222 research outputs found
New concepts for light mechanical structures of cylindrical drift chambers
A significant reduction in the amount of material at the end plates of a drift chamber can be obtained by the simple consideration of separating, in the mechanical structure, the gas containment function from the wire tension support function. According to this scheme, the wires are anchored to a self-sustaining light structure ("wire cage") surrounded by a very thin skin ("gas envelope") of suitable profile to compensate for the gas differential pressure with respect to the outside.
The "wire cage" is schematically made of a set of radial spokes, constrained into a polygonal shape at the inner ends and extended to the outer endplate rim, thus subdividing the chamber in identical sectors. The drift chamber is, then, built by stacking up radially, in each of the sectors and between adjacent spokes, printed circuit boards, where the ends of the wires are soldered, alternated with proper spacers, to define the cell width.
A system of adjustable tie-rods steers the wire tension to the outer endplate rim, where a rigid cylindrical carbon fibre support structure, bearing the total wire load, is attached.
Two thin carbon fibre domes, free to deform under the gas pressure without affecting the wire tension and conveniently shaped to minimize the stress at the inner rim, contribute to the "gas envelope" and, together with an inner thin cylindrical foil and with the outer structural support, enclose the gas volume
cis-Regulatory Requirements for Tissue-Specific Programs of the Circadian Clock
SummaryBackgroundBroadly expressed transcriptions factors (TFs) control tissue-specific programs of gene expression through interactions with local TF networks. A prime example is the circadian clock: although the conserved TFs CLOCK (CLK) and CYCLE (CYC) control a transcriptional circuit throughout animal bodies, rhythms in behavior and physiology are generated tissue specifically. Yet, how CLK and CYC determine tissue-specific clock programs has remained unclear.ResultsHere, we use a functional genomics approach to determine the cis-regulatory requirements for clock specificity. We first determine CLK and CYC genome-wide binding targets in heads and bodies by ChIP-seq and show that they have distinct DNA targets in the two tissue contexts. Computational dissection of CLK/CYC context-specific binding sites reveals sequence motifs for putative partner factors, which are predictive for individual binding sites. Among them, we show that the opa and GATA motifs, differentially enriched in head and body binding sites respectively, can be bound by OPA and SERPENT (SRP). They act synergistically with CLK/CYC in the Drosophila feedback loop, suggesting that they help to determine their direct targets and therefore orchestrate tissue-specific clock outputs. In addition, using in vivo transgenic assays, we validate that GATA motifs are required for proper tissue-specific gene expression in the adult fat body, midgut, and Malpighian tubules, revealing a cis-regulatory signature for enhancers of the peripheral circadian clock.ConclusionsOur results reveal how universal clock circuits can regulate tissue-specific rhythms and, more generally, provide insights into the mechanism by which universal TFs can be modulated to drive tissue-specific programs of gene expression
A 10-3 drift velocity monitoring chamber
The MEG-II experiment searches for the lepton flavor violating decay: mu in
electron and gamma. The reconstruction of the positron trajectory uses a
cylindrical drift chamber operated with a mixture of He and iC4H10 gas. It is
important to provide a stable performance of the detector in terms of its
electron transport parameters, avalanche multiplication, composition and purity
of the gas mixture. In order to have a continuous monitoring of the quality of
gas, we plan to install a small drift chamber, with a simple geometry that
allows to measure very precisely the electron drift velocity in a prompt way.
This monitoring chamber will be supplied with gas coming from the inlet and the
outlet of the detector to determine if gas contaminations originate inside the
main chamber or in the gas supply system. The chamber is a small box with
cathode walls, that define a highly uniform electric field inside two adjacent
drift cells. Along the axis separating the two drift cells, four staggered
sense wires alternated with five guard wires collect the drifting electrons.
The trigger is provided by two 90Sr weak calibration radioactive sources placed
on top of a two thin scintillator tiles telescope. The whole system is designed
to give a prompt response (within a minute) about drift velocity variations at
the 0.001 level
Iloprost in Acute Post-kidney Transplant Atheroembolism: A Case Report of Two Successful Treatments
Cholesterol embolization (CE) is a rare and alarming post-transplant complication, responsible for primary non-function (PNF) or delayed graft function (DGF). Its incidence is expected to rise due to increasingly old donors and recipients and the extended criteria for donation. Therapy with statins and steroids has not been shown to be effective, while agonism of prostaglandin I2 has been reported to be useful in systemic CE. We report two cases of acute post-transplant CE in which intravenous iloprost (0.05 mg/kg/day) was added to standard statin and steroid therapy. In the first instance, CE was due to embolization from the kidney artery resulting in embolization of the small vessels; after a long DGF and 15 days of iloprost therapy, renal function recovered. The second instance is a case of embolization from the iliac artery of the recipient, where CE manifested as a partial renal infarction. After 5 days of iloprost administration, creatinine levels improved. Iloprost acts on vasodilation and on different inflammatory pathways, improving the anti-inflammatory profile. Post-transplant CE is difficult to diagnose and, if not treated, can lead to loss of function. Iloprost added to standard therapy could be beneficial in accelerating renal function recovery immediately after transplant
Surviving adversity: Exploring the presence of Lunularia cruciata (L.) Dum. on metal‐polluted mining waste
The tailings dump of Barraxiutta (Sardinia, Italy) contains considerable concentrations of heavy metals and, consequently, is scarcely colonized by plants. However, wild populations of the liverwort Lunularia cruciata (L.) Dum. form dense and healthy-looking carpets on this tailing dump.
