9,376 research outputs found
Developmental Expression of Elements of Hepatic Cholesterol Metabolism In The Rat
The expression of several key enzymes and receptors of rat hepatic cholesterol metabolism was studied during development. Among major findings were: acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase, the cholesteryl ester hydrolases, cholesterol-7 alpha-hydroxylase and the alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor (LRP) were very low in fetal livers, but all were induced shortly before birth, suggesting that these elements are important for extrauterine life. Although the other elements continued to increase, by day 6 of postnatal life, cholesterol-7 alpha-hydroxylase had reached undetectable levels. It reappeared by day 12 of suckling, placing it in the group of late-appearing activities necessary for the fully mature hepatic phenotype. Changes in acyl coenzyme A:cholesterol acyltransferase activity appeared due predominantly to changes in amount of active protein. The cholesteryl ester hydrolase (CEH) activities all showed different developmental patterns, suggesting that each was a unique activity. The bile salt- dependent CEH activity was much higher in the suckling period than in the adult where it was almost undetectable, suggesting that this CEH may have its major importance in the suckling period of development. Low density lipoprotein receptors exhibited a pattern very different from that of the alpha 2-macroglobulin receptors and did not show consistent correlation with any other elements. At some developmental time points, the relationships amongst the elements differed significantly from the adult pattern. These studies provide for the first time an integrated picture of developmental expression of key elements of hepatic cholesterol metabolism and set the stage for further studies on their modes of regulation
Precise calibration of LIGO test mass actuators using photon radiation pressure
Precise calibration of kilometer-scale interferometric gravitational wave
detectors is crucial for source localization and waveform reconstruction. A
technique that uses the radiation pressure of a power-modulated auxiliary laser
to induce calibrated displacements of one of the ~10 kg arm cavity mirrors, a
so-called photon calibrator, has been demonstrated previously and has recently
been implemented on the LIGO detectors. In this article, we discuss the
inherent precision and accuracy of the LIGO photon calibrators and several
improvements that have been developed to reduce the estimated voice coil
actuator calibration uncertainties to less than 2 percent (1-sigma). These
improvements include accounting for rotation-induced apparent length variations
caused by interferometer and photon calibrator beam centering offsets, absolute
laser power measurement using temperature-controlled InGaAs photodetectors
mounted on integrating spheres and calibrated by NIST, minimizing errors
induced by localized elastic deformation of the mirror surface by using a
two-beam configuration with the photon calibrator beams symmetrically displaced
about the center of the optic, and simultaneously actuating the test mass with
voice coil actuators and the photon calibrator to minimize fluctuations caused
by the changing interferometer response. The photon calibrator is able to
operate in the most sensitive interferometer configuration, and is expected to
become a primary calibration method for future gravitational wave searches.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Classical and Quantum Gravit
Precise calibration of LIGO test mass actuators using photon radiation pressure
Precise calibration of kilometer-scale interferometric gravitational wave
detectors is crucial for source localization and waveform reconstruction. A
technique that uses the radiation pressure of a power-modulated auxiliary laser
to induce calibrated displacements of one of the ~10 kg arm cavity mirrors, a
so-called photon calibrator, has been demonstrated previously and has recently
been implemented on the LIGO detectors. In this article, we discuss the
inherent precision and accuracy of the LIGO photon calibrators and several
improvements that have been developed to reduce the estimated voice coil
actuator calibration uncertainties to less than 2 percent (1-sigma). These
improvements include accounting for rotation-induced apparent length variations
caused by interferometer and photon calibrator beam centering offsets, absolute
laser power measurement using temperature-controlled InGaAs photodetectors
mounted on integrating spheres and calibrated by NIST, minimizing errors
induced by localized elastic deformation of the mirror surface by using a
two-beam configuration with the photon calibrator beams symmetrically displaced
about the center of the optic, and simultaneously actuating the test mass with
voice coil actuators and the photon calibrator to minimize fluctuations caused
by the changing interferometer response. The photon calibrator is able to
