by orders of magnitude, and could be relevant for biological
organisms or synthetic swimming devices in fluctuating environmental or
biological flows
Dielectric and polarization experiments in high loss dielectrics: a word of caution
The recent quest for improved functional materials like high permittivity
dielectrics and/or multiferroics has triggered an intense wave of research.
Many materials have been checked for their dielectric permittivity or their
polarization state. In this report, we call for caution when samples are
simultaneously displaying insulating behavior and defect-related conductivity.
Many oxides containing mixed valent cations or oxygen vacancies fall in this
category. In such cases, most of standard experiments may result in effective
high dielectric permittivity which cannot be related to ferroelectric
polarization. Here we list few examples of possible discrepancies between
measured parameters and their expected microscopic origin
Non-collinear Magnetic Order in the Double Perovskites: Double Exchange on a Geometrically Frustrated Lattice
Double perovskites of the form A_2BB'O_6 usually involve a transition metal
ion, B, with a large magnetic moment, and a non magnetic ion B'. While many
double perovskites are ferromagnetic, studies on the underlying model reveal
the possibility of antiferromagnetic phases as well driven by electron
delocalisation. In this paper we present a comprehensive study of the magnetic
ground state and T_c scales of the minimal double perovskite model in three
dimensions using a combination of spin-fermion Monte Carlo and variational
calculations. In contrast to two dimensions, where the effective magnetic
lattice is bipartite, three dimensions involves a geometrically frustrated face
centered cubic (FCC) lattice. This promotes non-collinear spiral states and
`flux' like phases in addition to collinear anti-ferromagnetic order. We map
out the possible magnetic phases for varying electron density, `level
separation' epsilon_B - epsilon_B', and the crucial B'-B' (next neighbour)
hopping t'.Comment: 15 pages pdflatex + 19 figs, revision: removed redundant comment
Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli infection inhibits colonic thiamin pyrophosphate uptake via transcriptional mechanism.
Colonocytes possess a specific carrier-mediated uptake process for the microbiota-generated thiamin (vitamin B1) pyrophosphate (TPP) that involves the TPP transporter (TPPT; product of the SLC44A4 gene). Little is known about the effect of exogenous factors (including enteric pathogens) on the colonic TPP uptake process. Our aim in this study was to investigate the effect of Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) infection on colonic uptake of TPP. We used human-derived colonic epithelial NCM460 cells and mice in our investigation. The results showed that infecting NCM460 cells with live EHEC (but not with heat-killed EHEC, EHEC culture supernatant, or with non-pathogenic E. Coli) to lead to a significant inhibition in carrier-mediated TPP uptake, as well as in level of expression of the TPPT protein and mRNA. Similarly, infecting mice with EHEC led to a significant inhibition in colonic TPP uptake and in level of expression of TPPT protein and mRNA. The inhibitory effect of EHEC on TPP uptake by NCM460 was found to be associated with reduction in the rate of transcription of the SLC44A4 gene as indicated by the significant reduction in the activity of the SLC44A4 promoter transfected into EHEC infected cells. The latter was also associated with a marked reduction in the level of expression of the transcription factors CREB-1 and ELF3, which are known to drive the activity of the SLC44A4 promoter. Finally, blocking the ERK1/2 and NF-kB signaling pathways in NCM460 cells significantly reversed the level of EHEC inhibition in TPP uptake and TPPT expression. Collectively, these findings show, for the first time, that EHEC infection significantly inhibit colonic uptake of TPP, and that this effect appears to be exerted at the level of SLC44A4 transcription and involves the ERK1/2 and NF-kB signaling pathways
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