8,502 research outputs found
Towards Laser Driven Hadron Cancer Radiotherapy: A Review of Progress
It has been known for about sixty years that proton and heavy ion therapy is
a very powerful radiation procedure for treating tumours. It has an innate
ability to irradiate tumours with greater doses and spatial selectivity
compared with electron and photon therapy and hence is a tissue sparing
procedure. For more than twenty years powerful lasers have generated high
energy beams of protons and heavy ions and hence it has been frequently
speculated that lasers could be used as an alternative to RF accelerators to
produce the particle beams necessary for cancer therapy. The present paper
reviews the progress made towards laser driven hadron cancer therapy and what
has still to be accomplished to realise its inherent enormous potential.Comment: 40 pages, 24 figure
The Structure & Dynamics of Massive Early-type Galaxies: On Homology, Isothermality and Isotropy inside one Effective Radius
Based on 58 SLACS strong-lens early-type galaxies with direct total-mass and
stellar-velocity dispersion measurements, we find that inside one effective
radius massive elliptical galaxies with M_eff >= 3x10^10 M_sun are
well-approximated by a power-law ellipsoid with an average logaritmic density
slope of = -dlog(rho_tot)/dlog(r)=2.085^{+0.025}_{-0.018} (random
error on mean) for isotropic orbits with beta_r=0, +-0.1 (syst.) and
sigma_gamma' <= 0.20^{+0.04}_{-0.02} intrinsic scatter (all errors indicate the
68 percent CL). We find no correlation of gamma'_LD with galaxy mass (M_eff),
rescaled radius (i.e. R_einst/R_eff) or redshift, despite intrinsic differences
in density-slope between galaxies. Based on scaling relations, the average
logarithmic density slope can be derived in an alternative manner, fully
independent from dynamics, yielding =1.959 +- 0.077. Agreement
between the two values is reached for =0.45 +- 0.25, consistent with
mild radial anisotropy. This agreement supports the robustness of our results,
despite the increase in mass-to-light ratio with total galaxy mass: M_eff ~
L_{V,eff}^(1.363+-0.056). We conclude that massive early-type galaxies are
structurally close-to homologous with close-to isothermal total density
profiles (<=10 percent intrinsic scatter) and have at most some mild radial
anisotropy. Our results provide new observational limits on galaxy formation
and evolution scenarios, covering four Gyr look-back time.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJL; 4 pages, 2 figure
The Sloan Lens ACS Survey. IX. Colors, Lensing and Stellar Masses of Early-type Galaxies
We present the current photometric dataset for the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS)
Survey, including HST photometry from ACS, WFPC2, and NICMOS. These data have
enabled the confirmation of an additional 15 grade `A' (certain) lens systems,
bringing the number of SLACS grade `A' lenses to 85; including 13 grade `B'
(likely) systems, SLACS has identified nearly 100 lenses and lens candidates.
Approximately 80% of the grade `A' systems have elliptical morphologies while
~10% show spiral structure; the remaining lenses have lenticular morphologies.
