6 research outputs found
Measurement of parity violation in thermal neutron capture on a proton
The NPDGamma experiment is measuring the directional parity violating asymmetry in the emission of gamma rays from the capture of cold neutrons on protons. The asymmetry can be related in a straightforward way to effective couplings within an appropriate NN weak interaction theory, such as chiral perturbation based effective field theories.
Since this is a measurement within a two body system, the observables are calculable without uncertainties from few to many body (large nuclei) effects. The experiment consists of two phases. The first one, at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE), has just been completed, providing a measurement of the asymmetry to an accuracy at the 10-7 level. Directional gamma-ray asymmetries have been measured using a number of targets including liquid hydrogen and several medium - A isotopes. The second phase of the experiment will commence at the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge, where it is currently being reassembled, to continue the measurement to an accuracy of the 10-8 level. In this work the results of the commissioning phases as well as the first production phase of the experiment are discussed
Near-unity nuclear polarization with an open-source 129Xe hyperpolarizer for NMR and MRI
The exquisite NMR spectral sensitivity and negligible reactivity of hyperpolarized xenon-129 (HP129Xe) make it attractive for a number of magnetic resonance applications; moreover, HP129Xe embodies an alternative to rare and nonrenewable 3He. However, the ability to reliably and inexpensively produce large quantities of HP129Xe with sufficiently high 129Xe nuclear spin polarization (PXe) remains a significant challengeāparticularly at high Xe densities. We present results from our āopen-sourceā large-scale (ā¼1 L/h) 129Xe polarizer for clinical, preclinical, and materials NMR and MRI research. Automated and composed mostly of off-the-shelf components, this āhyperpolarizerā is designed to be readily implementable in other laboratories. The device runs with high resonant photon flux (up to 200 W at the Rb D1 line) in the xenon-rich regime (up to 1,800 torr Xe in 500 cc) in either single-batch or stopped-flow mode, negating in part the usual requirement of Xe cryocollection. Excellent agreement is observed among four independent methods used to measure spin polarization. In-cell PXe values of ā¼90%, ā¼57%, ā¼50%, and ā¼30% have been measured for Xe loadings of ā¼300, ā¼500, ā¼760, and ā¼1,570 torr, respectively. PXe values of ā¼41% and ā¼28% (with ā¼760 and ā¼1,545 torr Xe loadings) have been measured after transfer to Tedlar bags and transport to a clinical 3 T scanner for MR imaging, including demonstration of lung MRI with a healthy human subject. Long āin-bagā 129Xe polarization decay times have been measured (T1 ā¼38 min and ā¼5.9 h at ā¼1.5 mT and 3 T, respectively)āmore than sufficient for a variety of applications
XeNA: an automated āopen-sourceā 129Xe hyperpolarizer for clinical use
Here we provide a full report on the construction, components, and capabilities of our consortiumās āopen-sourceā large-scale (~ 1 L/h) 129Xe hyperpolarizer for clinical, pre-clinical, and materials NMR/MRI (Nikolaou et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 110, 14150 (2013)). The āhyperpolarizerā is automated and built mostly of off-the-shelf components; moreover, it is designed to be cost-effective and installed in both research laboratories and clinical settings with materials costing less than $125,000. The device runs in the xenon-rich regime (up to 1800 Torr Xe in 0.5 L) in either stopped-flow or single-batch modeāmaking cryo-collection of the hyperpolarized gas unnecessary for many applications. In-cell 129Xe nuclear spin polarization values of ~ 30%ā90% have been measured for Xe loadings of ~ 300ā1600 Torr. Typical 129Xe polarization build-up and T1 relaxation time constants were ~ 8.5 min and ~ 1.9 h respectively under our spin-exchange optical pumping conditions; such ratios, combined with near-unity Rb electron spin polarizations enabled by the high resonant laser power (up to ~ 200 W), permit such high PXe values to be achieved despite the high in-cell Xe densities. Importantly, most of the polarization is maintained during efficient HP gas transfer to other containers, and ultra-long 129Xe relaxation times (up to nearly 6 h) were observed in Tedlar bags following transport to a clinical 3 T scanner for MR spectroscopy and imaging as a prelude to in vivo experiments. The device has received FDA IND approval for a clinical study of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease subjects. The primary focus of this paper is on the technical/engineering development of the polarizer, with the explicit goals of facilitating the adaptation of design features and operative modes into other laboratories, and of spurring the further advancement of HP-gas MR applications in biomedicine
Single-breath xenon polarization transfer contrast (SB-XTC):Implementation and initial results in healthy humans
PURPOSE: To implement and characterize a single-breath xenon transfer contrast (SB-XTC) method to assess the fractional diffusive gas transport F in the lung: to study the dependence of F and its uniformity as a function of lung volume; to estimate local alveolar surface area per unit gas volume S(A)/V(Gas) from multiple diffusion time measurements of F; to evaluate the reproducibility of the measurements and the necessity of B(1) correction in cases of centric and sequential encoding. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In SB-XTC three or four gradient echo images separated by inversion/saturation pulses were collected during a breath-hold in eight healthy volunteers, allowing the mapping of F (thus S(A)/V(Gas)) and correction for other contributions such as T(1) relaxation, RF depletion and B(1) inhomogeneity from inherently registered data. RESULTS: Regional values of F and its distribution were obtained; both the mean value and heterogeneity of F increased with the decrease of lung volume. Higher values of F in the bases of the lungs in supine position were observed at lower volumes in all volunteers. Local S(A)/V(Gas) (with a mean Ā± standard deviation of [Formula: see text]) was estimated in vivo near functional residual capacity. Calibration of SB-XTC on phantoms highlighted the necessity for B(1) corrections when k-space is traversed sequentially; with centric ordering B(1) distribution correction is dispensable. CONCLUSION: SB-XTC technique is implemented and validated for in vivo measurements of local S(A)/V(Gas)