2,563 research outputs found
Investigation of plasma contactors for use with orbiting wires
The proposed Shuttle-based short tether experiments with hollow cathodes have the potential for providing important data that will not be obtained in long tether experiments. A critical property for hollow cathode effectiveness as a plasma contactor is the cross magnetic field conductivity of the emitted plasma. The different effects of hollow cathode cloud overlap in the cases of motion-driven and battery-driven operation are emphasized. The calculations presented on the size and shape of the hollow cathode cloud improve the qualitative picture of hollow cathodes in low Earth orbit and provide estimates of time constants for establishing the fully-expanded cloud. The magnetic boundary value problem calculations indicate the way in which the magnetic field will effect the shape of the cloud by resisting expansion in the direction perpendicular to the field. The large-scale interactions of the system were also considered. It was concluded that recent plasma chamber experiments by Stenzel and Urrutia do not model an electrodynamic tether well enough to apply the results to tethered system behavior. Orbiting short tether experiments on hollow cathodes will provide critical information on hollow cathode performance and the underlying physics that cannot be obtained any other way. Experiments should be conducted as soon as funding and a suitable space vehicle are available
Performance of an automated multiplex immunofluorescence assay for detection of Chlamydia trachomatis immunoglobulin G.
Chlamydia serology is indicated to investigate etiology of miscarriage, infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease, and ectopic pregnancy. Here, we assessed the reliability of a new automated-multiplex immunofluorescence assay (InoDiag test) to detect specific anti-C. trachomatis immunoglobulin G. Considering immunofluorescence assay (IF) as gold standard, InoDiag tests exhibited similar sensitivities (65.5%) but better specificities (95.1%-98%) than enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). InoDiag tests demonstrated similar or lower cross-reactivity rates when compared to ELISA or IF
Ultrafast electron dynamics at metal surfaces: Competition between electron-phonon coupling and hot-electron transport
An experimental scheme (double pump/reflectivity probe using femtosecond laser pulses) enables the investigation of nonequilibrium electron dynamics at metal surfaces by measuring the equilibrated surface temperature. The competition between electron-phonon coupling and hot-electron transport gives rise to a reduced equilibrated temperature when the two pump pulses overlap in time, and provides a way of accurately determining the electron-phonon coupling constant. These observations have important consequences for femtosecond photochemical investigations
Does femtosecond time-resolved second-harmonic generation probe electron temperatures at surfaces?
Femtosecond pump-probe second-harmonic generation (SHG) and transient linear
reflectivity measurements were carried out on polycrystalline Cu, Ag and Au in
air to analyze whether the electron temperature affects Fresnel factors or
nonlinear susceptibilities, or both. Sensitivity to electron temperatures was
attained by using photon energies near the interband transition threshold. We
find that the nonlinear susceptibility carries the electron temperature
dependence in case of Ag and Au, while for Cu the dependence is in the Fresnel
factors. This contrasting behavior emphasizes that SHG is not a priori
sensitive to electron dynamics at surfaces or interfaces, notwithstanding its
cause.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Review: ‘Gimme five’: future challenges in multiple sclerosis. ECTRIMS Lecture 2009
This article is based on the ECTRIMS lecture given at the 25th ECTRIMS meeting which was held in Düsseldorf, Germany, from 9 to 12 September 2009. Five challenges have been identified: (1) safeguarding the principles of medical ethics; (2) optimizing the risk/benefit ratio; (3) bridging the gap between multiple sclerosis and experimental autoimmune encephalitis; (4) promoting neuroprotection and repair; and (5) tailoring multiple sclerosis therapy to the individual patient. Each of these challenges will be discussed and placed in the context of current research into the pathogenesis and treatment of multiple sclerosis
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