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Nonparaxial Propagation of Rotating Cosh-Gaussian Beams
Dongmei Deng,Xi Peng,Chidao Chen,Bo Chen,Yulian Peng,Meiling Zhou 한국물리학회 2015 THE JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY Vol.66 No.5
Starting from the inhomogeneous Helmholtz equation, we obtain the exact rotating Cosh-Gaussian vector potential solution oriented along the propagation axis (i.e., the z axis). The electricand the magnetic fields are both expressed in terms of rotating Cosh-Gaussian beams (RCGBs) thatare rigorous solutions to Maxwell’s equations. The paraxial and the nonparaxial RCGBs have aninherent rotating property in that the angular velocity decreases with increasing the propagationdistance. The evolution of the Poynting vector of the RCGBs is analyzed as they propagate in freespace.
Deng, Weidong,Wanapat, Metha,Ma, Songcheng,Chen, Jing,Xi, Dongmei,He, Tianbao,Yang, Zhifang,Mao, Huaming Asian Australasian Association of Animal Productio 2007 Animal Bioscience Vol.20 No.7
Six male Gayal (Bos frontalis), approximately two years of age and with a mean live weight of $203{\pm}17$ kg ($mean{\pm}standard\;deviation$), were housed indoors in metabolism cages and fed bamboo (Sinarundinaria) leaves and twigs. After an adjustment period of 24 days of feeding the diet, samples of rumen liquor were obtained for analyses of bacteria in the liquor. The diversity of rumen bacteria was investigated by constructing a 16S rDNA clone library. A total of 147 clones, comprising nearly full length sequences (with a mean length of 1.5 kb) were sequenced and submitted to an on-line similarity search and phylogenetic analysis. Using the criterion of 97% or greater similarity with the sequences of known bacteria, 17 clones were identified as Ruminococcus albus, Butyrivibrio fibrosolvens, Quinella ovalis, Clostridium symbiosium, Succiniclasticum ruminis, Selenomonas ruminantium and Allisonella histaminiformans, respectively. A further 22 clones shared similarity ranging from 90-97% with known bacteria but the similarity in sequences for the remaining 109 clones was less than 90% of those of known bacteria. Using a phylogenetic analysis it was found that the majority of the clones identified (57.1%) were located in the low G+C subdivision, with most of the remainder (42.2% of clones) located in the Cytophage-Flexibacter-Bacteroides (CFB) phylum and one clone (0.7%) was identified as a Spirochaete. It was apparent that Gayal have a large and diverse range of bacteria in the rumen liquor which differ from those of cattle and other ruminants. This may explain the greater live weights of Gayal, compared to cattle, grazing in the harsh natural environments in which Gayal are located naturally.
Xi, Dongmei,Wanapat, Metha,Deng, Weidong,He, Tianbao,Yang, Zhifang,Mao, Huaming Asian Australasian Association of Animal Productio 2007 Animal Bioscience Vol.20 No.8
Three male Gayal, two years of age and with a mean live weight of $203{\pm}26$ kg, and three adult Yunnan Yellow Cattle, with a mean live weight of $338{\pm}18$ kg were fed a ration of pelleted lucerne hay and used to collect rumen fluid for in vitro measurements of digestibilities and gas production from fermentation of a range of forages. The forages were: bamboo stems, bamboo twigs, bamboo leaves, rice straw, barley straw, annual ryegrass hay, smooth vetch hay and pelleted lucerne hay. There were significant (p<0.05) effects of the source of rumen fluid on in vitro dry matter digestibility (IVDMD) and gas production during fermentation of forage. For the roughage of lowest quality (bamboo stems and rice straw), gas production during fermentation was higher (p<0.05) in the presence of rumen fluid from Gayal than Yunnan Yellow Cattle. Differences for these parameters were found for the better quality roughages with gas production being enhanced in the presence of rumen fluid from Yunnan Yellow Cattle. Moreover, the IVDMD of investigated roughages was significantly higher (p<0.05) in Gayal than Yunnan Yellow Cattle. The results offer an explanation for the positive live weight gains recorded for Gayal foraging in their natural environment where the normal diet consists of poor quality roughages.
Nonparaxial correction solution to isodiffracting sub-cycle pulsed beam propagation in free space
Hong Guo,Dongmei Deng,Fahuai Yi,Hong Jin Kong,Lu Guangshan 한국물리학회 2003 THE JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY Vol.42 No.5
The propagation of an isodifiracting sub-cycle pulsed beam, modelled by a Poisson spectrum, in free space is studied, and a nonparaxially corrected solution is presented both analytically and numerically. Numerical simulations indicate that, for a half-cycle pulsed beam, the paraxial approximation is not valid, so the nonparaxial corrections must be taken into account.
Ganggang Mu,Qianshan Ding,Hongyan Li,Li Zhang,Lingli Zhang,Ke He,Lu Wu,Yunchao Deng,Dongmei Yang,Lianlian Wu,Ming Xu,Jie Zhou,Honggang Yu 생화학분자생물학회 2018 Experimental and molecular medicine Vol.50 No.-
The mechanism by which gastrin promotes pancreatic cancer cell metastasis is unclear. The process of directing polarized cancer cells toward the extracellular matrix is principally required for invasion and distant metastasis; however, whether gastrin can induce this process and its underlying mechanism remain to be elucidated. In this study, we found that gastrin-induced phosphorylation of paxillin at tyrosine 31/118 and RhoA activation as well as promoted the metastasis of PANC-1 cancer cells. Depletion of Gα12 and Gα13 inhibited the phosphorylation of paxillin and downstream activation of GTP-RhoA, blocked the formation and aggregation of focal adhesions and facilitated polarization of actin filaments induced by gastrin. Suppression of RhoA and ROCK also exhibited identical results. Selective inhibition of the CCKBR–Gα12/13–RhoA–ROCK signaling pathway blocked the reoriented localization of the Golgi apparatus at the leading edge of migrated cancer cells. YM022 and Y-27632 significantly suppressed hepatic metastasis of orthotic pancreatic tumors induced by gastrin in vivo. Collectively, we demonstrate that gastrin promotes Golgi reorientation and directional polarization of pancreatic cancer cells by activation of paxillin via the CCKBR–Gα12/13–RhoA–ROCK signal pathway.