53 research outputs found

    Mirror system of the RICH detector of the NA62 experiment

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    A large RICH detector is used in NA62 to suppress the muon contamination in the charged pion selection by a factor 100 in the momentum range between 15 and 35 GeV/c. The detector consists of a 17 m long tank (vessel), filled with neon gas at atmospheric pressure. Cherenkov light is reflected by a mosaic of 20 spherical mirrors with 17 m focal length, placed at the downstream end, and collected by 1952 photomultipliers (PMTs) placed at the upstream end. In this paper the characterization of the mirrors before installation and the mirror support system are described. The mirror installation procedure and the laser alignment are also illustrated

    The RICH detector of the NA62 experiment at CERN

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    The NA62 experiment at CERN aims to measure the branching ratio of the ultra-rare charged kaon decay K+→π+νν¯ with a 10% accuracy and with a background contamination at the 10% level. Since the branching ratio of this decay is O (10 −10 ), to fulfill such request one of the main backgrounds, the decay K+→μ+ν (BR ~63% ), must be suppressed by a rejection factor of 4×10 −13 (assuming 10% signal acceptance). This can be partially accomplished using a combination of kinematical cuts (8×10 −6 ) and the different power of penetration through matter of pions and muons (10 −5 ). A further 5×10 −3 suppression factor will be provided by a RICH detector, in a momentum range between 15 and 35 GeV/c. The details of the RICH project as well as the results from test runs performed on a RICH prototype of the same length of the final detector will be presented. The current status of the construction and the description of the final readout and trigger electronics will also be reviewed

    Stability and efficiency of a CMOS sensor as detector of low energy beta and gamma particles

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    Radio Guided Surgery (RGS) is a nuclear medicine technique allowing the surgeon to identify tumor residuals in real time with a millimetric resolution, thanks to a radiopharmaceutical as tracer and a probe as detector. The use of beta(-) emitters, instead of gamma or beta(+), has been recently proposed with the aim to increase the technique sensitivity and reducing both the administered activity to the patient and the medical exposure. In this paper, the possibility to use the commercial CMOS Image Sensor MT9V115, originally designed for visible light imaging, as beta(-) radiation detector RGS is discussed. Being crucial characteristics in a surgical environment, in particular its stability against time, operating temperature, integration time and gain has been studied on laboratory measurements. Moreover, a full Monte Carlo simulation of the detector has been developed. Its validation against experimental data allowed us to obtain efficiency curves for both beta and gamma particles, and also to evaluate the effect of the covering heavy resin protective layer that is present in the "off the shelf" detector. This study suggests that a dedicated CMOS Image Sensor (i.e. one produced without the covering protective layer) represents the ideal candidate detector for RGS, able to massively increase the amount of application cases and the efficacy of this technique

    The beam and detector of the NA62 experiment at CERN

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    NA62 is a fixed-target experiment at the CERN SPS dedicated to measurements of rare kaon decays. Such measurements, like the branching fraction of the K+ → π+ ν bar nu decay, have the potential to bring significant insights into new physics processes when comparison is made with precise theoretical predictions. For this purpose, innovative techniques have been developed, in particular, in the domain of low-mass tracking devices. Detector construction spanned several years from 2009 to 2014. The collaboration started detector commissioning in 2014 and will collect data until the end of 2018. The beam line and detector components are described together with their early performance obtained from 2014 and 2015 data

    Single-molecule spectroscopy of fluorescent proteins

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    Gene expression profiles of APP and BACE1 in Tg SOD1G93A cortical cells

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    Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease defined by motor neuron loss. Transgenic mouse model (Tg SOD1G93A) shows pathological features that closely mimic those seen in ALS patients. An hypothetic link between AD and ALS was suggested by finding an higher amount of amyloid precursor protein (APP) in the spinal cord anterior horn neurons, and of A beta peptides in ALS patients skin. In this work, we have investigated the expression of some genes involved in Alzheimer's disease, as APP, beta- and gamma-secretase, in an animal model of ALS, to understand some possible common molecular mechanisms between these two pathologies. For gene expression analysis, we carried out a quantitative RT-PCR in ALS mice and in transgenic mice over-expressing human wild-type SOD1 (Tg hSOD1). We found that APP and BACE1 mRNA levels were increased 1.5-fold in cortical cells of Tg SOD1G93A mice respect to Tg hSOD1, whereas the expression of gamma-secretase genes, as PSEN1, PSEN2, Nicastrin, and APH1a, showed no statistical differences between wild-type and ALS mice. Biochemical analysis carried out by immunostaining and western blotting, did not show any significant modulation of the protein expression compared to the genes, suggesting the existence of post-translational mechanisms that modify protein levels

    Influences of hypothyroidism on lipid composition and inositol lipid-linked receptors responsiveness and protein kinase C (PKC) activity in the cerebral cortex of Lewis rats

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    The influence of hypothyroidism (HO) induced by treatment with propylthiouracil on lipid composition, receptor responsiveness of M1-muscarinic receptors (M(1)AChRs) and metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) as well as on protein kinase C (PKC) activity was investigated in the cerebral cortex of Lewis rats. HO did not influence the lipid composition. There was a significant 2-fold increase of efficacy and 6-fold decrease of potency of carbachol-induced inositol phosphate (IF) accumulation in HO, with respect to control rats. The efficacy of trans-(1S,3R)-1-amino-1,3-cyclopentanedicarboxylic acid (ACPD)-induced IP accumulation was also higher in HO (by 50%), without differences in EC50 values. The activities of soluble calcium-dependent and calcium-independent PKC were higher in HO than in control rats (both roughly 30%); membrane-associated PKCs were not modified. The data indicate that HO induces an increased responsiveness of M(1)AChRs and mGluRs and a rise in the soluble PKC activity that could be available and ready for translocation

    INFLUENCES OF HYPOTHYROIDISM ON LIPID COMPOSITION AND INOSITOLLIPID-LINKED RECEPTORS RESPONSIVENESS AND PROTEIN KINASE C (PKC) ACTIVITY IN THE CEREBRAL CORTEX OF LEWIS RATS

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    The influence of hypothyroidism (HO) induced by treatment with propylthiouracil on lipid composition, receptor responsiveness of M1-muscarinic receptors (M(1)AChRs) and metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) as well as on protein kinase C (PKC) activity was investigated in the cerebral cortex of Lewis rats. HO did not influence the lipid composition. There was a significant 2-fold increase of efficacy and 6-fold decrease of potency of carbachol-induced inositol phosphate (IF) accumulation in HO, with respect to control rats. The efficacy of trans-(1S,3R)-1-amino-1,3-cyclopentanedicarboxylic acid (ACPD)-induced IP accumulation was also higher in HO (by 50%), without differences in EC50 values. The activities of soluble calcium-dependent and calcium-independent PKC were higher in HO than in control rats (both roughly 30%); membrane-associated PKCs were not modified. The data indicate that HO induces an increased responsiveness of M(1)AChRs and mGluRs and a rise in the soluble PKC activity that could be available and ready for translocation
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