Institution
Utsunomiya University
Education•Utsunomiya, Japan•
About: Utsunomiya University is a education organization based out in Utsunomiya, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Holography. The organization has 4139 authors who have published 6812 publications receiving 91975 citations. The organization is also known as: Utsunomiya daigaku.
Topics: Laser, Holography, Plasma, Electron, Polarization (waves)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Hirosaki University1, Chinese Academy of Sciences2, Yokohama National University3, Hebei Normal University4, Tibet University5, Shandong University6, Southwest Jiaotong University7, Yunnan University8, Kanagawa University9, Utsunomiya University10, University of Tokyo11, Konan University12, Waseda University13, Shinshu University14, Tsinghua University15, Saitama University16, National Institute of Informatics17, College of Industrial Technology18, Max Planck Society19, Shonan Institute of Technology20
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented an updated all-particle energy spectrum of primary cosmic rays in a wide range from 10 14 to 10 17 eVusing 5:5 ; 10 7 events collected from 2000 November through 2004 October by the Tibet-III air-shower array located 4300 m in altitude.
Abstract: We present an updated all-particle energy spectrum of primary cosmic rays in a wide range from 10 14 to 10 17 eVusing 5:5 ; 10 7 events collected from 2000 November through 2004 October by the Tibet-III air-shower array located 4300 m abovesealevel(anatmosphericdepthof 606gcm � 2 ).Thesizespectrumexhibitsasharpkneeatacorrespondingprimary energy around 4 PeV. This work uses increased statistics and new simulation calculations for the analysis. We discuss our extensive Monte Carlo calculations and the model dependencies involved in thefinal result, assuming interaction models QGSJET01c and SIBYLL2.1, and heavy dominant (HD) and proton dominant (PD) primary composition models. Pure protonandpureironprimarymodelsarealsoexaminedasextremecases.A detector simulationwasalsoperformedtoimproveouraccuracyindeterminingthesizeof theairshowersandtheenergyof theprimaryparticle.Weconfirmedthatthe all-particle energy spectra obtained under various plausible model parameters are not significantly different from each other, which was the expected result given the characteristics of the experiment at high altitude, where the air showers of the primary energy around the knee reach near-maximum development, with their features dominated by electromagnetic components,leadingtoaweakdependenceontheinteractionmodel or theprimarymass.Thisisthehighest statistical and the best systematics-controlled measurement covering the widest energy range around the knee energy region.
194 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, five emulsion chambers were analyzed with two different dilution factors exposed to the 50-, 100-, and 300-GeV electron beams at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
Abstract: Five emulsion chambers were analyzed with two different dilution factors exposed to the 50-, 100-, and 300-GeV electron beams at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. The longitudinal development and lateral distribution of the number of shower tracks within a certain radius (\ensuremath{\le} 100 \ensuremath{\mu} m) both roughly agree with the theoretical transition and lateral curves by Nishimura and Kidd connected by a spacing factor equal to the dilution factor. The error of the cascade energy measurement by the conventional way, using the transition curves within a radius 50 \ensuremath{\mu} m, is 18-28% for 50-100 GeV and 13-14% for 300 GeV. Track length within a cylinder of the same radius gives less ambiguity than the above method, when the track length is summed up till the depth is greater than 1.4 times the depth of the maximum number of shower tracks within a radius 50 \ensuremath{\mu} m. Other results with details are also described.
189 citations
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TL;DR: Results indicate that BU1 protein is a positive regulator of BR response: it controls bending of the lamina joint in rice and it is a novel primary response gene that participates in two BR signaling pathways through OsBRI1 and RGA1.
Abstract: Brassinosteroids (BRs) are involved in many developmental processes and regulate many subsets of downstream genes throughout the plant kingdom. However, little is known about the BR signal transduction and response network in monocots. To identify novel BR-related genes in rice (Oryza sativa), we monitored the transcriptomic response of the brassinosteroid deficient1 (brd1) mutant, with a defective BR biosynthetic gene, to brassinolide treatment. Here, we describe a novel BR-induced rice gene BRASSINOSTEROID UPREGULATED1 (BU1), encoding a helix-loop-helix protein. Rice plants overexpressing BU1 (BU1:OX) showed enhanced bending of the lamina joint, increased grain size, and resistance to brassinazole, an inhibitor of BR biosynthesis. In contrast to BU1:OX, RNAi plants designed to repress both BU1 and its homologs displayed erect leaves. In addition, compared to the wild type, the induction of BU1 by exogenous brassinolide did not require de novo protein synthesis and it was weaker in a BR receptor mutant OsbriI (Oryza sativa brassinosteroid insensitive1, d61) and a rice G protein alpha subunit (RGA1) mutant d1. These results indicate that BU1 protein is a positive regulator of BR response: it controls bending of the lamina joint in rice and it is a novel primary response gene that participates in two BR signaling pathways through OsBRI1 and RGA1. Furthermore, expression analyses showed that BU1 is expressed in several organs including lamina joint, phloem, and epithelial cells in embryos. These results indicate that BU1 may participate in some other unknown processes modulated by BR in rice.
