312 research outputs found
Use of Displacement Damage Dose in an Engineering Model of GaAs Solar Cell Radiation Damage
Current methods for calculating damage to solar cells are well documented in the GaAs Solar Cell Radiation Handbook (JPL 96-9). An alternative, the displacement damage dose (D(sub d)) method, has been developed by Summers, et al. This method is currently being implemented in the SAVANT computer program
The Goldbeter-Koshland switch in the first-order region and its response to dynamic disorder
In their classical work (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 1981, 78:6840-6844),
Goldbeter and Koshland mathematically analyzed a reversible covalent
modification system which is highly sensitive to the concentration of
effectors. Its signal-response curve appears sigmoidal, constituting a
biochemical switch. However, the switch behavior only emerges in the
"zero-order region", i.e. when the signal molecule concentration is much lower
than that of the substrate it modifies. In this work we showed that the
switching behavior can also occur under comparable concentrations of signals
and substrates, provided that the signal molecules catalyze the modification
reaction in cooperation. We also studied the effect of dynamic disorders on the
proposed biochemical switch, in which the enzymatic reaction rates, instead of
constant, appear as stochastic functions of time. We showed that the system is
robust to dynamic disorder at bulk concentration. But if the dynamic disorder
is quasi-static, large fluctuations of the switch response behavior may be
observed at low concentrations. Such fluctuation is relevant to many biological
functions. It can be reduced by either increasing the conformation
interconversion rate of the protein, or correlating the enzymatic reaction
rates in the network.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, accepted by PLOS ON
Influence of through-flow on linear pattern formation properties in binary mixture convection
We investigate how a horizontal plane Poiseuille shear flow changes linear
convection properties in binary fluid layers heated from below. The full linear
field equations are solved with a shooting method for realistic top and bottom
boundary conditions. Through-flow induced changes of the bifurcation thresholds
(stability boundaries) for different types of convective solutions are deter-
mined in the control parameter space spanned by Rayleigh number, Soret coupling
(positive as well as negative), and through-flow Reynolds number. We elucidate
the through-flow induced lifting of the Hopf symmetry degeneracy of left and
right traveling waves in mixtures with negative Soret coupling. Finally we
determine with a saddle point analysis of the complex dispersion relation of
the field equations over the complex wave number plane the borders between
absolute and convective instabilities for different types of perturbations in
comparison with the appropriate Ginzburg-Landau amplitude equation
approximation. PACS:47.20.-k,47.20.Bp, 47.15.-x,47.54.+rComment: 19 pages, 15 Postscript figure
A Population Model of Time-Dependent Changes in Serum Creatinine in (Near)term Neonates with Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy During and After Therapeutic Hypothermia
The objective was to apply a population model to describe the time course and variability of serum creatinine (sCr) in (near)term neonates with moderate to severe encephalopathy during and after therapeutic hypothermia (TH). The data consisted of sCr observations up to 10 days of postnatal age in neonates who underwent TH during the first 3 days after birth. Available covariates were birth weight (BWT), gestational age (GA), survival, and acute kidney injury (AKI). A previously published population model of sCr kinetics in neonates served as the base model. This model predicted not only sCr but also the glomerular filtration rate normalized by its value at birth (GFR/GFR0). The model was used to compare the TH neonates with a reference full term non-asphyxiated population of neonates. The estimates of the model parameters had good precision and showed high between subject variability. AKI influenced most of the estimated parameters denoting a strong impact on sCr kinetics and GFR. BWT and GA were not significant covariates. TH transiently increased sCr in TH neonates over the first days compared to the reference group. Asphyxia impacted not only GFR, but also the sCr synthesis rate. We also observed that AKI neonates exhibit a delayed onset of postnatal GFR increase and have a higher sCr synthesis rate compared to no-AKI patients. Our findings show that the use of sCr as marker of renal function in asphyxiated neonates treated with TH to guide dose selection for renally cleared drugs is challenging, while we captured the postnatal sCr patterns in this specific population. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].</p
First Test Results of the Trans-Impedance Amplifier Stage of the Ultra-fast HPSoC ASIC
We present the first results from the HPSoC ASIC designed for readout of
Ultra-fast Silicon Detectors. The 4-channel ASIC manufactured in 65 nm CMOS by
TSMC has been optimized for 50 um thick AC-LGAD. The evaluation of the analog
front end with \b{eta}-particles impinging on 3x3 AC-LGAD arrays (500 um pitch,
200x200 um2 metal) confirms a fast output rise time of 600 ps and good timing
performance with a jitter of 45 ps. Further calibration experiments and TCT
laser studies indicate some gain limitations that are being investigated and
are driving the design of the second-generation pre-amplification stages to
reach a jitter of 15 ps.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Observations of DG Tauri with the Keck Interferometer
We present the first science results from the Keck Interferometer, a
direct-detection infrared interferometer utilizing the two 10-meter Keck
telescopes. The instrument and system components are briefly described. We then
present observations of the T Tauri object DG Tau, which is resolved by the
interferometer. The resolved component has a radius of 0.12 to 0.24 AU,
depending on the assumed stellar and extended component fluxes and the model
geometry used. Possible origins and implications of the resolved emission are
discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in ApJ Letter
Serum Creatinine Patterns in Neonates Treated with Therapeutic Hypothermia for Neonatal Encephalopathy
Introduction: There is large variability in kidney function and injury in neonates with neonatal encephalopathy (NE) treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH). Acute kidney injury (AKI) definitions that apply categorical approaches may lose valuable information about kidney function in individual patients. Centile serum creatinine (SCr) over postnatal age (PNA) may provide more valuable information in TH neonates. Methods: Data from seven TH neonates and one non-TH-treated, non-NE control cohorts were pooled in a retrospective study. SCr centiles over PNA, and AKI incidence (definition: SCr ↑≥0.3 mg/dL within 48 h, or ↑ ≥1.5 fold vs. the lowest prior SCr within 7 days) and mortality were calculated. Repeated measurement linear models were applied to SCr trends, modeling SCr on PNA, birth weight or gestational age (GA), using heterogeneous autoregressive residual covariance structure and maximum likelihood methods. Findings were compared to patterns in the control cohort. Results: Among 1,136 TH neonates, representing 4,724 SCr observations, SCr (10th-25th-50th-75th-90th-95th) PNA centiles (day 1-10) were generated. In TH neonates, the AKI incidence was 132/1,136 (11.6%), mortality 193/1,136 (17%). AKI neonates had a higher mortality (37.2-14.3%, p < 0.001). Median SCr patterns over PNA were significantly higher in nonsurvivors (p < 0.01) or AKI neonates (p < 0.001). In TH-treated neonates, PNA and GA or birth weight explained SCr variability. Patterns over PNA were significantly higher in TH neonates to controls (801 neonates, 2,779 SCr). Conclusions: SCr patterns in TH-treated NE neonates are specific. Knowing PNA-related patterns enable clinicians to better assess kidney function and tailor pharmacotherapy, fluids, or kidney supportive therapies
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