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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 0.50 + 1,050 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Washington Banking Reports Second Quarter 2008 Eps of $0.25
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Jul 24, 2008
The live call can be accessed by dialing (303) 262-2083 or on the web at www.wibank.com. The replay, which will be available for a month beginning shortly ...WBCO - OTC:CMTX
Source: Google News

FIRST OAK BROOK BANCSHARES, INC. -
F Data, B Sheet, S Record - doi.wiley.com
... 0.42 0.49 2003 0.47 0.47 0.47 0.47 2004 0.48 0.48 0.46 0.50 2005 0.43 ... Address: 1400
Sixteenth Street, Oak Brook, IL 60523 Telephone: 630-571-1050 Web Site: www ...

Electroslag casting of compressor crankshafts
AP Alikin, AA Dan'kin - Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, 1993 - Springer
... 7) device for assem bly of the crankshaft; 8) base; 9) web being melted ... Note. Chemical
analysis of the 45 steel electrode (GOST 1050-88), %: 0.42-0.50 C, 0.17 ...
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… organic matter, inorganic nutrients, and ultraviolet radiation on an alpine littoral food web -
RD Vinebrooke, PR Leavitt - Limnology and Oceanography, 1998 - JSTOR
... Our findings suggest that littoral food-web structure in clear ... fluorescence detector
and an HP model 1050 PDA spectro ... 0.45 DOM x UVR 0.94 0.98 0.50 0.71 3.67 ...

Grained and anodized aluminum substrate for lithographic printing plates -
US Patent 5,834,129, 1998 - freepatentsonline.com
... wherein Ra ranges from about 0.10 to about 0.50 microns, preferably ... EXAMPLE 1
(COMPARATIVE) A lithographic grade 1050 alloy aluminum web was degreased ...

Lithographic printing plates having specific grained and anodized aluminum substrate -
MS Dhillon, G Sprintschnik, JG Gonzales - US Patent 5,728,503, 1998 - freepatentsonline.com
... roughness parameters wherein Ra ranges from about 0.10 to about 0.50 microns,
preferably from ... A lithographic grade 1050 alloy aluminum web was degreased ...

[CITATION] A Theoretical Approach to Web Design in E-Commerce: A Belief Reinforcement Model -
J Song, FM Zahedi - Management Science, 2005 - INFORMS
... A Theoretical Approach to Web Design in ... Vari- ous Web-design elements are used in
order to con- vey information in these categories to potential Web customers. ...

[PDF] Comparison of Load Balancing Strategies on Cluster-based Web Servers -
YM Teo, R Ayani - Transactions of the Society for Modeling and Simulation, 2001 - comp.nus.edu.sg
... Comparison of Load Balancing Strategies on Cluster-based Web Servers, YM Teo and
R Ayani, Transactions of the Society for Modeling and ... 0.1 0.2 0.50 5 0.50 5.03 ...
-

Comparison of student performance using web and paper-based homework in college-level physics -
SW Bonham, DL Deardorff, RJ Beichner - Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2003 - doi.wiley.com
... in which Web-based homework could enable exercises with greater pedagogical value
are discussed. ? 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 40: 1050?1071 ...

Lithographic printing plates having a smooth, shiny surface -
MS Dhillon, G Sprintschnik, JG Gonzales - EP Patent 0,778,158, 1997 - freepatentsonline.com
... roughness parameters wherein Ra ranges from about 0.10 to about 0.50 microns,
preferably from ... A lithographic grade 1050 alloy aluminum web was degreased ...
-

Press perturbations and the predictability of ecological interactions in a food web -
OJ Schmitz - Ecology, 1997 - JSTOR
... 0.65 0.67 Fragaria 0.92-0.69 0.63 Herbivore press Hieracium 0.53-0.34 0.50 Solidago
0.73 ... species presses on all other species in the old-field food web via all ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Extremely low-dose MDCT useful for reducing hospital stay for patients with acute abdominal pain

Extremely low-dose MDCT of the abdomen and pelvis is useful in providing needed diagnostic information and reducing hospital stay in patients with acute nonspecific abdominal pain, according to a new study by researchers from the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, GA, and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, MA.

For the study, researchers analyzed the findings of 163 patients who had nonspecific abdominal pain and who underwent ultra-low-dose MDCT of the abdomen and pelvis. All of these patients would have otherwise undergone three view abdominal X-ray serris according to standard department protocol. "We found that 61 patients (37%) were able to be discharged the same day from the emergency department based on negative findings on MDCT," said Unni Udayasankar, MD, lead author of the study. The mean duration of the hospital stay overall for the study population was 2.4 days.

"Patients with unspecified abdominal pain usually have to get abdominal X-rays," said Dr. Udayasankar. "Abdominal X-rays lack accuracy in patients with acute abdominal pain. Our study focused on the feasibility of substituting three-view abdominal X-rays with ultra-low-dose MDCT and assess its impact on patient care and management," said Dr. Udayasankar.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

"With developments in CT technology it is now feasible to acquire good quality images at extremely low radiation doses. Patients with acute abdominal pain who would otherwise have undergone three-view abdominal X-rays may be evaluated with ultra-low-dose MDCT at comparable radiation doses. CT studies improved reader confidence and resulted in early diagnosis and patient management," added Dr. Udayasankar.

The full results of the study will be presented on Tuesday, May 8, 2007 during the American Roentgen Ray Society Annual Meeting in Orlando, FL.