operate in the most sensitive interferometer configuration, and is expected to
become a primary calibration method for future gravitational wave searches.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Classical and Quantum Gravit
Radar systems for the water resources mission. Volume 4: Appendices E-I
The use of a scanning antenna beam for a synthetic aperture system was examined. When the resolution required was modest, the radar did not use all the time the beam was passing a given point on the ground to build a synthetic aperture, so time was available to scan the beam to other positions and build several images at different ranges. The scanning synthetic-aperture radar (SCANSAR) could achieve swathwidths of well over 100 km with modest antenna size. Design considerations for a SCANSAR for hydrologic parameter observation are presented. Because of the high sensitivity to soil moisture at angles of incidence near vertical, a 7 to 22 deg swath was considered for that application. For snow and ice monitoring, a 22 to 37 deg scan was used. Frequencies from X-band to L-band were used in the design studies, but the proposed system operated in C-band at 4.75 GHz. It achieved an azimuth resolution of about 50 meters at all angles, with a range resolution varying from 150 meters at 7 deg to 31 meters at 37 deg. The antenna required an aperture of 3 x 4.16 meters, and the average transmitter power was under 2 watts
Radar systems for the water resources mission, volume 2
The application of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) in monitoring and managing earth resources was examined. The function of spaceborne radar is to provide maps and map imagery to be used for earth resource and oceanographic applications. Spaceborne radar has the capability of mapping the entire United States regardless of inclement weather; however, the imagery must have a high degree of resolution to be meaningful. Attaining this resolution is possible with the SAR system. Imagery of the required quality must first meet mission parameters in the following areas: antenna patterns, azimuth and range ambiguities, coverage, and angle of incidence
Radar systems for the water resources mission, volume 1
The state of the art determination was made for radar measurement of: soil moisture, snow, standing and flowing water, lake and river ice, determination of required spacecraft radar parameters, study of synthetic-aperture radar systems to meet these parametric requirements, and study of techniques for on-board processing of the radar data. Significant new concepts developed include the following: scanning synthetic-aperture radar to achieve wide-swath coverage; single-sideband radar; and comb-filter range-sequential, range-offset SAR processing. The state of the art in radar measurement of water resources parameters is outlined. The feasibility for immediate development of a spacecraft water resources SAR was established. Numerous candidates for the on-board processor were examined
Comparing strings in AdS(5)xS(5) to planar diagrams: an example
The correlator of a Wilson loop with a local operator in N=4 SYM theory can
be represented by a string amplitude in AdS(5)xS(5). This amplitude describes
an overlap of the boundary state, which is associated with the loop, with the
string mode, which is dual to the local operator. For chiral primary operators
with a large R charge, the amplitude can be calculated by semiclassical
techniques. We compare the semiclassical string amplitude to the SYM
perturbation theory and find an exact agrement to the first two non-vanishing
orders.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX; v2: typos corrected; v3: clarification of
boundary conditions at infinity adde
Radar systems for a polar mission, volume 3, appendices A-D, S, T
Success is reported in the radar monitoring of such features of sea ice as concentration, floe size, leads and other water openings, drift, topographic features such as pressure ridges and hummocks, fractures, and a qualitative indication of age and thickness. Scatterometer measurements made north of Alaska show a good correlation with a scattering coefficient with apparent thickness as deduced from ice type analysis of stereo aerial photography. Indications are that frequencies from 9 GHz upward seem to be better for sea ice radar purposes than the information gathered at 0.4 GHz by a scatterometer. Some information indicates that 1 GHz is useful, but not as useful as higher frequencies. Either form of like-polarization can be used and it appears that cross-polarization may be more useful for thickness measurement. Resolution requirements have not been fully established, but most of the systems in use have had poorer resolution than 20 meters. The radar return from sea ice is found to be much different than that from lake ice. Methods to decrease side lobe levels of the Fresnel zone-plate processor and to decrease the memory requirements of a synthetic radar processor are discussed
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