1,475 research outputs found
PReS-FINAL-2161: Safety and effectiveness of adalimumab in children with polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis aged 2 to <4 years or >=4 years weighing <15 kg
International audienceEn faisant le tour du monde (Mauritanie, Madagascar, Éthiopie, Burkina Faso, Cameroun, New-York, Nouvelle-Zélande, France... ) en passant par l’Internet, cet ouvrage fait le point sur les dernières innovations en matière de gestion des déchets. Considéré comme une ressource, le déchet révèle enfin sa valeur : il est créateur de revenus, de liens sociaux et de nouvelles technologies. C’est pourquoi il devient urgent de structurer son économie
Bifurcations and stability of gap solitons in periodic potentials
We analyze the existence, stability, and internal modes of gap solitons in
nonlinear periodic systems described by the nonlinear Schrodinger equation with
a sinusoidal potential, such as photonic crystals, waveguide arrays,
optically-induced photonic lattices, and Bose-Einstein condensates loaded onto
an optical lattice. We study bifurcations of gap solitons from the band edges
of the Floquet-Bloch spectrum, and show that gap solitons can appear near all
lower or upper band edges of the spectrum, for focusing or defocusing
nonlinearity, respectively. We show that, in general, two types of gap solitons
can bifurcate from each band edge, and one of those two is always unstable. A
gap soliton corresponding to a given band edge is shown to possess a number of
internal modes that bifurcate from all band edges of the same polarity. We
demonstrate that stability of gap solitons is determined by location of the
internal modes with respect to the spectral bands of the inverted spectrum and,
when they overlap, complex eigenvalues give rise to oscillatory instabilities
of gap solitons.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures; updated bibliograph
A molecular insight into algal-oomycete warfare: cDNA analysis of <i>Ectocarpus siliculosus</i> infected with the basal oomycete <i>Eurychasma dicksonii</i>
Brown algae are the predominant primary producers in coastal habitats, and like land plants are subject to disease and parasitism. Eurychasma dicksonii is an abundant, and probably cosmopolitan, obligate biotrophic oomycete pathogen of marine brown algae. Oomycetes (or water moulds) are pathogenic or saprophytic non-photosynthetic Stramenopiles, mostly known for causing devastating agricultural and aquacultural diseases. Whilst molecular knowledge is restricted to crop pathogens, pathogenic oomycetes actually infect hosts from most eukaryotic lineages. Molecular evidence indicates that Eu. dicksonii belongs to the most early-branching oomycete clade known so far. Therefore Eu. dicksonii is of considerable interest due to its presumed environmental impact and phylogenetic position. Here we report the first large scale functional molecular data acquired on the most basal oomycete to date. 9873 unigenes, totalling over 3.5Mb of sequence data, were produced from Sanger-sequenced and pyrosequenced EST libraries of infected Ectocarpus siliculosus. 6787 unigenes (70%) were of algal origin, and 3086 (30%) oomycete origin. 57% of Eu. dicksonii sequences had no similarity to published sequence data, indicating that this dataset is largely unique. We were unable to positively identify sequences belonging to the RXLR and CRN groups of oomycete effectors identified in higher oomycetes, however we uncovered other unique pathogenicity factors. These included putative algal cell wall degrading enzymes, cell surface proteins, and cyclophilin-like proteins. A first look at the host response to infection has also revealed movement of the host nucleus to the site of infection as well as expression of genes responsible for strengthening the cell wall, and secretion of proteins such as protease inhibitors. We also found evidence of transcriptional reprogramming of E. siliculosus transposable elements and of a viral gene inserted in the host genome
Qualitative and quantitative analysis of stability and instability dynamics of positive lattice solitons
We present a unified approach for qualitative and quantitative analysis of
stability and instability dynamics of positive bright solitons in
multi-dimensional focusing nonlinear media with a potential (lattice), which
can be periodic, periodic with defects, quasiperiodic, single waveguide, etc.
We show that when the soliton is unstable, the type of instability dynamic that
develops depends on which of two stability conditions is violated.
