76 research outputs found
Wavefront-Error Performance Characterization for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) Science Instruments
The science instruments (SIs) comprising the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) were tested in three cryogenic-vacuum test campaigns in the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)'s Space Environment Simulator (SES) test chamber. In this paper, we describe the results of optical wavefront-error performance characterization of the SIs. The wavefront error is determined using image-based wavefront sensing, and the primary data used by this process are focus sweeps, a series of images recorded by the instrument under test in its as-used configuration, in which the focal plane is systematically changed from one image to the next. High-precision determination of the wavefront error also requires several sources of secondary data, including 1) spectrum, apodization, and wavefront-error characterization of the optical ground-support equipment (OGSE) illumination module, called the OTE Simulator (OSIM), 2) F-number and pupil-distortion measurements made using a pseudo-nonredundant mask (PNRM), and 3) pupil geometry predictions as a function of SI and field point, which are complicated because of a tricontagon-shaped outer perimeter and small holes that appear in the exit pupil due to the way that different light sources are injected into the optical path by the OGSE. One set of wavefront-error tests, for the coronagraphic channel of the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) Longwave instruments, was performed using data from transverse translation diversity sweeps instead of focus sweeps, in which a sub-aperture is translated and/or rotated across the exit pupil of the system. Several optical-performance requirements that were verified during this ISIM-level testing are levied on the uncertainties of various wavefront-error-related quantities rather than on the wavefront errors themselves. This paper also describes the methodology, based on Monte Carlo simulations of the wavefront-sensing analysis of focus-sweep data, used to establish the uncertainties of the wavefront-error maps
Wavefront-Error Performance Characterization for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) Science Instruments
The science instruments (SIs) comprising the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) were tested in three cryogenic-vacuum test campaigns in the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)'s Space Environment Simulator (SES). In this paper, we describe the results of optical wavefront-error performance characterization of the SIs. The wavefront error is determined using image-based wavefront sensing (also known as phase retrieval), and the primary data used by this process are focus sweeps, a series of images recorded by the instrument under test in its as-used configuration, in which the focal plane is systematically changed from one image to the next. High-precision determination of the wavefront error also requires several sources of secondary data, including 1) spectrum, apodization, and wavefront-error characterization of the optical ground-support equipment (OGSE) illumination module, called the OTE Simulator (OSIM), 2) plate scale measurements made using a Pseudo-Nonredundant Mask (PNRM), and 3) pupil geometry predictions as a function of SI and field point, which are complicated because of a tricontagon-shaped outer perimeter and small holes that appear in the exit pupil due to the way that different light sources are injected into the optical path by the OGSE. One set of wavefront-error tests, for the coronagraphic channel of the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) Longwave instruments, was performed using data from transverse translation diversity sweeps instead of focus sweeps, in which a sub-aperture is translated andor rotated across the exit pupil of the system.Several optical-performance requirements that were verified during this ISIM-level testing are levied on the uncertainties of various wavefront-error-related quantities rather than on the wavefront errors themselves. This paper also describes the methodology, based on Monte Carlo simulations of the wavefront-sensing analysis of focus-sweep data, used to establish the uncertainties of the wavefront error maps
Validation of satellite-based noontime UVI with NDACC ground-based instruments: influence of topography, environment and satellite overpass time
Spectral solar UV radiation measurements are performed in France using three
spectroradiometers located at very different sites. One is installed in
Villeneuve d'Ascq, in the north of France (VDA). It is an urban site in a
topographically flat region. Another instrument is installed in Observatoire
de Haute-Provence, located in the southern French Alps (OHP). It is a rural
mountainous site. The third instrument is installed in Saint-Denis,
Réunion Island (SDR). It is a coastal urban site on a small mountainous
island in the southern tropics. The three instruments are affiliated with the
Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) and carry
out routine measurements to monitor the spectral solar UV radiation and
enable derivation of UV index (UVI). The ground-based UVI values observed at
solar noon are compared to similar quantities derived from the Ozone
Monitoring Instrument (OMI, onboard the Aura satellite) and the second Global
Ozone Monitoring Experiment (GOME-2, onboard the Metop-A satellite)
measurements for validation of these satellite-based products. The present
study concerns the period 2009–September 2012, date of the implementation of
a new OMI processing tool. The new version (v1.3) introduces a correction for
absorbing aerosols that were not considered in the old version (v1.2). Both
versions of the OMI UVI products were available before September 2012 and are
used to assess the improvement of the new processing tool. On average,
estimates from satellite instruments always overestimate surface UVI at solar
noon. Under cloudless conditions, the satellite-derived estimates of UVI
compare satisfactorily with ground-based data: the median relative bias is
less than 8 % at VDA and 4 % at SDR for both OMI v1.3 and GOME-2, and
about 6 % for OMI v1.3 and 2 % for GOME-2 at OHP. The correlation
between satellite-based and ground-based data is better at VDA and OHP (about
0.99) than at SDR (0.96) for both space-borne instruments. For all sky
conditions, the median relative biases are much larger, with large dispersion
for both instruments at all sites (VDA: about 12 %; OHP: 9 %; SDR:
11 %). Correlation between satellite-based and ground-based data is still
better at VDA and OHP (about 0.95) than at SDR (about 0.73) for both
satellite instruments. These results are explained considering the time of
overpass of the two satellites, which is far from solar noon, preventing a
good estimation of the cloud cover necessary for a good modelling of the UVI.
