6,304 research outputs found
Multiplate focusing collimator
An appartus is described for scanning relatively small near sources of penetrating radiation to obtain the energy distribution thereof, wherein a collimator assembly is interposed between a radiation source and a radiation detector. The collimator assembly has a plurality of plates aligned in parallel planes with respect to a common axis normal to their centers. All the plates have similar random distribution of apertures. All apertures on each plate are the same size. The size of respective plates, the size of the apertures of said respective plates, and the spacing between said respective plates vary precisely according to a predetermined ratio to produce radiation channels which converge to a focal point. The radiation incident to the radiation detector is maximized when the focal point and the radiation source are co-incident
Prospects for Extrasolar "Earths" in Habitable Zones
We have shown that Earth-mass planets could survive in variously restricted
regions of the habitable zones (HZs) of most of a sample of nine of the 102
main-sequence exoplanetary systems confirmed by 19 November 2003. In a
preliminary extrapolation of our results to the other systems, we estimate that
roughly a half of these systems could have had an Earth-mass planet confined to
the HZ for at least the most recent 1000 Ma. The HZ migrates outwards during
the main-sequence lifetime, and so this proportion varies with stellar age.
About two thirds of the systems could have such a planet confined to the HZ for
at least 1000 Ma at sometime during the main-sequence lifetime. Clearly, these
systems should be high on the target list for exploration for terrestrial
planets. We have reached this conclusion by launching putative Earth-mass
planets in various orbits and following their fate with mixed-variable
symplectic and hybrid integrators. Whether the Earth-mass planets could form in
the HZs of the exoplanetary systems is an urgent question that needs further
study.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Neutralino-hadron scattering in the NMSSM
We provide a scan of the parameter space for neutralino-hadron scattering in
the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model using an updated value for
the strange quark sigma commutator. These results also take into account
constraints from WMAP data on the relic density and new constraints from the
Large Hadron Collider. We find that the resultant spin-independent cross
sections are smaller in magnitude than those found in recent results obtained
within the constrained minimal supersymmetric standard model, yet still great
enough to feasibly allow for detection in the case of bino-like neutralinos.Comment: 4 pages 5 figure
Successful Teaching: A Practical Training Course For Bible School Teachers
A pamphlet designed to help in the preparation and presentation of Bible lessons. Chapters include The Bible School, The Teacher, The Pupil, and The Lesson.https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/1526/thumbnail.jp
Observing the Geometry of Warped Compactification via Cosmic Inflation
Using DBI inflation as an example, we demonstrate that the detailed geometry
of warped compactification can leave an imprint on the cosmic microwave
background (CMB). We compute CMB observables for DBI inflation in a generic
class of warped throats and find that the results (such as the sign of the tilt
of the scalar perturbations and its running) depend sensitively on the precise
shape of the warp factor. In particular, we analyze the warped deformed
conifold and find that the results can differ from those of other warped
geometries, even when these geometries approximate well the exact metric of the
warped deformed conifold.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. v2: References and clarifications adde
Androgen receptor phosphorylation status at serine 578 predicts poor outcome in prostate cancer patients
Purpose: Prostate cancer growth is dependent upon androgen receptor (AR) activation, regulated via phosphorylation. Protein kinase C (PKC) is one kinase that can mediate AR phosphorylation. This study aimed to establish if AR phosphorylation by PKC is of prognostic significance.
Methods: Immunohistochemistry for AR, AR phosphorylated at Ser-81 (pARS81), AR phosphorylated at Ser-578 (pARS578), PKC and phosphorylated PKC (pPKC) was performed on 90 hormone-naïve prostate cancer specimens. Protein expression was quantified using the weighted histoscore method and examined with regard to clinico-pathological factors and outcome measures; time to biochemical relapse, survival from biochemical relapse and disease-specific survival.
Results: Nuclear PKC expression strongly correlated with nuclear pARS578 (c.c. 0.469, p=0.001) and cytoplasmic pARS578 (c.c. 0.426 p=0.002). High cytoplasmic and nuclear pARS578 were associated with disease-specific survival (p<0.001 and p=0.036 respectively). High nuclear PKC was associated with lower disease-specific survival when combined with high pARS578 in the cytoplasm (p=0.001) and nucleus (p=0.038). Combined high total pARS81 and total pARS578 was associated with decreased disease-specific survival (p=0.005)
Conclusions: pARS578 expression is associated with poor outcome and is a potential independent prognostic marker in hormone-naïve prostate cancer. Furthermore, PKC driven AR phosphorylation may promote prostate cancer progression and provide a novel therapeutic target
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