431 research outputs found
Dynamical Mean-Field Study of the Ferromagnetic Transition Temperature of a Two-Band Model for Colossal Magnetoresistance Materials
The ferromagnetic (FM) transition temperature (Tc) of a two-band
Double-Exchange (DE) model for colossal magnetoresistance (CMR) materials is
studied using dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT), in wide ranges of coupling
constants, hopping parameters, and carrier densities. The results are shown to
be in excellent agreement with Monte Carlo simulations. When the bands overlap,
the value of Tc is found to be much larger than in the one-band case, for all
values of the chemical potential within the energy overlap interval. A nonzero
interband hopping produces an additional substantial increase of Tc, showing
the importance of these nondiagonal terms, and the concomitant use of multiband
models, to boost up the critical temperatures in DE-based theories.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Population structure, growth and reproduction properties of barbel (Barbus plebejus Bonaparte, 1832) living in Çığlı stream, Van, Turkey
This study was carried out to determine population structure, growth and reproduction properties of barbel. A total of 198 individuals were sampled. Ages of samples were found between I and VI years, fork lengths between 4.3 and 16.6 cm and total weights between 1.2 and 65.8 g. Length-weight relationship was calculated as W=0.0146×L^2.934. Munro’s phi prime index was estimated as 1.95, L∞ as 26.42 cm, W∞ as 216.92 g, and condition factor as 1.265±0.01. First sexual maturation was determined in 6.0-6.9 cm-group males, and second sexual maturity was recorded in 10.0-10.9 cm-group females. Individual fecundity was defined between 568 and 4171 eggs/female and relative fecundity was calculated as 64964.55±5855.49 eggs/kg female. Barbel did not show good growth and reproduction performance in the stream, because of fishing pressure
The Crossover from Impurity to Valence Band in Diluted Magnetic Semiconductors: The Role of the Coulomb Attraction by Acceptor
The crossover between an impurity band (IB) and a valence band (VB) regime as
a function of the magnetic impurity concentration in models for diluted
magnetic semiconductors (DMS) is studied systematically by taking into
consideration the Coulomb attraction between the carriers and the magnetic
impurities. The density of states and the ferromagnetic transition temperature
of a Spin-Fermion model applied to DMS are evaluated using Dynamical Mean-Field
Theory (DMFT) and Monte Carlo (MC) calculations. It is shown that the addition
of a square-well-like attractive potential can generate an IB at small enough
Mn doping for values of the exchange that are not strong enough
to generate one by themselves. We observe that the IB merges with the VB when
where is a function of and the Coulomb attraction strength
. Using MC calculations, we demonstrate that the range of the Coulomb
attraction plays an important role. While the on-site attraction, that has been
used in previous numerical simulations, effectively renormalizes for all
values of , an unphysical result, a nearest-neighbor range attraction
renormalizes only at very low dopings, i.e., until the bound holes wave
functions start to overlap. Thus, our results indicate that the Coulomb
attraction can be neglected to study Mn doped GaSb, GaAs, and GaP in the
relevant doping regimes, but it should be included in the case of Mn doped GaN
that is expected to be in the IB regime.Comment: 8 pages, 4 Postscript figures, RevTex
The nature of the X-ray sources in dwarf galaxies in nearby clusters from the KIWICS
We present a deep search for and analysis of X-ray sources in a sample of
dwarf galaxies (M < -15.5 mag) located within twelve galaxy clusters from
the Kapteyn IAC WEAVE INT Cluster Survey (KIWICS) of photometric observations
in the and using the Wide Field Camera (WFC) at the
2.5-m Isaac Newton telescope (INT). We first investigated the optical data,
identified 2720 dwarf galaxies in all fields and determined their
characteristics; namely, their colors, effective radii, and stellar masses. We
then searched the data archive for X-ray counterparts of
optically detected dwarf galaxies. We found a total of 20 X-ray emitting dwarf
galaxies, with X-ray flux ranging from 1.7 to
4.1 erg cm s and X-ray luminosities varying from
2 to 5.4 erg s. Our results indicate that
the X-ray luminosity of the sources in our sample is larger than the Eddington
luminosity limit for a typical neutron star, even at the lowest observed
levels. This leads us to conclude that the sources emitting X-rays in our
sample are likely black holes. Additionally, we have employed a scaling
relation between black hole and stellar mass to estimate the masses of the
black holes in our sample, and have determined a range of black hole masses
from 4.6 to 1.5 M. Finally, we find a trend
between X-ray to optical flux ratio and X-ray flux. We discuss the implications
of our findings and highlight the importance of X-ray observations in studying
the properties of dwarf galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 11 pages, 7 figure
Factors affecting nutritional quality in terms of the fatty acid composition of Cyprinion macrostomus
This study aimed to evaluate the effect of different factors (season, gender, location, total lipid, weight and length) on the fatty acid composition and nutritional quality of Cyprinion macrostomus. The results were evaluated through PERMANOVA, principal coordinates (PCO), and cluster analysis for similarity ranges. An analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) was performed on the distance matrix using multiple permutations within a significant fixed effect (p < 0.05). C18:1ω9, EPA and DHA were the most important fatty acids which had an effect on the nutritional quality in all the factor groups. Total lipid amount, season and length factors were the most influential on the fatty acid compositions of C. macrostomus. Summer and Spring were the best the periods for the good nutritional quality of C. macrostomus in terms of AI (Atherogenicity index), TI (Thrombogenicity index) and h/H (Σhypocholesterolemic/Σhypercholesterolemic fatty acid index). In addition, station, gender and weight had no effect on nutritional quality. The study indicated that C. macrostomus is a potential fish meat for human nutrition with high nutritional value in terms of fatty acid composition
A Real Space Description of Field Induced Melting in the Charge Ordered Manganites: II. the Disordered Case
We study the effect of A site disorder on magnetic field induced melting of
charge order (CO) in half doped manganites using a Monte-Carlo technique.