Specifically, violation of the slope condition leads to an amplitude
instability, whereas violation of the spectral condition leads to a drift
instability. We also present a quantitative approach that allows to predict the
stability and instability strength
Effect of Flow on Caloric Curve for Finite Nuclei
In a finite temperature Thomas-Fermi theory, we construct caloric curves for
finite nuclei enclosed in a freeze-out volume few times the normal nuclear
volume, with and without inclusion of flow. Without flow, the caloric curve
indicates a smooth liquid-gas phase transition whereas with flow, the
transition may be very sharp. We discuss these results in the context of two
recent experiments, one for heavy symmetric system (Au + Au at 600A MeV) and
the other for highly asymmetric system (Au + C at 1A GeV) where different
behaviours in the caloric curves are seen.Comment: 11 pages revtex; 4 figs; version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Caloric curve in Au + Au collisions
Realistic caloric curves are obtained for reaction with
incident energy ranging from 35 to 130 MeV/nucleon in the dynamic statistical
multifragmentation model. It is shown that for excitation energy 3 to 8
MeV/nucleon, the temperature remains constant in the range 5 to 6 MeV, which is
close to experiment. The mechanism of energy deposition through the
tripartition of colliding system envisaged in this model together with
inter-fragment nuclear interaction are found to play important role. A possible
signature of liquid-gas phase transition is seen in the specific heat
distribution calculated from these caloric curves, and the critical temperature
is found to be 6 to 6.5 MeV.Comment: Revtex, 10 pages, 4 postscipt figures, To appear in Phys. Rev. C
(Rapid Communications
A linear AC trap for polar molecules in their ground state
Contains fulltext :
98810.pdf (preprint version ) (Open Access
Continuous Equilibrium in Affine and Information-Based Capital Asset Pricing Models
We consider a class of generalized capital asset pricing models in continuous
time with a finite number of agents and tradable securities. The securities may
not be sufficient to span all sources of uncertainty. If the agents have
exponential utility functions and the individual endowments are spanned by the
securities, an equilibrium exists and the agents' optimal trading strategies
are constant. Affine processes, and the theory of information-based asset
pricing are used to model the endogenous asset price dynamics and the terminal
payoff. The derived semi-explicit pricing formulae are applied to numerically
analyze the impact of the agents' risk aversion on the implied volatility of
simultaneously-traded European-style options.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Thymocyte selection-associated high mobility group box gene (TOX) is aberrantly over-expressed in mycosis fungoides and correlates with poor prognosis
Mycosis fungoides (MF) often mimics the common chronic inflammatory skin diseases and is difficult to be diagnosed with certainty, partly because of the lack of well-characterized molecular markers. Previously, we discovered that TOX, a key T cell development regulator,was aberrantly over-expressed in early stage MF. In the current multi-center study involving two independent patient cohorts, we determined the prevalence of TOX over-expression in the full spectrum of MF skin biopsies, and tested if TOX expression levels correlated with long term clinical outcomes. We examined TOX expression levels in 113 MF biopsies. We found that the MF biopsies expressed higher TOX mRNA than the controls in both cohorts (17.9 fold in cohort 1, P = 0.002; 5.8 fold in cohort 2, P < 0.0001). In addition, thicker skin lesions such as plaques and tumors expressed even higher TOX levels than thinner patches. Further, TOX over-expression differentiated MF from the controls (area under the curve [AUC]=0.87, P < 0.0001). Finally, high TOX mRNA levels correlated with increased risks of disease progression (P = 0.003) and disease-specific mortality (P = 0.008). In conclusion, TOX may be a useful marker for improving MF diagnosis and prognostication
Searching for the Nuclear Liquid-Gas Phase Transition in Au + Au Collisions at 35 MeV/nucleon
Within the framework of Classical Molecular Dynamics, we study the collision
Au + Au at an incident energy of 35 MeV/nucleon. It is found that the system
shows a critical behaviour at peripheral impact parameters, revealed through
the analysis of conditional moments of charge distributions, Campi Scatter
Plot, and the occurrence of large fluctuations in the region of the Campi plot
where this critical behaviour is expected. When applying the experimental
filters of the MULTICS-MINIBALL apparatus, it is found that criticality signals
can be hidden due to the inefficiency of the experimental apparatus. The
signals are then recovered by identifying semi-peripheral and peripheral
collisions looking to the velocity distribution of the largest fragment, then
by selecting the most complete events.Comment: RevTex file, 21 pages + 19 figures available upon request from
[email protected]
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