1,182 research outputs found
Analytical Modeling of a New Compliant Microsystem for Atherectomy Operations
This work offers a new alternative tool for atherectomy operations, with the purpose of minimizing the risks for the patients and maximizing the number of clinical cases for which the system can be used, thanks to the possibility of scaling its size down to lumen reduced to a few tenths
of mm. The development of this microsystem has presented a certain theoretical work during the kinematic synthesis and the design stages. In the first stage a new multi-loop mechanism with a
Stephenson’s kinematic chain (KC) was found and then adopted as the so-called pseudo-rigid body mechanism (PRBM). Analytical modeling was necessary to verify the synthesis requirements. In
the second stage, the joint replacement method was applied to the PRBM to obtain a corresponding and equivalent compliant mechanism with lumped compliance. The latter presents two loops and
six elastic joints and so the evaluation of the microsystem mechanical advantage (MA) had to be calculated by taking into account the accumulation of elastic energy in the elastic joints. Hence, a new
closed form expression of the microsystem MA was found with a method that presents some new aspects in the approach. The results obtained with Finite Element Analysis (FEA) were compared to
those obtained with the analytical model. Finally, it is worth noting that a microsystem prototype can
be fabricated by using MEMS Technology classical methods, while the microsystem packaging could be a further development for the present investigation
A candidate optical counterpart to the middle-aged gamma-ray pulsar PSR J1741-2054
We carried out deep optical observations of the middle-aged -ray
pulsar PSR J1741-2054 with the Very Large Telescope (VLT). We identified two
objects, of magnitudes and , at positions
consistent with the very accurate Chandra coordinates of the pulsar, the
faintest of which is more likely to be its counterpart. From the VLT images we
also detected the known bow-shock nebula around PSR J1741-2054. The nebula is
displaced by \sim 0\farcs9 (at the confidence level) with respect
to its position measured in archival data, showing that the shock propagates in
the interstellar medium consistently with the pulsar proper motion. Finally, we
could not find evidence of large-scale extended optical emission associated
with the pulsar wind nebula detected by Chandra, down to a surface brightness
limit of magnitudes arcsec. Future observations are needed
to confirm the optical identification of PSR J1741-2054 and characterise the
spectrum of its counterpart.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Astrophysical Journal, in pres
Searching for Very High Energy Emission from Pulsars Using the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Observatory
There are currently over 160 known gamma-ray pulsars. While most of them are
detected only from space, at least two are now seen also from the ground. MAGIC
and VERITAS have measured the gamma ray pulsed emission of the Crab pulsar up
to hundreds of GeV and more recently MAGIC has reported emission at
TeV. Furthermore, in the Southern Hemisphere, H.E.S.S. has detected the Vela
pulsar above 30 GeV. In addition, non-pulsed TeV emission coincident with
pulsars has been detected by many groups, including the Milagro Collaboration.
These GeV-TeV observations open the possibility of searching for
very-high-energy (VHE, > 100GeV) pulsations from gamma-rays pulsars in the HAWC
field of view.Comment: Presented at the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2015),
The Hague, The Netherlands. See arXiv:1508.03327 for all HAWC contribution
Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients uncovered by the EXTraS project: flares reveal the development of magnetospheric instability in accreting neutron stars
The low luminosity, X-ray flaring activity, of the sub-class of high mass
X-ray binaries called Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients, has been investigated
using XMM-Newton public observations, taking advantage of the products made
publicly available by the EXTraS project. One of the goals of EXTraS was to
extract from the XMM-Newton public archive information on the aperiodic
variability of all sources observed in the soft X-ray range with EPIC (0.2-12
keV). Adopting a Bayesian block decomposition of the X-ray light curves of a
sample of SFXTs, we picked out 144 X-ray flares, covering a large range of soft
X-ray luminosities (1e32-1e36 erg/s). We measured temporal quantities, like the
rise time to and the decay time from the peak of the flares, their duration and
the time interval between adjacent flares. We also estimated the peak
luminosity, average accretion rate and energy release in the flares. The
observed soft X-ray properties of low-luminosity flaring activity from SFXTs is
in qualitative agreement with what is expected by the application of the
Rayleigh-Taylor instability model in accreting plasma near the neutron star
magnetosphere. In the case of rapidly rotating neutron stars, sporadic
accretion from temporary discs cannot be excluded.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (accepted 2019 May 1; received 2019
April 30; in original form 2019 February 25). 22 pages, 16 figures, 3 tables
X-ray observations and the search for Fermi-LAT gamma-ray pulsars
The Large Area Telescope (LAT) on Fermi has detected ~150 gamma-ray pulsars,