Spectroscopic redshifts for the lens and source are available for every system,
making SLACS the largest homogeneous dataset of galaxy-scale lenses to date. We
have developed a novel Bayesian stellar population analysis code to determine
robust stellar masses with accurate error estimates. We apply this code to
deep, high-resolution HST imaging and determine stellar masses with typical
statistical errors of 0.1 dex; we find that these stellar masses are unbiased
compared to estimates obtained using SDSS photometry, provided that informative
priors are used. The stellar masses range from 10^10.5 to 10^11.8 M and
the typical stellar mass fraction within the Einstein radius is 0.4, assuming a
Chabrier IMF. The ensemble properties of the SLACS lens galaxies, e.g. stellar
masses and projected ellipticities, appear to be indistinguishable from other
SDSS galaxies with similar stellar velocity dispersions. This further supports
that SLACS lenses are representative of the overall population of massive
early-type galaxies with M* >~ 10^11 M, and are therefore an ideal
dataset to investigate the kpc-scale distribution of luminous and dark matter
in galaxies out to z ~ 0.5.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, 5 tables, published in Ap
Nonlinear Scattering of a Bose-Einstein Condensate on a Rectangular Barrier
We consider the nonlinear scattering and transmission of an atom laser, or
Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) on a finite rectangular potential barrier. The
nonlinearity inherent in this problem leads to several new physical features
beyond the well-known picture from single-particle quantum mechanics. We find
numerical evidence for a denumerably infinite string of bifurcations in the
transmission resonances as a function of nonlinearity and chemical potential,
when the potential barrier is wide compared to the wavelength of oscillations
in the condensate. Near the bifurcations, we observe extended regions of
near-perfect resonance, in which the barrier is effectively invisible to the
BEC. Unlike in the linear case, it is mainly the barrier width, not the height,
that controls the transmission behavior. We show that the potential barrier can
be used to create and localize a dark soliton or dark soliton train from a
phonon-like standing wave.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, new version includes clarification of
definition of transmission coefficient in general nonlinear vs. linear cas
PKS B1400-33: an unusual radio relic in a poor cluster
We present new arcminute resolution radio images of the low surface
brightness radio source PKS B1400-33 that is located in the poor cluster Abell
S753. The observations consist of 330 MHz VLA, 843 MHz MOST and 1398 and 2378
MHz ATCA data. These new images, with higher surface brightness sensitivity
than previous observations, reveal that the large scale structure consists of
extended filamentary emission bounded by edge-brightened rims. The source is
offset on one side of symmetrically distributed X-ray emission that is centered
on the dominant cluster galaxy NGC 5419. PKS B1400-33 is a rare example of a
relic in a poor cluster with radio properties unlike those of most relics and
halos observed in cluster environments.
The diffuse source appears to have had an unusual origin and we discuss
possible mechanisms. We examine whether the source could be re-energized relic
radio plasma or a buoyant synchrotron bubble that is a relic of activity in NGC
5419. The more exciting prospect is that the source is relic plasma preserved
in the cluster gaseous environment following the chance injection of a radio
lobe into the ICM as a result of activity in a galaxy at the periphery of the
cluster.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
Forehead Skin Blood Flow in Normal Neonates during Active and Quiet Sleep, Measured with a Diode Laser Doppler Instrument
Changes in forehead skin blood flow during active and quiet sleep were determined in 16 healthy neonates using a recently developed semi-conductor laser Doppler flow meter without light conducting fibres. Measurements were carried out at a postnatal age varying from 5 hours to 7 days. The two sleep states could be distinguished in 17 recordings. The mean skin blood flow values during active sleep were significantly higher (p<0.01) than those during quiet sleep, the mean increase being 28.1%. The variability of the flow signal, expressed as the coefficient of variation, changed significantly from 23.1% during active sleep to 18.2% during quiet sleep
K_L \ra \mu^\pm e^\mp \nu \overline{\nu} as background to K_L \ra \mu^\pm e^\mp
We consider the process K_L \ra \mu^\pm e^\mp \nu \overline{\nu} at next to
leading order in chiral perturbation theory. This process occurs in the
standard model at second order in the weak interaction and constitutes a
potential background in searches for new physics through the modes K_L \ra
\mu^\pm e^\mp. We find that the same cut, ~MeV, used to remove
the sequential decays K_{l3}\ra \pi_{l2} pushes the B(K_L \ra \mu^\pm e^\mp
\nu \overline{\nu}) to the level, effectively removing it as a
background.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, 1 figure appended as postscript file after
\end{document}. Fermilab-Pub-93/024-