Strong A-site disorder destroys CO even without an applied field. At moderate
disorder, the zero field CO state survives but has several intriguing features
in its field response. Our spatially resolved results track the broadening of
the field melting transition due to disorder and explain the unusual dependence
of the melting scales on bandwidth and disorder. In combination with our
companion paper on field melting of charge order in clean systems we provide an
unified understanding of CO melting across all half doped manganites.Comment: 9 pages, pdflatex, 10 embedded png fig
The Impact of 18F-FDG PET CT Prior to Chemoradiotherapy for Stage III/IV Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Introduction. To determine the value of a FDG-PET-CT scan in patients with locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) prior to chemoradiotherapy. Materials and Methods. Consecutive patients with stage III or IV HNSCC who had undergone a staging FDG-PET-CT scan prior to chemoradiotherapy between August 2008 and April 2011 were included. Clinical details and conventional imaging (CT and/or MRI) were, retrospectively, reviewed, a TNM stage was assigned, and levels of cervical lymph node involvement were documented. This process was repeated with the addition of FDG-PET-CT. Radiotherapy plans were reviewed for patients with an alteration identified on TNM staging and/or nodal level identification with FDG-PET-CT and potential alterations in radiotherapy planning were documented. Results. 55 patients were included in the analysis. FDG-PET-CT altered the TNM stage in 17/55 (31%) of patients, upstaging disease in 11 (20%) and downstaging in 6 (11%); distant metastases were identified by FDG-PET-CT in 1 (2%) patient. FDG-PET-CT altered the lymph node levels identified in 22 patients (40%), upclassifying disease in 16 (29%) and downclassifying in 6 (11%). Radiotherapy plans were judged retrospectively to have been altered by FDG-PET-CT in 10 patients (18%). Conclusions. The use of FDG-PET-CT potentially impacts upon both treatment decisions and radiotherapy planning
Turner syndrome and associated problems in turkish children: A multicenter study
Objective: Turner syndrome (TS) is a chromosomal disorder caused by complete or partial X chromosome monosomy that manifests various clinical features depending on the karyotype and on the genetic background of affected girls. This study aimed to systematically investigate the key clinical features of TS in relationship to karyotype in a large pediatric Turkish patient population. Methods: Our retrospective study included 842 karyotype-proven TS patients aged 0-18 years who were evaluated in 35 different centers in Turkey in the years 2013-2014. Results: The most common karyotype was 45,X (50.7%), followed by 45,X/46,XX (10.8%), 46,X,i(Xq) (10.1%) and 45,X/46,X,i(Xq) (9.5%). Mean age at diagnosis was 10.2±4.4 years. The most common presenting complaints were short stature and delayed puberty. Among patients diagnosed before age one year, the ratio of karyotype 45,X was significantly higher than that of other karyotype groups. Cardiac defects (bicuspid aortic valve, coarctation of the aorta and aortic stenosi) were the most common congenital anomalies, occurring in 25% of the TS cases. This was followed by urinary system anomalies (horseshoe kidney, double collector duct system and renal rotation) detected in 16.3%. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis was found in 11.1% of patients, gastrointestinal abnormalities in 8.9%, ear nose and throat problems in 22.6%, dermatologic problems in 21.8% and osteoporosis in 15.3%. Learning difficulties and/or psychosocial problems were encountered in 39.1%. Insulin resistance and impaired fasting glucose were detected in 3.4% and 2.2%, respectively. Dyslipidemia prevalence was 11.4%. Conclusion: This comprehensive study systematically evaluated the largest group of karyotype-proven TS girls to date. The karyotype distribution, congenital anomaly and comorbidity profile closely parallel that from other countries and support the need for close medical surveillance of these complex patients throughout their lifespan. © Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology
Diffüz büyük B-hücreli lenfomanın farklı immünofenotipik profillerinde apoptozis, proliferasyon durumu ve O6 metilguanin DNA metiltransferaz metilasyon profillerinin tespiti
Objective: Our aim was to investigate the expression of apoptosis-associated proteins (bcl-2, bcl-xl, bax, bak, bid), apoptotic index (AI) and proliferation index (PI) in germinal center B-cell-like immunophenotypic profile (GCB) and non-GCB of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Materials and Methods: The methylation status of the promoter region of O6-methylguanine-DNA yerine O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) gene and its relation with immunophenotypic differentiation of DLBCLs were also investigated. 101 cases were classified as GCB (29 cases) or non-GCB (72 cases). Apoptosis-associated proteins and PI were determined by IHC, and TUNEL method was used to determine AI. MGMT methylation analysis was performed by real-time PCR. Results: The PI was significantly higher in GCB compared with non-GCB (p=0.011). Percentage of cells stained with bcl-6 was positively correlated with the percentage of cells expressing bcl-2 (p=0.023), AI (p=0.006) and PI (p<0.001), while a significant negative correlation was observed with the percentage of cells expressing bax (p=0.027). The percentage of cells stained with MUM1 showed a significantly positive correlation with the percentage of cells expressing bcl-xl (p=0.003), bid (p=0.002), AI (p<0.001), and PI (p=0.001). MGMT methylation analysis was performed in 95 samples, and methylated profile was found in 31 cases (32.6%). GCB was found in 6 cases (22.2%) and non-GCB was determined in 25 cases (36.8%) out of 31 with MGMT methylated samples. There was no significant association between MGMT methylation status and immunophenotypic profiles (p=0.173). Conclusion: These results suggest that bcl-6 protein expression may be responsible for the high PI in GCB. Additionally, we found that apoptosis-associated proteins were not significantly associated with immunophenotypic profiles
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