Site topography and environment are shown to have a non-significant
influence. At VDA and OHP, OMI v1.3 shows a significant improvement with
respect to v1.2, which did not account for absorbing aerosols
Cell Transplant
Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) are a most appealing source for cell replacement therapy in acute brain lesions. We evaluated the potential of hiPSC therapy in stroke by transplanting hiPSC-derived neural progenitor cells (NPCs) into the postischemic striatum. Grafts received host tyrosine hydroxylase-positive afferents and contained developing interneurons and homotopic GABAergic medium spiny neurons that, with time, sent axons to the host substantia nigra. Grafting reversed stroke-induced somatosensory and motor deficits. Grafting also protected the host substantia nigra from the atrophy that follows disruption of reciprocal striatonigral connections. Graft innervation by tyrosine hydoxylase fibers, substantia nigra protection, and somatosensory functional recovery were early events, temporally dissociated from the slow maturation of GABAergic neurons in the grafts and innervation of substantia nigra. This suggests that grafted hiPSC-NPCs initially exert trophic effects on host brain structures, which precede integration and potential pathway reconstruction. We believe that transplantation of NPCs derived from hiPSCs can provide useful interventions to limit the functional consequences of stroke through both neuroprotective effects and reconstruction of impaired pathways
Génération d'harmoniques, émission et réception paramétriques dues aux non-éinéarites du milieu marin
Aux fréquences acoustiques suffisamment élevées et pour de grandes amplitudes vibratoires, les non-linéarités du milieu marin favorisent la génération d'harmoniques et limitent ainsi la puissance qu'on peut transmettre sur une fréquence donnée. Ce phénomène peut être utilisé pour créer à partir de deux ondes primaires de fréquences différentes, des ondes secondaires aux fréquences somme ou différence. On a pu ainsi former dans le milieu marin des antennes paramétriques fictives d'émission et de réception de type end-fire qui peuvent remplacer avantageusement les antennes réelles dans certaines applications particulières
Relationship between gramacidin conformation dependent induction of phospholipid transbilayer movement and hexagonal HII phase formation in erythrocyte membranes
Addition of gramicidin in sufficient concentration from dimethylsulfoxide or trifluoroethanol to isolated erythrocyte membranes induces hexagonal HII phase formation for the phospholipids. In contrast, addition from ethanol does not change the overall bilayer organization despite a similar extent of peptide incorporation. The same solvent dependence is observed for the enhancement of transbilayer reorientation of lysophospholipids and unspecific leak formation in intact erythrocytes at lower gramicidin concentrations. These results indicate that the (β6.3) conformation of the peptide is essential for all three membrane perturbing effects
Interfacial properties of gramicidin and gramicidin-lipid mixtures measured with static and dynamic monolayer techniques.
Gramicidin films at the air/water interface are shown to exhibit a phase transition at 225 A2/molecule which might be caused by either cluster formation, reorientation of molecules, conformational changes or multilayer formation. It is further shown that coupling of a charged group on either NH2- or COOH-terminus or elongation of the peptide by two amino acids, only slightly affects the surface area characteristics whereas modification of the tryptophans or even replacement of a single tryptophan by phenylalanine leads to drastic alterations in the surface-area characteristics and a (partial) loss of the phase transition demonstrating that the tryptophans play an important role in the interfacial behavior of gramicidin. The lack of a solvent history effect on the interfacial behavior indicates a rapid conformational interconversion of the peptide at the air/water interface. Gramicidin in mixtures with dioleoylphosphatidylcholine and lysopalmitoylphosphatidylcholine shows a condensing effect whereas gramicidin shows ideal mixing with dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine. The condensing effect most likely is related to the aggregational state of the peptides which is different in phosphatidylcholines and phosphatidylethanolamines
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