59 research outputs found
Photodetachment study of He^- quartet resonances below the He(n=3) thresholds
The photodetachment cross section of He^- has been measured in the photon
energy range 2.9 eV to 3.3 eV in order to investigate doubly excited states.
Measurements were made channel specific by selectively detecting the residual
He atoms left in a particular excited state following detachment. Three
Feshbach resonances were found in the He(1s2p ^3P)+e^-(epsilon p) partial cross
section: a ^4S resonance below the He(1s3s ^3S) threshold and two ^4P
resonances below the He(1s3p ^3P) threshold. The measured energies of these
doubly excited states are 2.959260(6) eV, 3.072(7) eV and 3.26487(4) eV. The
corresponding widths are found to be 0.20(2) meV, 50(5) meV and 0.61(5) meV.
The measured energies agree well with recent theoretical predictions for the
1s3s4s ^4S, 1s3p^2 ^4P and 1s3p4p ^4P states, respectively, but the widths
deviate noticeably from calculations for 1s3p^2 ^4P and 1s3p4p ^4P states.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX2e scrartcl, amsmath. Accepted by Journal
of Physics B; minor changes after referee repor
Ion Collisions in Very Strong Electric Fields
A Classical Trajectory Monte Carlo (CTMC) simulation has been made of
processes of charge exchange and ionization between an hydrogen atom and fully
stripped ions embedded in very strong static electric fields (
V/m), which are thought to exist in cosmic and laser--produced plasmas.
Calculations show that the presence of the field affects absolute values of the
cross sections, enhancing ionization and reducing charge exchange. Moreover,
the overall effect depends upon the relative orientation between the field and
the nuclear motion. Other features of a null-field situation, such as scaling
laws, are revisited.Comment: Latex, 13 pages, 11 figures (available upon request), to be published
in Journal of Physics
Electron attachment to valence-excited CO
The possibility of electron attachment to the valence state of CO
is examined using an {\it ab initio} bound-state multireference configuration
interaction approach. The resulting resonance has symmetry;
the higher vibrational levels of this resonance state coincide with, or are
nearly coincident with, levels of the parent state. Collisional
relaxation to the lowest vibrational levels in hot plasma situations might
yield the possibility of a long-lived CO state.Comment: Revtex file + postscript file for one figur
Free-fall expansion of finite-temperature Bose-Einstein condensed gas in the non Thomas-Fermi regime
We report on our study of the free-fall expansion of a finite-temperature
Bose-Einstein condensed cloud of 87Rb. The experiments are performed with a
variable total number of atoms while keeping constant the number of atoms in
the condensate. The results provide evidence that the BEC dynamics depends on
the interaction with thermal fraction. In particular, they provide experimental
evidence that thermal cloud compresses the condensate.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Intrathoracic solitary fibrous tumor - an international multicenter study on clinical outcome and novel circulating biomarkers
Intrathoracic solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is a rare disease. Radical resection is the standard of care. However, estimating prognosis and planning follow-up and treatment strategies remains challenging. Data were retrospectively collected by five international centers to explore outcome and biomarkers for predicting event-free-survival (EFS). 125 histological proven SFT patients (74 female; 59.2%; 104 benign; 83.2%) were analyzed. The one-, three-, five- and ten-year EFS after curative-intent surgery was 98%, 90%, 77% and 67%, respectively. Patients age (>/=59 vs. 10 cm vs. 5 vs. < 5 HR 3.91, CI 1.40-10.89, p = 0.009) were prognostic after univariate analyses. After multivariate analyses tumor-dignity and fibrinogen remained as independent prognosticators. Besides validating the role of age, tumor-dignity, tumor-size, stage and resection margins, we identified for the first time inflammatory markers as prognosticators in SFT
BMJ Open
INTRODUCTION: Guidelines concerning the follow-up of subjects occupationally exposed to lung carcinogens, published in France in 2015, recommended the setting up of a trial of low-dose chest CT lung cancer screening in subjects at high risk of lung cancer. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the organisation of low-dose chest CT lung cancer screening in subjects occupationally exposed to lung carcinogens and at high risk of lung cancer. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This trial will be conducted in eight French departments by six specialised reference centres (SRCs) in occupational health. In view of the exploratory nature of this trial, it is proposed to test initially the feasibility and acceptability over the first 2 years in only two SRCs then in four other SRCs to evaluate the organisation. The target population is current or former smokers with more than 30 pack-years (who have quit smoking for less than 15 years), currently or previously exposed to International Agency for Research on Cancer group 1 lung carcinogens, and between the ages of 55 and 74 years. The trial will be conducted in the following steps: (1) identification of subjects by a screening invitation letter; (2) evaluation of occupational exposure to lung carcinogens; (3) evaluation of the lung cancer risk level and verification of eligibility; (4) screening procedure: annual chest CT scans performed by specialised centres and (5) follow-up of CT scan abnormalities. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This protocol study has been approved by the French Committee for the Protection of Persons. The results from this study will be submitted to peer-reviewed journals and reported at suitable national and international meetings. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT03562052; Pre-results
Preliminary evidence on the uptake, use and benefits of the CONSORT-PRO extension.
PURPOSE: This study assessed the uptake of the CONsolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT)-Patient-Reported Outcomes (PRO) statement; determined if use of CONSORT-PRO was associated with more complete reporting of PRO endpoints in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and identified the extent to which high-impact journals publishing RCTs with PRO endpoints endorse CONSORT-PRO. METHODS: CONSORT-PRO citations were identified by systematically searching Medline, EMBASE and Google from 2013 (year CONSORT-PRO released) to 17 December 2015. RCTs that cited CONSORT-PRO (cases) were compared to a comparable control sample of RCTs in terms of adherence to CONSORT-PRO using t tests. General linear models assessed the relationship between CONSORT-PRO score and key, pre-specified variables. The 100 highest-impact journals that published RCTs with PRO endpoints (2014-2015) were identified via a systematic Medline search. Instructions for authors were reviewed to determine whether journals endorsed CONSORT-PRO. RESULTS: Total CONSORT-PRO scores ranged from 47 to 100% for cases and 25-96% for controls. Cases had significantly higher total CONSORT-PRO scores compared to controls: t = 2.64, p = 0.01. 'Citing CONSORT-PRO', 'journal endorsing CONSORT-PRO' and 'dedicated PRO paper' were significant predictors of higher CONSORT-PRO adherence score: R (2) = 0.48, p < 0.001. 11/100 top-ranked journals endorsed CONSORT-PRO in their instructions to authors, seven of these journals published RCTs included as cases in this study. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated improved PRO reporting associated with journal endorsement and author use of the CONSORT-PRO extension. Despite growing awareness, more work is needed to promote appropriate use of CONSORT-PRO to improve completeness of reporting; in particular, stronger journal endorsement of CONSORT-PRO
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