The Sloan Lens ACS Survey. XI. Beyond Hubble resolution: size, luminosity and stellar mass of compact lensed galaxies at intermediate redshift
We exploit the strong lensing effect to explore the properties of
intrinsically faint and compact galaxies at intermediate redshift, at the
highest possible resolution at optical wavelengths. Our sample consists of 46
strongly-lensed emission line galaxies discovered by the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS)
Survey. The galaxies have been imaged at high resolution with HST in three
bands (V_HST, I_814 and H_160), allowing us to infer their size, luminosity,
and stellar mass using stellar population synthesis models. Lens modeling is
performed using a new fast and robust code, klens, which we test extensively on
real and synthetic non-lensed galaxies, and also on simulated galaxies
multiply-imaged by SLACS- like galaxy-scale lenses. Our tests show that our
measurements of galaxy size, flux, and Sersic index are robust and accurate,
even for objects intrinsically smaller than the HST point spread function. The
median magnification is 8.8, with a long tail that extends to magnifications
above 40. Modeling the SLACS sources reveals a population of galaxies with
colors and Sersic indices (median n ~ 1) consistent with the objects detected
in the field with HST in the GEMS survey, but that are (typically) ~ 2
magnitudes fainter and ~ 5 times smaller in apparent size. The closest analog
are ultracompact emission line galaxies identified by HST grism surveys. The
lowest mass galaxies in our sample are comparable to the brightest Milky Way
satellites in stellar mass (10^7 solar masses) and have well-determined half
light radii of 0."05 (~0.3 kpc).Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Charmed-Baryon Spectroscopy from Lattice QCD with N_f=2+1+1 Flavors
We present the results of a calculation of the positive-parity ground-state
charmed-baryon spectrum using 2+1+1 flavors of dynamical quarks. The
calculation uses a relativistic heavy-quark action for the valence charm quark,
clover-Wilson fermions for the valence light and strange quarks, and HISQ sea
quarks. The spectrum is calculated with a lightest pion mass around 220 MeV,
and three lattice spacings (a \approx 0.12 fm, 0.09 fm, and 0.06 fm) are used
to extrapolate to the continuum. The light-quark mass extrapolation is
performed using heavy-hadron chiral perturbation theory up to O(m_pi^3) and at
next-to-leading order in the heavy-quark mass. For the well-measured charmed
baryons, our results show consistency with the experimental values. For the
controversial J=1/2 Xi_{cc}, we obtain the isospin-averaged value
M_{Xi_{cc}}=3595(39)(20)(6) MeV (the three uncertainties are statistics,
fitting-window systematic, and systematics from other lattice artifacts, such
as lattice scale setting and pion-mass determination), which shows a 1.7 sigma
deviation from the experimental value. We predict the yet-to-be-discovered
doubly and triply charmed baryons Xi_{cc}^*, Omega_{cc}, Omega_{cc}^* and
Omega_{ccc} to have masses 3648(42)(18)(7) MeV, 3679(40)(17)(5) MeV,
3765(43)(17)(5) MeV and 4761(52)(21)(6) MeV, respectively.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figure
The Sloan Lens ACS Survey. X. Stellar, Dynamical, and Total Mass Correlations of Massive Early-type Galaxies
We use stellar masses, photometry, lensing, and velocity dispersions to
investigate empirical correlations for the final sample of 73 early-type lens
galaxies (ETGs) from the SLACS survey. The traditional correlations
(Fundamental Plane [FP] and its projections) are consistent with those found
for non-lens galaxies, supporting the thesis that SLACS lens galaxies are
representative of massive ETGs. The addition of strong lensing estimates of the
total mass allows us to gain further insights into their internal structure: i)
the mean slope of the total mass density profile is = 2.078+/-0.027
with an intrinsic scatter of 0.16+/-0.02; ii) gamma' correlates with effective
radius and central mass density, in the sense that denser galaxies have steeper
profiles; iii) the dark matter fraction within reff/2 is a monotonically
increasing function of galaxy mass and size; iv) the dimensional mass M_dim is
proportional to the total mass, and both increase more rapidly than stellar
mass M*; v) the Mass Plane (MP), obtained by replacing surface brightness with
surface mass density in the FP, is found to be tighter and closer to the virial
relation than the FP and the M*P, indicating that the scatter of those
relations is dominated by stellar population effects; vi) we construct the
Fundamental Hyper-Plane by adding stellar masses to the MP and find the M*
coefficient to be consistent with zero and no residual intrinsic scatter. Our
results demonstrate that the dynamical structure of ETGs is not scale invariant
and that it is fully specified by the total mass, r_eff, and sigma. Although
the basic trends can be explained qualitatively in terms of varying star
formation efficiency as a function of halo mass and as the result of dry and
wet mergers, reproducing quantitatively the observed correlations and their
tightness may be a significant challenge for galaxy formation models.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures; submitted to ApJ after responding to the referee
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