 

Scientists offer new view of photosynthesis

During the remarkable cascade of events of photosynthesis, plants approach the pinnacle of stinginess by scavenging nearly every photon of available light energy to produce food. Yet after many years of careful research into its exact mechanisms, some key questions remain about this fundamental biological process that supports all life on earth.

Now, a large research team led by Neal Woodbury, a scientist at ASU's Biodesign Institute, has come up with a new insight into the mechanism of photosynthesis, which involves the orchestrated movement of proteins on the timescale of a millionth of a millionth of a second. Their findings are described in "Protein Dynamics Control the Kinetics of Initial Electron Transfer in Photosynthesis," in the May 4 issue of Science.

"The studies that led up to this work initiated 20 years ago when Jim Allen and I looked at one of our mutants and thought our spectrometer was broken," Woodbury said. "That mutant turned out to be the first of a long series of mutations that systematically altered the energy of the initial reaction." Since then, Woodbury and colleagues have managed to shed light on an amazing process that provides earth's primary power source.

To get a closer look at what was happening during photosynthesis, the team used a well studied purple photosynthetic bacterium called Rhodobacter sphaeroides. This type of organism was likely one of the earliest photosynthetic bacteria to evolve. The researchers focused their efforts by studying the center stage of photosynthesis, the reaction center, where light energy is funneled into specialized chlorophyll binding proteins.

The textbook picture of photosynthesis represents the reaction center proteins as a scaffold, holding chlorophyll molecules at a highly optimized distance and orientation so that electrons can hop from one chlorophyll to another. With the chlorophylls in just the right position, any systematic protein movement was thought to be merely a side product of electrons shuttling between chlorophyll molecules.

Woodbury and his colleagues tried to uncover more of the physical mechanism driving photosynthesis by creating mutants that would theoretically tweak the electron transfer relationships between molecules in the reaction center.

"After years of failure trying to break the system by changing the energetics, we were left with the nagging question of how it continued to work so well," said Woodbury, ASU professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry and director of Biodesign's Center for Bio-Optical Nanotechnology.

The researchers started to inch closer to an answer when Wang, a postdoctoral research associate in Woodbury's lab, noticed something in common with all of the different mutants. When using a new model based on reaction-diffusion kinetics, Wang saw that the curves representing how fast electrons moved in the reaction center had a similar shape. "He decided that there must be some sort of underlying physical principle involved," Woodbury said.

Not many research groups are equipped to measure the early events in photosynthesis because of the extremely short timescale –similar to the amount of time it takes a supercomputer to carry out a single flop. Wang was able to use the ultrafast laser facility (funded by the National Science Foundation), which acts like a high-speed motion picture camera that can capture data from these lightning-fast reactions.

"He tried a really hard experiment, and he was actually able to measure the protein motion and match it to electron transfer," Woodbury said. This discovery helped the researchers understand why changing the energetics didn't knock out photosynthesis.

The movement of the reaction center proteins during photosynthesis allows the plant or bacteria to harness light energy efficiently even if conditions aren't optimal. So, while Woodbury and colleagues made it difficult for photosynthesis to work, the proteins were able to compensate by moving and energetically guiding the electrons through their biological circuit.

According to Woodbury, the reaction center proteins work for electrons in a way similar to how a slow moving elevator with no doors would work for people. The electrons are able to get off at the spot that they need to because the protein motion adjusts the energetics until it is just right. Even if the elevator starts a little too high or low (initial energies are not optimal), the people (electrons) can still get off on the right floor.

This way of representing the electron transfer process successfully captured the contribution of the protein movements to the rate of the reaction. The scientists were then able to quantitatively model the effect of the mutations on the initial rate of photosynthetic electron transfer and answer questions that had been haunting them for 20 years.

The answers may be good news for the development of organic solar cells, which have been of commercial interest due to their relatively low cost compared to traditional silicon solar cells. "Some of the problems that you have with the organic photovoltaics arise from the fact that they don't work under all of the conditions you want them to," Woodbury said.

The robustness of the natural system may offer some useful lessons for engineers trying to improve on current technologies. Woodbury proposed that there might be a way to increase the flexibility of the system used in organic solar cells by incorporating solvents that move on a variety of time scales that could "tune" the molecules to work in a wider variety of conditions.

Woodbury also expects that this new research will help move the study of photosynthesis forward. "It's changed the way I look at how photosynthesis works and has opened up a whole set of new questions," he said.

"One of the areas that we're particularly interested in is how the absorption of light starts protein movement," Woodbury said. The researchers are also looking for future experiments to help explain what sort of protein movements may be occurring in the reaction center and then try to match these findings with current computer models of protein movement.

###

The research team includes lead author Haiyu Wang, Biodesign Institute; Su Lin, Biodesign Institute; James Allen, ASU Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry; JoAnn Williams, ASU Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry; Sean Blankert and Christa Laser, Biodesign Institute.

The Biodesign Institute at ASU integrates diverse fields of science to cure and prevent disease, overcome the limitations of injury, renew the environment and improve national security. By fusing research in biology, engineering, medicine, physics, information technology and cognitive science, the institute accelerates discoveries into uses that can be adopted rapidly by the private sector. For information, visit www.biodesign.asu.edu or call (480) 727-8322.

 

Caption: The structure of the L and M subunits of the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (based on PDB entry 1PCR). The protein is represented in purple, the cofactors are represented in red, blue, black and yellow.

Credit: Professor Neal Woodbury, Biodesign Institute at ASU

 
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