63 research outputs found

    Carotid rete mirabile and pseudoxanthoma elasticum: an accidental association?

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    We report the case of a young female patient with a transient amaurosis due to a carotid rete mirabile (CRM), a rare congenital carotid malformation, and pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), an inherited autosomal recessive systemic metabolic disorder characterised by fragmentation and mineralisation of elastic fibres in connective tissues (skin, eyes) and the vascular system. CRM is a rare form of intracranial carotid malformation whose association with PXE (6 cases at present) would appear not to be accidental. This observation suggests a new link between congenital arterial remodelling and the PXE

    Localization and clustering in the nuclear Fermi liquid

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    Using the framework of nuclear energy density functionals we examine the conditions for single-nucleon localization and formation of cluster structures in finite nuclei. We propose to characterize localization by the ratio of the dispersion of single-nucleon wave functions to the average inter-nucleon distance. This parameter generally increases with mass and describes the gradual transition from a hybrid phase in light nuclei, characterized by the spatial localization of individual nucleon states that leads to the formation of cluster structures, toward the Fermi liquid phase in heavier nuclei. Values of the localization parameter that correspond to a crystal phase cannot occur in finite nuclei. Typical length and energy scales in nuclei allow the formation of liquid drops, clusters, and halo structures.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Direct mass measurements of 19B, 22C, 29F, 31Ne, 34Na and other light exotic nuclei

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    We report on direct time-of-flight based mass measurements of 16 light neutron-rich nuclei. These include the first determination of the masses of the Borromean drip-line nuclei 19^{19}B, 22^{22}C and 29^{29}F as well as that of 34^{34}Na. In addition, the most precise determinations to date for 23^{23}N and 31^{31}Ne are reported. Coupled with recent interaction cross-section measurements, the present results support the occurrence of a two-neutron halo in 22^{22}C, with a dominant ν2s1/22\nu2s_{1/2}^2 configuration, and a single-neutron halo in 31^{31}Ne with the valence neutron occupying predominantly the 2p3/2p_{3/2} orbital. Despite a very low two-neutron separation energy the development of a halo in 19^{19}B is hindered by the 1d5/22d_{5/2}^2 character of the valence neutrons.Comment: 5 page

    Blue light-filtering intraocular lenses and post-operative mood: a pilot clinical study

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    The purpose of the study was to determine if implantation of blue-filtering intraocular lenses (IOLs) affects post-operative mood, inducing more depression, compared to patients undergoing implantation with conventional IOLs. The study was conducted at the Angers University Hospital, France. This was a prospective with a lowercase pilot study, including consecutive patients planned to undergo cataract surgery in both eyes within 1 week. The same type of IOL was used in both eyes of each patient. The choice of IOL was not randomized but driven by the habits and experience of each participating surgeon. Cognitively healthy patients (an MMSE score higher than 25) were assessed before and after surgery, using the 30-item geriatric depression scale (GDS) to seek symptoms of depression. Univariate and multiple logistic regressions were used to examine the association between the type of IOL and the 30-item GDS score improvement during the 3 months after lens implantation, while adjusting for participants\u27 characteristics (age, visual acuity). Blue-filtering IOLs were used in 16 patients (mean +/- standard deviation, 75.6 +/- 7.5 years; 75 % female), and untinted IOLs in 18 patients (77.3 +/- 6.9 years; 77.8 %female). Pre-operatively visual acuity and GDS scores were comparable in the two groups. The post-operative GDS score was improved by 1.91 +/- 3.10 points in the whole sample (P = 0.002), as well as in each subgroup of patients. Three months after surgery, the mean change in GDS score did not differ between groups (P = 0.365), nor did the mean visual acuity (P = 0.198)

    Halos and related structures

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    The halo structure originated in nuclear physics but is now encountered more widely. It appears in loosely bound, clustered systems where the spatial extension of the system is significantly larger than that of the binding potentials. A review is given on our current understanding of these structures, with an emphasis on how the structures evolve as more cluster components are added, and on the experimental situation concerning halo states in light nuclei.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figures, Contribution to Nobel Symposium 152 "Physics With Radioactive Beams

    \ensuremath{\gamma}-ray spectroscopy of low-lying yrast and non-yrast states in neutron-rich 94,95,96Kr^{94,95,96}\mathrm{Kr}

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    International audienceWe report on γ-ray spectroscopy of low-lying excited states in the neutron-rich Kr94,95,96 isotopes measured as part of the “Shell Evolution And Search for Two-plus energies At RIBF” (SEASTAR) campaign at the RIKEN Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory. Excited yrast and non-yrast states were observed, and half-lives extracted via geant4 simulations. In Kr94,96 candidates for the 31− state were identified. For Kr95, the prompt SEASTAR data were combined with delayed spectroscopic data measured with the EURICA array to observe transitions on top of the known (7/2)+ isomer at a level energy of 195.5(3) keV. The comparison of the new experimental results with five-dimensional collective Hamiltonian (5DCH) and mapped interacting boson model (IBM) calculations, both using the Gogny D1M interaction, could suggest oblate-prolate shape coexistence already in Kr96
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