about a third of which were discovered in blind searches of the -ray
data. Because the angular resolution of the LAT is relatively poor and blind
searches for pulsars (especially millisecond pulsars, MSPs) are very sensitive
to an error in the position, one must typically scan large numbers of
locations. Identifying plausible X-ray counterparts of a putative pulsar
drastically reduces the number of trials, thus improving the sensitivity of
pulsar blind searches with the LAT. I discuss our ongoing program of Swift,
XMM-Newton, and Chandra observations of LAT unassociated sources in the context
of our blind searches for gamma-ray pulsars.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Figures, submitted to AN, proceedings of the workshop "The
Fast and the Furious: Energetic Phenomena in Isolated Neutron Stars, Pulsar
Wind Nebulae and Supernova Remnants" ESAC, Madrid, Spain 22nd - 24th May 201
Nitrogen and oxygen abundances in the Local Universe
We present chemical evolution models aimed at reproducing the observed (N/O)
vs. (O/H) abundance pattern of star forming galaxies in the Local Universe. We
derive gas-phase abundances from SDSS spectroscopy and a complementary sample
of low-metallicity dwarf galaxies, making use of a consistent set of abundance
calibrations. This collection of data clearly confirms the existence of a
plateau in the (N/O) ratio at very low metallicity, followed by an increase of
this ratio up to high values as the metallicity increases. This trend can be
interpreted as due to two main sources of nitrogen in galaxies: i) massive
stars, which produce small amounts of pure primary nitrogen and are responsible
for the (N/O) ratio in the low metallicity plateau; ii) low- and
intermediate-mass stars, which produce both secondary and primary nitrogen and
enrich the interstellar medium with a time delay relative to massive stars, and
cause the increase of the (N/O) ratio. We find that the length of the
low-metallicity plateau is almost solely determined by the star formation
efficiency, which regulates the rate of oxygen production by massive stars. We
show that, to reproduce the high observed (N/O) ratios at high (O/H), as well
as the right slope of the (N/O) vs. (O/H) curve, a differential galactic wind -
where oxygen is assumed to be lost more easily than nitrogen - is necessary. No
existing set of stellar yields can reproduce the observed trend without
assuming differential galactic winds. Finally, considering the current best set
of stellar yields, a bottom-heavy initial mass function is favoured to
reproduce the data.FV thanks the Cavendish Astrophysics Group at the University of Cambridge for kindly supporting his visit during 2014 September. FB acknowledges funding from the United Kingdom Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). RM acknowledges funding from the United Kingdom STFC through grant ST/M001172/1. FM acknowledges financial support from PRIN-MIUR 2010-2011 project ‘The Chemical and Dynamical Evolution of the Milky Way and Local Group Galaxies’, prot. 2010LY5N2T.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Oxford University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw53
Nuclear data uncertainty quantification on PWR spent nuclear fuel as a function of burnup
Nuclear data uncertainty analysis on the spent nuclear fuel inventory was performed on the Takahama-3 NT3G23 assembly, where the sample SF95-4 was irradiated up to a burnup of approximately 36 GWd/ t according to the SFCOMPO benchmark. The cross-section covariance matrices stored in the ENDF/B-VIII.0, JEFF-3.3 and JENDL-4.0u evaluated nuclear data libraries were propagated with the stochastic sampling algorithms implemented in the SANDY code. A comparison of the concentration uncertainty differences obtained using data from the three libraries is reported. Similarities were found with the fuel composition uncertainty results obtained for the Calvert Cliffs MKP109 sample P SFCOMPO benchmark. Such a similarity was also found when comparing concentration uncertainties along the sample irradiation. Therefore, the main contributors to the concentration uncertainty of a number of nuclides were identified at different burnup levels in the two samples. To complement the similarity analysis, a correlation study of the concentration distributions predicted by the two models was performed. The reported results hint a dominance of the common uncertainty propagation mechanisms over the model differences in the determination of concentration uncertainty
Methyltrioxorhenium catalysed synthesis of highly oxidised aryltetralin lignans with anti-topoisomerase II and apoptogenic activities
A novel and efficient procedure to prepare highly oxidised aryltetralin lignans, such as isopodophyllotoxone and (-)-aristologone
derivatives, by oxidation of podophyllotoxin and galbulin with methylrhenium trioxide (MTO) and novel MTO heterogeneous
catalysts is reported. It is noteworthy that in the case of isopodophyllotoxone derivatives the functionalisation of the
C-4 position of the C-ring and the ring-opening of the D-lactone moiety increased the activity against topoisomerase II while causing
the undesired inhibition of tubulin polymerisation to disappear. The novel (-)-aristologone derivatives showed apoptogenic
activity against resistant human lymphoma cell lines.L'articolo è disponibile sul sito dell'editore: http://www.sciencedirect.co
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