49 research outputs found
NY Serpentis: SU UMa-Type Nova in the Period Gap with Diversity of Normal Outbursts
We present photometric study of NY Ser, an in-the-gap SU UMa-type nova, in
2002 and 2013. We determined the duration of the superoutburst and the mean
superhump period to be 18 d and 0.10458 d, respectively. We detected in 2013
that NY Ser showed two distinct states separated by the superoutburst. A state
of rather infrequent normal outbursts lasted at least 44 d before the
superoutburst and a state of frequent outbursts started immediately after the
superoutburst and lasted at least for 34 d. Unlike a typical SU UMa star with
bimodal distribution of the outbursts duration, NY Ser displayed a diversity of
normal outbursts. In the state of infrequent outbursts, we detected a wide ~12
d outburst accompanied by 0.098 d orbital modulation but without superhumps
ever established in NY Ser. We classified this as the "wide normal outburst".
The orbital period dominated both in quiescence and during normal outbursts in
this state. In the state of the most frequent normal outbursts, the 0.10465 d
positive superhumps dominated and co-existed with the orbital modulation. In
2002 we detected the normal outburst of "intermediate" 5-6 d duration that was
also accompanied by orbital modulations.Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures, accepted in PAS
Parallel multiplex thermodynamic analysis of coaxial base stacking in DNA duplexes by oligodeoxyribonucleotide microchips
Microchip Analysis of DNA Sequence by Contiguous Stacking of Oligonucleotides and Mass Spectrometry
Synthesis, properties and bioconjugation of water-soluble asymmetric indodicarbocyanine dyes
Fabrication of Microarray of Gel-Immobilized Compounds on a Chip by Copolymerization
The manufacturing of microchips containing oligonucleotides and proteins immobilized within gel pads, ranging in size from 10 × 10 to 100 × 100 μm, is described. The microchips are produced by photo- or persulfate-induced copolymerization of unsaturated derivatives of biomolecules with acrylamide-bisacrylamide mixture. Oligonucleotides containing 5′-allyl or 5′-butenediol units were synthesized using standard phosphoramidite chemistry. Acryloyl residues were attached to a protein by a twostep procedure. Photopolymerization was induced by illumination of the monomer solution containing initiator with UV light through the mask. The mask was applied directly over the monomer solution or projected through a microscope. Alternatively, copolymerization was carried out in drops of aqueous solution of monomers containing ammonium persulfate. Drops with different allyl-oligonucleotides were distributed on a glass slide, and the polymerization was induced by diffusion of N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED) from a hexane solution that covered the aqueous drops
