594 research outputs found

    Energy response of GR-200A thermoluminescence dosemeters to CO-60 and to monoenergetic synchrotron radiation in the energy range 28-40 KEV

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    7noThe response of LiF:Mg,Cu,P thermoluminescence dosemeters (type GR-200A) to monoenergetic radiation of energy 28, 35, 38 and 40 keV was evaluated with respect to irradiation with a calibrated 60Co gamma-ray source. High-precision measurements of the relative air kerma response performed at the SYRMEP beamline of the ELETTRA synchrotron radiation facility (Trieste, Italy) showed a significant deviation of the average response to low-energy X-rays from that to 60Co, with an over-response from 6 % (at 28 keV) to 22 % (at 40 keV). These data are not consistent with literature data for these dosemeters, where model predictions gave deviation from unity of the relative air kerma response of about 10 %. The authors conclude for the need of additional determinations of the low-energy relative response of GR-200A dosemeters, covering a wider range of monoenergetic energies sampled at a fine energy step, as planned in future experiments by their group at the ELETTRA facility.Published online first 02 March 2015partially_openembargoed_20160302F. Emiro; F. Di Lillo; G. Mettivier; C. Fedon; R. Longo; G. Tromba; P. RussoF., Emiro; F., Di Lillo; G., Mettivier; Fedon, Christian; Longo, Renata; G., Tromba; P., Russ

    Use of XR-QA2 radiochromic films for quantitative imaging of a synchrotron radiation beam

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    This work investigates the use of XR-QA2 radiochromic films for quantitative imaging of a synchrotron radiation (SR) beam. Pieces (200 7 30 mm2) of XR-QA2 film were irradiated in a plane transverse to the beam axis, at the SYRMEP beamline at ELETTRA (Trieste), with a monochromatic beam of size 170 7 3.94 mm2 (H 7 V) and energy of 28, 35, 38 or 40 keV. The response was calibrated in terms of average air kerma (1\uf02d20 mGy), measured with a calibrated ionization chamber. Films were digitized in reflectance mode using a flatbed scanner. The 16-bit red channel was used. The net\uf020reflectance was then converted to photon fluence per unit air kerma (mm-2 mGy-1). The SR beam profile was acquired also with a scintillator (GOS) based, fiberoptic coupled CCD camera as well as with a scintillator based flat panel detector. Horizontal profiles obtained with the two modalities were compared, evaluated in a ROI of 17.71 7 0.59 mm2, across the beam centre. Once corrected for flat field, the CCD profile was scaled in order to have the same average value as the normalized profile acquired with the gafchromic film. The same procedure was followed for the beam images acquired with the flat panel detector. Horizontal and vertical line profiles acquired with the radiochromic film show an uneven 2D distribution of the beam intensity, with variations in the order of 15\uf02d20% in the horizontal direction, while the statistical uncertainties evaluated for the radiochromic dose measurements were 6% at 28 keV. Larger variations up to 64% were observed in the vertical direction. The response of the radiochromic film is comparable to that of the other imaging detectors, within less than 5% variation

    Set-based Inverse Kinematics Control of an Anthropomorphic Dual Arm Aerial Manipulator

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    The paper presents a multiple task-priority inverse kinematics algorithm for a dual-arm aerial manipulator. Both tasks defined as equality constraints and inequality constraints are handled by means of a singularity robust method based on the Null-Space based Behavioral control. The proposed schema is constituted by the inverse kinematics control, that receives the desired behavior of the system and outputs the reference values for the motion variables, i.e. the UAV pose and the arm joints position, and a motion control, that computes the vehicle thrusts and the joint torques. The method has been experimentally validated on a system composed by an underactuated aerial hexarotor vehicle equipped with two lightweight 4-DOF manipulators, involved in operations requiring the coordination of the two arms and the vehicle

    DNA damage response at telomeres boosts the transcription of SARS-CoV-2 receptor ACE2 during aging