188 citations
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University of Minnesota1, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute2, Louisiana State University3, University of Toronto4, University of Buea5, University of the Philippines6, University of Peradeniya7, Wildlife Conservation Society8, University of Georgia9, Osaka City University10, Forest Research Institute Malaysia11, University of Missouri–St. Louis12, Nanyang Technological University13, University of the Philippines Diliman14, Organization for Tropical Studies15, Utsunomiya University16, National Museum of Natural History17, Indian Institute of Science18, Tunghai University19, Oregon State University20, University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras21, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador22, Florida State University23, University of Alberta24, Thammasat University25, University of California, San Diego26
TL;DR: This work uses demographic equilibrium theory to derive analytic predictions for tree size distributions corresponding to different growth and mortality functions and tests these predictions using data from 14 large-scale tropical forest plots encompassing censuses of 473 ha and > 2 million trees.
Abstract: Tropical forests vary substantially in the densities of trees of different sizes and thus in above-ground biomass and carbon stores. However, these tree size distributions show fundamental similarities suggestive of underlying general principles. The theory of metabolic ecology predicts that tree abundances will scale as the -2 power of diameter. Demographic equilibrium theory explains tree abundances in terms of the scaling of growth and mortality. We use demographic equilibrium theory to derive analytic predictions for tree size distributions corresponding to different growth and mortality functions. We test both sets of predictions using data from 14 large-scale tropical forest plots encompassing censuses of 473 ha and > 2 million trees. The data are uniformly inconsistent with the predictions of metabolic ecology. In most forests, size distributions are much closer to the predictions of demographic equilibrium, and thus, intersite variation in size distributions is explained partly by intersite variation in growth and mortality.
187 citations
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TL;DR: N-Decanoyl cyclopentylamide (C10-CPA) was found to be the strongest inhibitor, and its concentrations required for half-maximal inhibition for lasB-lacZ and rhlA- lacZ expression were 80 and 90 μM, respectively.
Abstract: N-Octanoyl cyclopentylamide (C8-CPA) was found to moderately inhibit quorum sensing in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1. To obtain more powerful inhibitors, a series of structural analogs of C8-CPA were synthesized and examined for their ability to inhibit quorum sensing in P. aeruginosa PAO1. The lasB-lacZ and rhlA-lacZ reporter assays revealed that the chain length and the ring structure were critical for C8-CPA analogs to inhibit quorum sensing. N-Decanoyl cyclopentylamide (C10-CPA) was found to be the strongest inhibitor, and its concentrations required for half-maximal inhibition for lasB-lacZ and rhlA-lacZ expression were 80 and 90 μM, respectively. C10-CPA also inhibited production of virulence factors, including elastase, pyocyanin, and rhamnolipid, and biofilm formation without affecting growth of P. aeruginosa PAO1. C10-CPA inhibited induction of both lasI-lacZ by N-(3-oxododecanoyl)-l-homoserine lactone (PAI1) and rhlA-lacZ by N-butanoyl-l-homoserine lactone (PAI2) in the lasI rhlI mutant of P. aeruginosa PAO1, indicating that C10-CPA interferes with the las and rhl quorum-sensing systems via inhibiting interaction between their response regulators (LasR and RhlR) and autoinducers.
186 citations
Authors
Showing all 4148 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kazuhito Hashimoto | 120 | 781 | 61195 |
Yoshinori Yamamoto | 85 | 950 | 28130 |
S. Uehara | 78 | 602 | 23493 |
Minghua Liu | 74 | 679 | 20727 |
Akira Fujishima | 70 | 299 | 69335 |
Satoshi Hasegawa | 69 | 708 | 22153 |
Donald A. Tryk | 67 | 240 | 25469 |
Hiromu Suzuki | 65 | 250 | 15241 |
Kunio Arai | 64 | 293 | 15022 |
Kazuo Suzuki | 63 | 507 | 17786 |
Jin Wang | 60 | 196 | 10435 |
James B. Reid | 60 | 246 | 11773 |
Richard L. Smith | 59 | 302 | 11420 |
Isao Kubo | 58 | 303 | 11291 |
Takao Yokota | 57 | 245 | 11813 |