3,240 research outputs found
Could cancer drugs provide ammunition against aging?
Recent advances in our understanding of the molecular and cellular signaling pathways that drive aging have revealed several genetic and environmental manipulations that can increase lifespan across different species. Research on the underlying biology of aging has not only revealed it to be a biologically malleable process but has also paved the way for the development of pharmacological interventions that could increase lifespan and delay the onset and/or progression of age-related disease
Transmyacardial Laser Revasularisation for Angina not Controlled by Medication or Amenable to Surgery
Lattice thermal conductivity of disordered NiPd and NiPt alloys
Numerical calculations of lattice thermal conductivity are reported for the
binary alloys NiPd and NiPt. The present work is a continuation of an earlier
paper by us [PRB, 72, 214207 (2005)]which had developed a theoretical framework
for the calculation of configuration-averaged lattice thermal conductivity and
thermal diffusivity in disordered alloys. The formulation was based on the
augmented space theorem combined with a scattering diagram technique. In this
paper we shall show dependence of the lattice thermal conductivity on a series
of variables like phonon frequency, temperature and alloy composition. The
temperature dependence of and its realtion to the measured thermal
conductivity is discussed. The concentration dependence of appears to
justify the notion of a minimum thermal conductivity as discussed by Kittel,
Slack and others. We also study the frequency and composition dependence of the
thermal diffusivity averaged over modes. A numerical estimate of this quantity
gives an idea about the location of mobility edge and the fraction of states in
the frequency spectrum which is delocalized.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figure
Thermoelectric transport in strained Si and Si/Ge heterostructures
The anisotropic thermoelectric transport properties of bulk silicon strained
in [111]-direction were studied by detailed first-principles calculations
focussing on a possible enhancement of the power factor. Electron as well as
hole doping were examined in a broad doping and temperature range. At low
temperature and low doping an enhancement of the power factor was obtained for
compressive and tensile strain in the electron-doped case and for compressive
strain in the hole-doped case. For the thermoelectrically more important high
temperature and high doping regime a slight enhancement of the power factor was
only found under small compressive strain with the power factor overall being
robust against applied strain. To extend our findings the anisotropic
thermoelectric transport of an [111]-oriented Si/Ge superlattice was
investigated. Here, the cross-plane power factor under hole-doping was
drastically suppressed due to quantum-well effects, while under electron-doping
an enhanced power factor was found. With that, we state a figure of merit of
ZT and ZT at T=\unit[300]{K} and T=\unit[900]{K} for the
electron-doped [111]-oriented Si/Ge superlattice. All results are discussed in
terms of band structure features
Heat transport in model jammed solids
We calculate numerically the normal modes of vibrations in 3D jammed packings
of soft spheres as a function of the packing fraction and obtain the energy
diffusivity, a spectral measure of transport that controls sound propagation
and thermal conductivity. The crossover frequency between weak and strong
phonon scattering is controlled by the coordination and shifts to zero as the
system is decompressed towards the critical packing fraction at which rigidity
is lost. Below the crossover, the diffusivity displays a power-law divergence
with inverse frequency, which suggests that the vibrational modes are primarily
transverse waves, weakly scattered by disorder. Above it, a large number of
modes appear whose diffusivity plateaus at a nearly constant value independent
of the inter-particle potential, before dropping to zero above the Anderson
localization frequency. The thermal conductivity of a marginally jammed solid
just above the rigidity threshold is calculated and related to the one measured
experimentally at room temperature for most glasses.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Glass-Like Heat Conduction in High-Mobility Crystalline Semiconductors
The thermal conductivity of polycrystalline semiconductors with type-I
clathrate hydrate crystal structure is reported. Ge clathrates (doped with Sr
and/or Eu) exhibit lattice thermal conductivities typical of amorphous
materials. Remarkably, this behavior occurs in spite of the well-defined
crystalline structure and relatively high electron mobility (). The dynamics of dopant ions and their interaction with the
polyhedral cages of the structure are a likely source of the strong phonon
scattering.Comment: 4 pages, 3 postscript figures, to be published, Phys. Rev. Let
Characteristics and serotype distribution of childhood cases of invasive pneumococcal disease following pneumococcal conjugate vaccination in England and Wales, 2006-14
Background The 7-valent (PCV7) and 13-valent (PCV13) pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are
highly effective in preventing invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) caused by vaccine serotypes.