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    The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) causes the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), known to be more common in the elderly, who also show more severe symptoms and are at higher risk of hospitalization and death. Here, we show that the expression of the angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), the SARS-CoV-2 cell receptor, increases during aging in mouse and human lungs. ACE2 expression increases upon telomere shortening or dysfunction in both cultured mammalian cells and in vivo in mice. This increase is controlled at the transcriptional level, and Ace2 promoter activity is DNA damage response (DDR)-dependent. Both pharmacological global DDR inhibition of ATM kinase activity and selective telomeric DDR inhibition by the use of antisense oligonucleotides prevent Ace2 upregulation following telomere damage in cultured cells and in mice. We propose that during aging telomere dysfunction due to telomeric shortening or damage triggers DDR activation and this causes the upregulation of ACE2, the SARS-CoV-2 cell receptor, thus contributing to make the elderly more susceptible to the infection

    Imaging performance of phase-contrast breast computed tomography with synchrotron radiation and a CdTe photon-counting detector

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    Purpose: Within the SYRMA-CT collaboration based at the ELETTRA synchrotron radiation (SR) facility (Trieste, Italy) the authors investigated the imaging performance of the phase-contrast computed tomography (CT) system dedicated to monochromatic in vivo 3D imaging of the female breast, for breast cancer diagnosis. Methods: Test objects were imaged at 38 keV using monochromatic SR and a high-resolution CdTe photon-counting detector. Signal and noise performance were evaluated using modulation transfer function (MTF) and Noise Power Spectrum (NPS). Phase-contrast CT images as well as images obtained after the application of a phase-retrieval algorithm were evaluated. The contrast to noise ratio (CNR) and the capability of detecting test microcalcification clusters and soft masses were explored. Results: For a voxel size of (60 \u3bcm)3, phase-contrast images showed higher spatial resolution (6.7 mm-1 at 10% MTF) than corresponding phase retrieval images (2.5 mm-1). Phase retrieval produced a reduction of the noise level as well as an increase of the CNR by more than one order of magnitude, compared to raw phase-contrast images. CaCO3 microcalcifications with a diameter down to 130 \u3bcm were detected both in phase-contrast and in phase retrieval images of the test object. Conclusions: The investigation on test objects indicates that breast CT with a monochromatic SR source is technically feasible in terms of spatial resolution, image noise and contrast, for in vivo 3D imaging with a dose comparable to that of two-view mammography. Phase-retrieved images showed the best performance in the trade-off between spatial resolution and image noise

    Sector Neutral Portfolios: Long Memory Motifs Persistence in Market Structure Dynamics

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    We study soft persistence (existence in subsequent temporal layers of motifs from the initial layer) of motif structures in Triangulated Maximally Filtered Graphs (TMFG) generated from time-varying Kendall correlation matrices computed from stock prices log-returns over rolling windows with exponential smoothing. We observe long-memory processes in these structures in the form of power law decays in the number of persistent motifs. The decays then transition to a plateau regime with a power-law decay with smaller exponent. We demonstrate that identifying persistent motifs allows for forecasting and applications to portfolio diversification. Balanced portfolios are often constructed from the analysis of historic correlations, however not all past correlations are persistently reflected into the future. Sector neutrality has also been a central theme in portfolio diversification and systemic risk. We present an unsupervised technique to identify persistently correlated sets of stocks. These are empirically found to identify sectors driven by strong fundamentals. Applications of these findings are tested in two distinct ways on four different markets, resulting in significant reduction in portfolio volatility. A persistence-based measure for portfolio allocation is proposed and shown to outperform volatility weighting when tested out of sample

    Sfrp1 deficiency makes retinal photoreceptors prone to degeneration

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    Millions of individuals worldwide suffer from impaired vision, a condition with multiple origins that often impinge upon the light sensing cells of the retina, the photoreceptors, affecting their integrity. The molecular components contributing to this integrity are however not yet fully understood. Here we have asked whether Secreted Frizzled Related Protein 1 (SFRP1) may be one of such factors. SFRP1 has a context-dependent function as modulator of Wnt signalling or of the proteolytic activity of A Disintegrin And Metalloproteases (ADAM) 10, a main regulator of neural cell-cell communication. We report that in Sfrp1^{-/-} mice, the outer limiting membrane (OLM) is discontinuous and the photoreceptors disorganized and more prone to light-induced damage. Sfrp1 loss significantly enhances the effect of the Rpe6^{Leu450Leu} genetic variant -present in the mouse genetic background- which confers sensitivity to light-induced stress. These alterations worsen with age, affect visual function and are associated to an increased proteolysis of Protocadherin 21 (PCDH21), localized at the photoreceptor outer segment, and N-cadherin, an OLM component. We thus propose that SFRP1 contributes to photoreceptor fitness with a mechanism that involves the maintenance of OLM integrity. These conclusions are discussed in view of the broader implication of SFRP1 in neurodegeneration and aging