L. cruciata colonizing the tailing dump was compared with a control population growing in a pristine environment in terms of: (i) pollutant content, (ii) photochemical efficiency, and (iii) volatile secondary metabolites in thalli extracts.
L. cruciata maintained optimal photosynthesis despite containing considerable amounts of soil pollutants in its thalli and had higher sesquiterpene content compared to control plants.
Sesquiterpenes have a role in plant stress resistance and adaptation to adverse environments. In the present study, we propose enhanced sesquiterpenes featuring Contaminated L. cruciata as a defence strategy implemented in the post-mining environment
The Tracking performance for the IDEA drift chamber
The IDEA detector concept for a future e+e- collider adopts an ultra-low mass drift chamber as a central tracking system. The He-based ultra-low mass drift chamber is designed to provide efficient tracking, a high-precision momentum measurement, and excellent particle identification by exploiting the cluster counting technique. This paper describes the expected tracking performance, obtained with full and fast simulation, for track reconstruction on detailed simulated physics events. Moreover, the details of the construction parameters of the drift chamber, including the inspection of new material for the wires, new techniques for soldering the wires, the development of an improved schema for the drift cell, and the choice of a gas mixture, will be described
A case report of IgG4-related disease: an insidious path to the diagnosis through kidney, heart and brain
BACKGROUND: IgG4-related disease, described around the years 2000 as a form of autoimmune pancreatitis, is now increasingly accepted as a systemic syndrome. The diagnosis is based on both comprehensive and organ-specific criteria. For the kidney, Mayo clinic classification and the guidelines of the Japanese Nephrology Society are used. Ultimately, together with parameters that characterize every organ or apparatus involved, the key element is the confirmation of growing levels of IgG4 in blood or in tissues. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a male patient with chronic renal failure associated to hypertension without proteinuria. IgG4-related disease was diagnosed through renal biopsy. After an initial positive response to steroids, he presented tinnitus, and histological assessment showed cerebral and subsequently cardiac damage, both IgG4-related. This case appears unique for the type of histologically documented cardiac and neurological parenchymal involvement, and at the same time, exemplifies the subtle and pernicious course of the disease. Frequently, blurred and non-specific signs prevail. Here, kidney damage was associated with minimal urinary findings, slowly progressive renal dysfunction and other factors that can be equivocated in the differential diagnosis. Neurological involvement was represented by tinnitus alone, while cardiac alterations were completely asymptomatic. CONCLUSIONS: This report is representative of the neurological and cardiac changes described in the literature for IgG4-related disease, which may be correlated or not with the renal form and highlights the need, in some cases, of targeted therapeutic approaches. In addition to glucocorticoids, as in this case, rituximab may be necessary
The measuring systems of the wire tension for the MEG II Drift Chamber by means of the resonant frequency technique
The ultra-low mass Cylindrical Drift Chamber designed for the MEG experiment
upgrade is a challenging apparatus made of 1728 phi = 20 micron gold plated
tungsten sense wires, 7680 phi = 40 micron and 2496 phi = 50 micron silver
plated aluminum field wires. Because of electrostatic stability requirements
all the wires have to be stretched at mechanical tensions of about 25, 19 and
29 g respectively which must be controlled at a level better than 0.5 g. This
chamber is presently in acquisition, but during its construction about 100
field wires broke, because of chemical corrosion induced by the atmospheric
humidity. On the basis of the experience gained with this chamber we decided to
build a new one, equipped with a different type of wires less sensitive to
corrosion. The choice of the new wire required a deep inspection of its
characteristics and one of the main tools for doing this is a system for
measuring the wire tension by means of the resonant frequency technique, which
is described in this paper. The system forces the wires to oscillate by
applying a sinusoidal signal at a known frequency, and then measures the
variation of the capacitance between a wire and a common ground plane as a
function of the external signal frequency. We present the details of the
measuring system and the results obtained by scanning the mechanical tensions
of two samples of MEG II CDCH wires and discuss the possible improvements of
the experimental apparatus and of the measuring technique.Comment: Ten pages, twelve figures, to be submitted to Nuclear Instruments and
Methods
Performances of a new generation tracking detector: the MEG II cylindrical drfit chamber
The cylindrical drift chamber is the most innovative part of the MEG~II
detector, the upgraded version of the MEG experiment. The MEG~II chamber
differs from the MEG one because it is a single volume cylindrical structure,
instead of a segmented one, chosen to improve its resolutions and efficiency in
detecting low energy positrons from muon decays at rest. In this paper, we show
the characteristics and performances of this fundamental part of the MEG~II
apparatus and we discuss the impact of its higher resolution and efficiency on
the sensitivity of the MEG~II experiment. Because of its innovative structure
and high quality resolution and efficiency the MEG~II cylindrical drift chamber
will be a cornerstone in the development of an ideal tracking detector for
future positron-electron collider machines.Comment: 27 pages, 41 figures, to be submitted to EPJ
- …