1,280 research outputs found
Scale-adaptive simulation of a square cross-sectional bubble column
This paper presents detailed Euler–Euler Scale-Adaptive Simulations of the dispersed bubbly flow in a square cross-sectioned bubble column. The main objective is to investigate the potential of this approach for the prediction of bubbly flows with anisotropic liquid velocity fluctuations. The set of physical models describing the momentum exchange between the phases was chosen according to previous experiences of the authors. Experimental data and Euler–Euler Large Eddy Simulation are used for comparison. It was found that the presented combination of sub-models provides good agreement with experimental data for the mean flow and liquid velocity fluctuations. The energy spectra of the resolved velocity obtained from the simulations are presented and compared to the experimental spectra
Experimental Proof of a Magnetic Coulomb Phase
Spin ice materials are magnetic substances in which the spin directions map
onto hydrogen positions in water ice. Recently this analogy has been elevated
to an electromagnetic equivalence, indicating that the spin ice state is a
Coulomb phase, with magnetic monopole excitations analogous to ice's mobile
ionic defects. No Coulomb phase has yet been proved in a real magnetic
material, as the key experimental signature is difficult to resolve in most
systems. Here we measure the scattering of polarised neutrons from the
prototypical spin ice Ho2Ti2O7. This enables us to separate different
contributions to the magnetic correlations to clearly demonstrate the existence
of an almost perfect Coulomb phase in this material. The temperature dependence
of the scattering is consistent with the existence of deconfined magnetic
monopoles connected by Dirac strings of divergent length.Comment: 18 pages, 4 fig
Artesunate reduces but does not prevent posttreatment transmission of Plasmodium falciparum to Anopheles gambiae.
Combination therapy that includes artemisinin derivatives cures most falciparum malaria infections. Lowering transmission by reducing gametocyte infectivity would be an additional benefit. To examine the effect of such therapy on transmission, Gambian children with Plasmodium falciparum malaria were treated with standard regimens of chloroquine or pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine alone or in combination with 1 or 3 doses of artesunate. The infectivity to mosquitoes of gametocytes in peripheral blood was determined 4 or 7 days after treatment. Infection of mosquitoes was observed in all treatment groups and was positively associated with gametocyte density. The probability of transmission was lowest in those who received pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine and 3 doses of artesunate, and it was 8-fold higher in the group that received pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine alone. Artesunate reduced posttreatment infectivity dramatically but did not abolish it completely. The study raises questions about any policy to use pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine alone as the first-line treatment for malaria
Magnetic ground state and magnon-phonon interaction in multiferroic h-YMnO
Inelastic neutron scattering has been used to study the magneto-elastic
excitations in the multiferroic manganite hexagonal YMnO. An avoided
crossing is found between magnon and phonon modes close to the Brillouin zone
boundary in the -plane. Neutron polarization analysis reveals that this
mode has mixed magnon-phonon character. An external magnetic field along the
-axis is observed to cause a linear field-induced splitting of one of the
spin wave branches. A theoretical description is performed, using a Heisenberg
model of localized spins, acoustic phonon modes and a magneto-elastic coupling
via the single-ion magnetostriction. The model quantitatively reproduces the
dispersion and intensities of all modes in the full Brillouin zone, describes
the observed magnon-phonon hybridized modes, and quantifies the magneto-elastic
coupling. The combined information, including the field-induced magnon
splitting, allows us to exclude several of the earlier proposed models and
point to the correct magnetic ground state symmetry, and provides an effective
dynamic model relevant for the multiferroic hexagonal manganites.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
New structural and magnetic aspects of the nanotube system Na2V3O7
We present new experimental results of low temperature x-ray synchrotron
diffraction, neutron scattering and very low temperature (mK-range) bulk
measurements on the nanotube system {\tube}. The crystal structure determined
from our data is similar to the previously proposed model (P. Millet {\it et
al.} J. Solid State Chem. , 676 (1999)), but also deviates from it in
significant details. The structure comprises nanotubes along the c-axis formed
by stacking units of two V-rings buckled in the -plane. The space group is
P and the composition is nonstoichiometric, Na(2-x)V3O7, x=0.17. The
thermal evolution of the lattice parameters reveals anisotropic lattice
compression on cooling. Neutron scattering experiments monitor a very weak
magnetic signal at energies from -20 to 9 meV. New magnetic susceptibility,
specific heat measurements and decay of remanent magnetization in the 30 mK -
300 mK range reveal that the previously observed transition at ~76 mK is
spin-glass like with no long-range order. Presented experimental observations
do not support models of isolated clusters, but are compatible with a model of
odd-legged S=1/2 spin tubes possibly segmented into fragments with different
lengths
Hyperpolarized carbon 13 MRI: clinical applications and future directions in oncology
Hyperpolarized carbon 13 MRI (13C MRI) is a novel imaging approach that can noninvasively probe tissue metabolism in both normal and pathologic tissues. The process of hyperpolarization increases the signal acquired by several orders of magnitude, allowing injected 13C-labeled molecules and their downstream metabolites to be imaged in vivo, thus providing real-time information on kinetics. To date, the most important reaction studied with hyperpolarized 13C MRI is exchange of the hyperpolarized 13C signal from injected [1-13C]pyruvate with the resident tissue lactate pool. Recent preclinical and human studies have shown the role of several biologic factors such as the lactate dehydrogenase enzyme, pyruvate transporter expression, and tissue hypoxia in generating the MRI signal from this reaction. Potential clinical applications of hyperpolarized 13C MRI in oncology include using metabolism to stratify tumors by grade, selecting therapeutic pathways based on tumor metabolic profiles, and detecting early treatment response through the imaging of shifts in metabolism that precede tumor structural changes. This review summarizes the foundations of hyperpolarized 13C MRI, presents key findings from human cancer studies, and explores the future clinical directions of the technique in oncology
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