    Electrocardiogram analysis in Anderson-Fabry disease: a valuable tool for progressive phenotypic expression tracking

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    BackgroundElectrocardiogram (ECG) has proven to be useful for early detection of cardiac involvement in Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD); however, little evidence is available on the association between ECG alterations and the progression of the disease.Aim and MethodsTo perform a cross sectional comparison of ECG abnormalities throughout different left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) severity subgroups, providing ECG patterns specific of the progressive AFD stages. 189 AFD patients from a multicenter cohort underwent comprehensive ECG analysis, echocardiography, and clinical evaluation.ResultsThe study cohort (39% males, median age 47 years, 68% classical AFD) was divided into 4 groups according to different degree of left ventricular (LV) thickness: group A & LE; 9 mm (n = 52, 28%); group B 10-14 mm (n = 76, 40%); group C 15-19 mm (n = 46, 24%); group D & GE; 20 mm (n = 15, 8%). The most frequent conduction delay was right bundle branch block (RBBB), incomplete in groups B and C (20%,22%) and complete RBBB in group D (54%, p < 0.001); none of the patients had left bundle branch block (LBBB). Left anterior fascicular block, LVH criteria, negative T waves, ST depression were more common in the advanced stages of the disease (p < 0.001). Summarizing our results, we suggested ECG patterns representative of the different AFD stages as assessed by the increases in LV thickness over time (Central Figure). Patients from group A showed mostly a normal ECG (77%) or minor anomalies like LVH criteria (8%) and delta wave/slurred QR onset + borderline PR (8%). Differently, patients from groups B and C exhibited more heterogeneous ECG patterns: LVH (17%; 7% respectively); LVH + LV strain (9%; 17%); incomplete RBBB + repolarization abnormalities (8%; 9%), more frequently associated with LVH criteria in group C than B (8%; 15%). Finally, patients from group D showed very peculiar ECG patterns, represented by complete RBBB + LVH and repolarization abnormalities (40%), sometimes associated with QRS fragmentation (13%).ConclusionsECG is a sensitive tool for early identification and long-term monitoring of cardiac involvement in patients with AFD, providing "instantaneous pictures" along the natural history of AFD. Whether ECG changes may be associated with clinical events remains to be determined

    An ESPRESSO view of HD 189733 system. Broadband transmission spectrum, differential rotation, and system architecture

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    The development of state-of-the-art spectrographs has ushered in a new era in the detection and characterization of exoplanetary systems. Our objective is to utilize the high-resolution and precision capabilities of the ESPRESSO instrument to detect and measure the broad-band transmission spectrum of HD 189733b's atmosphere. Additionally, we aim to employ an improved Rossiter-McLaughlin model to derive properties related to the velocity fields of the stellar surface and to constrain the orbital architecture. Our results demonstrate a high degree of precision in fitting the observed radial velocities during transit using the improved modeling of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. We tentatively detect the effect of differential rotation with a confidence level of 93.4%93.4 \% when considering a rotation period within the photometric literature values, and 99.6%99.6\% for a broader range of rotation periods. For the former, the amplitude of differential rotation ratio suggests an equatorial rotation period of 11.45±0.0911.45\pm 0.09 days and a polar period of 14.9±214.9\pm 2. The addition of differential rotation breaks the latitudinal symmetry, enabling us to measure the true spin-orbit angle ψ13.6±6.9 \psi \approx 13.6 \pm 6.9 ^\circ and the stellar inclination axis angle i71.875.55+6.91 i_{\star} \approx 71.87 ^{+6.91^\circ}_{-5.55^\circ}. Moreover, we determine a sub-solar amplitude of the convective blueshift velocity VCBV_{CB} \approx 21161+69-211 ^{+69} _{-61} m\,s1 ^{-1}, which falls within the expected range for a K-dwarf host star and is compatible with both runs. Finally, we successfully retrieved the transmission spectrum of HD 189733b from the high-resolution ESPRESSO data. We observe a significant decrease in radius with increasing wavelength, consistent with the phenomenon of super-Rayleigh scattering
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