1,114 research outputs found
The left sternalis muscle variation detected during mastectomy
The sternalis muscle variation is a well-known anatomical situation. It is present
in 8.7% of women and 6.4% of men, although the incidence varies according
to sex, race and ethnicity. During a left modified radical mastectomy operation
on a 46-year-old female patient a sternalis muscle was detected on the pectoralis
major muscle in the superficial fascia. It was in craniocaudal position and
was parallel to the body of the sternum. The cylindrical muscle was approximately
8 cm in length and 2 cm in diameter. Such variations are considered to
have their origin in embryological development. Awareness of muscular variations
and their identification is important both for procedure through the proper
dissection planes during breast surgery and in radiological examination and
follow-up
The Charge Form Factor of the Neutron at Low Momentum Transfer from the Reaction
We report new measurements of the neutron charge form factor at low momentum
transfer using quasielastic electrodisintegration of the deuteron.
Longitudinally polarized electrons at an energy of 850 MeV were scattered from
an isotopically pure, highly polarized deuterium gas target. The scattered
electrons and coincident neutrons were measured by the Bates Large Acceptance
Spectrometer Toroid (BLAST) detector. The neutron form factor ratio
was extracted from the beam-target vector asymmetry
at four-momentum transfers , 0.20, 0.29 and 0.42
(GeV/c).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Measurement of the proton electric to magnetic form factor ratio from \vec ^1H(\vec e, e'p)
We report the first precision measurement of the proton electric to magnetic
form factor ratio from spin-dependent elastic scattering of longitudinally
polarized electrons from a polarized hydrogen internal gas target. The
measurement was performed at the MIT-Bates South Hall Ring over a range of
four-momentum transfer squared from 0.15 to 0.65 (GeV/c).
Significantly improved results on the proton electric and magnetic form factors
are obtained in combination with previous cross-section data on elastic
electron-proton scattering in the same region.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PR
Anisotropy of ferromagnetism in Co-implanted rutile
Magnetic anisotropy of cobalt implanted single-crystalline rutile has been studied by means of magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE) and superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) techniques. We observed for the first time strong angular dependence of the remanent magnetization and coercive field in the plane of the implanted surface: twofold anisotropy for the (100)-substrate and fourfold anisotropy for the (001)-substrate samples. The observation opens up new possibilities to tailor magnetic anisotropies of the material. Possible origins of ferromagnetism and anisotropies in dielectric and diamagnetic single-crystalline TiO2 samples after Co-ion implantation are discussed. © 2005 IOP Publishing Ltd
A New Upper Limit for the Tau-Neutrino Magnetic Moment
Using a prompt neutrino beam in which a nu_tau component was identified for
the first time, the nu_tau magnetic moment was measured based on a search for
an anomalous increase in the number of neutrino-electron interactions. One such
event was observed when 2.3 were expected from background processes, giving an
upper 90% confidence limit of 3.9x10^-7 Bohr magnetons.Comment: 9 pages; 1 figur
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