Vaccine failure (vaccine-type IPD after age-appropriate immunisation) is rare. Little is known about
the risk, clinical characteristics or outcomes of PCV13 compared to PCV7 vaccine failure.
Methods Public Health England conducts IPD surveillance and provides a national reference
service for serotyping pneumococcal isolates in England and Wales. We compared the
epidemiology, rates, risk factors, serotype distribution, clinical characteristics, and outcomes of IPD
in children with PCV13 and PCV7 vaccine failure.
Results A total of 163 episodes of PCV failure were confirmed in 161 children over eight years (04
September 2006 to 03 September 2014) in ten birth cohorts. After three vaccine doses, PCV7 and
PCV13 failure rates were 0.19/100,000 (95% CI, 0.10-0.33; 57 cases) and 0.66/100,000 (95% CI,
0.44-0.99; 104 cases) vaccinated person-years, respectively. Children with PCV13 failure were
more likely to be healthy (87/105 [82.9%] vs. 37/56 [66.1%]; P=0.02), present with bacteremic lower
respiratory tract infection (61/105 [58.1%] vs. 11/56 [19.6%]; P<0.001) and develop empyema
(41/61 [67.2%] vs. 1/11 [9.1%]; P<0.001) compared to PCV7 failures. Serotypes 3 (n=38, 36.2%)
and 19A (n=30, 28.6%) were responsible for most PCV13 failures. Five children died (3.1%; 95%
CI, 1.0-7.1%), including four with co-morbidities.
Conclusions PCV failure is rare and, compared to PCV7 serotypes, the additional PCV13
serotypes are more likely to cause bacteremic lower respiratory tract infection and empyema in
healthy vaccinated children
Performance Data Report: Space Medicine Division, Human Research Program, Behavioural Health and Performance Research Element
This report is the result of a collaborative effort between NASA?s Behavioral Health & Performance (BHP) Research and Operations Group to investigate and determine the availability of data pertaining to behavioral performance (and other pertinent variables) that have been collected by the laboratories at NASA?s Johnson Space Center. BHP?s Operations and Research groups collaborated to systematically identify what types of performance data are needed in relevant BHP performance domains and also to conduct structured interviews with NASA personnel to identify which data do or do not exist currently (and for instances where such data exist, to evaluate the type, quality, accessibility, and confidentiality of those data). The authors defined outcome categories of performance that encapsulate BHP performance domains, mapped BHP Research Risks and Gaps onto those performance outcome categories, and identified and prioritized indicators for each outcome category. The team identified key points of contact (subject matter experts [SMEs]) as potential interviewees, created a template for structured interview questions about sources and accessibility of performance data, and coordinated and conducted structured interviews with the SMEs. The methodology, results, and implications of this effort, as well as forward work needed, are discussed in this report
User-centered development of a Virtual Research Environment to support collaborative research events
This paper discusses the user-centred development process within the Collaborative Research Events on the Web (CREW) project, funded under the JISC Virtual Research Environments (VRE) programme. After presenting the project, its aims and the functionality
of the CREW VRE, we focus on the user engagement approach, grounded in the method of co-realisation. We describe the different research settings and requirements of our three embedded user groups and the respective activities conducted so far. Finally we elaborate on
the main challenges of our user engagement approach and end with the project’s next steps
Responsiveness of the order fulfilment process
This paper discusses evidence from field studies undertaken to investigate the responsiveness of the order fulfilment process in a number of companies. The evidence is analysed in the context of the literature on responsiveness and related areas such as time-based competition. Similarities and differences are analysed across a number of industrial sectors with respect to order fulfilment processes and the interpretation and significance of responsiveness. Generic factors that influence different types of companies are identified. Four components of responsiveness - stimuli, awareness, capabilities and goals - emerge from an analysis of the literature. The field and case study evidence allows the development of more precise definitions and descriptions of each of these components. The study also allows a generic responsiveness framework to be developed that incorporates both strategic and operational viewpoints. The need for more field studies on responsiveness is noted. More work is advocated on the assessment and measurement of responsiveness and on developing appropriate responsiveness interventions, particularly with respect to the order fulfilment process
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