Institution
Houston Advanced Research Center
Nonprofit•The Woodlands, Texas, United States•
About: Houston Advanced Research Center is a nonprofit organization based out in The Woodlands, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Supersymmetry & Higgs boson. The organization has 306 authors who have published 690 publications receiving 25243 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: Definitive data on the absorption spectrum of pure water from 380 to 700 nm have been obtained with an integrating cavity technique and several spectroscopic features have been identified in the visible spectrum to the knowledge for the first time.
Abstract: Definitive data on the absorption spectrum of pure water from 380 to 700 nm have been obtained with an integrating cavity technique. The results are in good agreement with those recently obtained by our group with a completely independent photothermal technique. As before, we find that the absorption in the blue is significantly lower than had previously been generally believed and that the absorption minimum is at a significantly shorter wavelength, i.e., 0.0044 ? 0.0006 m(-1) at 418 nm. Several spectroscopic features have been identified in the visible spectrum to our knowledge for the first time.
2,134 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that γ-ray bursts are sensitive to an energy dispersion predicted by some approaches to quantum gravity, which is sufficient to test theories of quantum gravity.
Abstract: The recent confirmation that at least some γ-ray bursts originate at cosmological distances1,2,3,4 suggests that the radiation from them could be used to probe some of the fundamental laws of physics. Here we show that γ-ray bursts will be sensitive to an energy dispersion predicted by some approaches to quantum gravity. Many of the bursts have structure on relatively rapid timescales5, which means that in principle it is possible to look for energy-dependent dispersion of the radiation, manifested in the arrival times of the photons, if several different energy bands are observed simultaneously. A simple estimate indicates that, because of their high energies and distant origin, observations of these bursts should be sensitive to a dispersion scale that is comparable to the Planck energy scale (∼1019 GeV), which is sufficient to test theories of quantum gravity. Such observations are already possible using existing γ-ray burst detectors.
1,322 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present analytic one-loop expressions for sin 2 θ w, the unification scale M x, and the coupling at the unification level α (M x ), in supersymmetric grand-unified models with arbitrary intermediate scales.
620 citations
•
27 Oct 1994TL;DR: In this article, an improved microfabricated apparatus for conducting a multiplicity of individual and simultaneous binding reactions is described, which comprises a substrate on which are located discrete and isolated sites for binding reactions.
Abstract: An improved microfabricated apparatus for conducting a multiplicity of individual and simultaneous binding reactions is described. The apparatus comprises a substrate on which are located discrete and isolated sites for binding reactions. The apparatus is characterized by discrete and isolated regions that extend through said substrate and terminate on a second surface thereof such that when a test sample is allowed to the substrate, it is capable of penetrating through each such region during the course of said binding reaction. The apparatus is especially useful for sequencing by hybridization of DNA molecules.
496 citations
••
TL;DR: An “encyclopedia” of all overlaps between studies yielded a more extensively corroborated set of host factors assisting HIV replication, and refined networks that specify cellular subsystems recruited by HIV to assist in replication are reported.
Abstract: We have analyzed host cell genes linked to HIV replication that were identified in nine genome-wide studies, including three independent siRNA screens. Overlaps among the siRNA screens were very modest (<7% for any pairwise combination), and similarly, only modest overlaps were seen in pairwise comparisons with other types of genome-wide studies. Combining all genes from the genome-wide studies together with genes reported in the literature to affect HIV yields 2,410 protein-coding genes, or fully 9.5% of all human genes (though of course some of these are false positive calls). Here we report an “encyclopedia” of all overlaps between studies (available at http://www.hostpathogen.org), which yielded a more extensively corroborated set of host factors assisting HIV replication. We used these genes to calculate refined networks that specify cellular subsystems recruited by HIV to assist in replication, and present additional analysis specifying host cell genes that are attractive as potential therapeutic targets.
444 citations
Authors
Showing all 306 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
John Ellis | 110 | 929 | 45501 |
Nevan J. Krogan | 104 | 396 | 47254 |
Dimitri V. Nanopoulos | 93 | 772 | 39251 |
Marlan O. Scully | 92 | 1029 | 40802 |
Remus Teodorescu | 84 | 606 | 38521 |
Maciej Banach | 77 | 905 | 37538 |
Robert H. Hauge | 73 | 348 | 29922 |
Robert C. Harriss | 63 | 159 | 12821 |
Ray Ming | 61 | 268 | 16790 |
Peter McIntyre | 58 | 430 | 13377 |
Michael Fleischhauer | 57 | 287 | 18596 |
Tianjun Li | 57 | 373 | 16710 |
Shi-Yao Zhu | 54 | 348 | 11768 |
Alan D. Frankel | 54 | 133 | 16846 |
John Ellis | 52 | 208 | 10964 |