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6
result(s) for
"Sreedhar, Y. H"
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In-orbit performance of UVIT and first results
by
Hutchings, J. B
,
Kumar, A
,
Nagabhushana, S
in
Astronomy
,
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
,
Calibration
2017
NRC publication: Yes
Journal Article
In-orbit Calibrations of the Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope
by
Kamath, P U
,
Kumar, A
,
Sankarasubramanian, K
in
Channels
,
Imaging
,
Near ultraviolet radiation
2017
The Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT) is one of the payloads in ASTROSAT, the first Indian Space Observatory. The UVIT instrument has two 375mm telescopes: one for the far-ultraviolet (FUV) channel (1300--1800\\AA), and the other for the near-ultraviolet (NUV) channel (2000--3000\\AA) and the visible (VIS) channel (3200--5500\\AA). UVIT is primarily designed for simultaneous imaging in the two ultraviolet channels with spatial resolution better than 1.8 arcsec, along with provision for slit-less spectroscopy in the NUV and FUV channels.The results of in-orbit calibrations of UVIT are presented in this paper.
In-orbit Performance of UVIT and First Results
2016
The performance of the ultraviolet telescope (UVIT) on-board ASTROSAT is reported. The performance in orbit is also compared with estimates made from the calibrations done on the ground. The sensitivity is found to be within ~15% of the estimates, and the spatial resolution in the NUV is found to exceed significantly the design value of 1.8 arcsec and it is marginally better in the FUV. Images obtained from UVIT are presented to illustrate the details revealed by the high spatial resolution. The potential of multi-band observations in the ultraviolet with high spatial resolution is illustrated by some results.
Sources of Variability in Structural Bending Response of Pediatric and Adult Human Ribs in Dynamic Frontal Impacts
by
Dominguez, Victoria M
,
Bolte, 4th, John H
,
Sreedhar, Akshara
in
Accidents, Traffic
,
Adolescent
,
Adult
2018
Despite safety advances, thoracic injuries in motor vehicle crashes remain a significant source of morbidity and mortality, and rib fractures are the most prevalent of thoracic injuries. The objective of this study was to explore sources of variation in rib structural properties in order to identify sources of differential risk of rib fracture between vehicle occupants. A hierarchical model was employed to quantify the effects of demographic differences and rib geometry on structural properties including stiffness, force, displacement, and energy at failure and yield. Three-hundred forty-seven mid-level ribs from 182 individual anatomical donors were dynamically (~2 m/s) tested to failure in a simplified bending scenario mimicking a frontal thoracic impact. Individuals ranged in age from 4 - 108 years (mean 53 ± 23 years) and included 59 females and 123 males of diverse body sizes. Age, sex, body size, aBMD, whole rib geometry and cross-sectional geometry were explored as predictors of rib structural properties. Measures of cross-sectional rib size (Tt.Ar), bone quantity (Ct.Ar), and bone distribution (Z) generally explained more variation than any other predictors, and were further improved when normalized by rib length (e.g., robustness and WBSI). Cortical thickness (Ct.Th) was not found to be a useful predictor. Rib level predictors performed better than individual level predictors. These findings moderately explain differential risk for rib fracture and with additional exploration of the rib's role in thoracic response, may be able contribute to ATD and HBM development and alterations in addition to improvements to thoracic injury criteria and scaling methods.
Journal Article
DNA helicase Srs2 disrupts the Rad51 presynaptic filament
by
Krejci, Lumir
,
Li, Ying
,
Klein, Hannah
in
Adenosine Triphosphatases - genetics
,
Adenosine Triphosphatases - metabolism
,
Biochemistry
2003
Mutations in the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
gene
SRS2
result in the yeast's sensitivity to genotoxic agents, failure to recover or adapt from DNA damage checkpoint-mediated cell cycle arrest, slow growth, chromosome loss, and hyper-recombination
1
,
2
. Furthermore, double mutant strains, with mutations in DNA helicase genes
SRS2
and
SGS1
, show low viability that can be overcome by inactivating recombination, implying that untimely recombination is the cause of growth impairment
1
,
3
,
4
. Here we clarify the role of
SRS2
in recombination modulation by purifying its encoded product and examining its interactions with the Rad51 recombinase. Srs2 has a robust ATPase activity that is dependent on single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and binds Rad51, but the addition of a catalytic quantity of Srs2 to Rad51-mediated recombination reactions causes severe inhibition of these reactions. We show that Srs2 acts by dislodging Rad51 from ssDNA. Thus, the attenuation of recombination efficiency by Srs2 stems primarily from its ability to dismantle the Rad51 presynaptic filament efficiently. Our findings have implications for the basis of Bloom's and Werner's syndromes, which are caused by mutations in DNA helicases and are characterized by increased frequencies of recombination and a predisposition to cancers and accelerated ageing
5
.
Journal Article
Three interaction energy scales in single-layer high-T\\(_C\\) cuprate HgBa\\(_2\\)CuO\\(_{4+\\delta}\\)
2020
The lamellar cuprate superconductors exhibit the highest ambient-pressure superconducting transition temperatures (T\\(_C\\)) and, after more than three decades of extraordinary research activity, continue to pose formidable scientific challenges. A major experimental obstacle has been to distinguish universal phenomena from materials- or technique-dependent ones. Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) measures momentum-dependent single-particle electronic excitations and has been invaluable in the endeavor to determine the anisotropic momentum-space properties of the cuprates. HgBa\\(_2\\)CuO\\(_{4+\\delta}\\) (Hg1201) is a single-CuO\\(_2\\)-layer cuprate with a particularly high optimal T\\(_C\\) and a simple crystal structure; yet there exists little information from ARPES about the electronic properties of this model system. Here we present an ARPES study of doping-, temperature-, and momentum-dependent systematics of near-nodal dispersion anomalies in Hg1201. The data reveal a hierarchy of three distinct energy scales -a sub-gap low-energy kink, an intermediate-energy kink near 55 meV, and a peak-dip-hump structure. The first two features are attributed to the coupling of electrons to Ba-derived optical phonons and in-plane bond-stretching phonons, respectively. The nodal peak-dip-hump structure appears to have a common doping-dependence in several single-layer cuprates, and is interpreted as a manifestation of pseudogap physics at the node. These results establish several universal phenomena, both in terms of connecting multiple experimental techniques for a single material, and in terms of connecting comparable spectral features in multiple structurally similar cuprates.