53 research outputs found
Possible effects on avionics induced by terrestrial gamma-ray flashes
Abstract. Terrestrial gamma-ray flashes (TGFs) are impulsive (intrinsically sub-millisecond) events associated with lightning in powerful thunderstorms. TGFs turn out to be very powerful natural accelerators known to accelerate particles and generate radiation up to hundreds of MeV energies. The number ratio of TGFs over normal lightning has been measured in tropical regions to be near 10â4. We address in this Article the issue of the possible susceptibility of typical aircraft electronics exposed to TGF particle, gamma ray and neutron irradiation. We consider possible scenarios regarding the intensity, the duration, and geometry of TGFs influencing nearby aircraft, and study their effects on electronic equipment. We calculate, for different assumptions, the total dose and the dose-rate, and estimate single-event-effects. We find that in addition to the electromagnetic component (electrons/positrons, gamma rays) also secondary neutrons produced by gamma-ray photo production in the aircraft structure substantially contribute to single-event effects in critical semiconductors components. Depending on the physical characteristics and geometry, TGFs may deliver a large flux of neutrons within a few milliseconds in an aircraft. This flux is calculated to be orders of magnitude larger than the natural cosmic-ray background, and may constitute a serious hazard to aircraft electronic equipment. We present a series of numerical simulations supporting our conclusions. Our results suggest the necessity of dedicated measurement campaigns addressing the radiative and particle environment of aircraft near or within thunderstorms
Mucosal-associated invariant T cells are functionally impaired in pediatric and young adult patients following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and their recovery correlates with clinical outcomes
Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are innate-like T-cells implicated in the response to fungal and bacterial infections. Their contribution to restoring T-cell immunity and influencing hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) outcomes remains poorly understood.
We retrospectively studied MAIT-cell recovery in 145 consecutive children and young adults with hematological malignancies undergoing allo-HSCT, between April/2019 and May/2022, from unrelated matched donor (MUD, n=52), with standard graft-versus-host-disease (GvHD) prophylaxis, or HLA-haploidentical (Haplo, n=93) donor after in vitro αÎČT/CD19-cell depletion, without post-HSCT pharmacological prophylaxis. With a median follow-up of 33 months (12-49), overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS) and non-relapse mortality (NRM) were 79.5%, 72% and 7%, respectively; GvHD-free, Relapse-free Survival (GRFS) was 63%, while cumulative incidence of relapse was 23%.
While WWT-cells reconstituted 1-2 years post-HSCT, MAIT-cells showed delayed recovery and prolonged functional impairment, characterized by expression of activation (CD25, CD38), exhaustion (PD1, TIM3) and senescence (CD57) markers, and suboptimal ex vivo response.
OS, DFS and NRM were not affected by MAIT-cells. Interestingly, higher MAIT-cells at day+30 correlated with higher incidence of grade II-IV acute GvHD (19% vs 7%, p=0.06). Furthermore, a greater MAIT-cell count tended to be associated with a higher incidence of chronic GvHD (17% vs 6%, p=0.07) resulting in lower GRFS (55% vs 73%, p=0.05). Higher MAIT-cells also correlated with greater cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation and lower late blood stream infections (BSI) (44% vs 24%, p=0.02 and 9% vs 18%, p=0.08, respectively). Future studies are needed to confirm the impact of early MAIT-cell recovery on cGvHD, CMV reactivation and late BSI
High resolution imaging of the sodium and potassium exosphere from Mercury Planetary Orbiter
International audienc
Preliminary optical design of the stereo channel of the imaging system simbiosys for the BepiColombo ESA mission
The paper describes the optical design and
performance budget of a novel catadioptric instrument
chosen as baseline for the Stereo Channel (STC) of the
imaging system SIMBIOSYS for the BepiColombo
ESA mission to Mercury.
The main scientific objective is the 3D global mapping
of the entire surface of Mercury with a scale factor of
50 m per pixel at periherm in four different spectral
bands.
The system consists of two twin cameras looking at
\ub120\ub0 from nadir and sharing some components, such as
the relay element in front of the detector and the
detector itself. The field of view of each channel is 4\ub0 x
4\ub0 with a scale factor of 23\u2019\u2019/pixel. The system
guarantees good optical performance with Ensquared
Energy of the order of 80% in one pixel.
For the straylight suppression, an intermediate field
stop is foreseen, which gives the possibility to design
an efficient baffling system
High resolution imaging of the sodium and potassium exosphere from Mercury Planetary Orbiter
International audienc
High resolution imaging of the sodium and potassium exosphere from Mercury Planetary Orbiter
International audienc
A novel optical design for the stereo channel of the imaging system SIMBIOSYS for the BepiColombo ESA mission
In this paper the design of a novel catadioptric optical
solution for the Stereo Channel (STC) of the imaging
system SIMBIOSYS for the BepiColombo ESA
mission to Mercury is presented.
The main scientific objective is the 3D global mapping
of the entire surface of Mercury with a scale factor of
50 m per pixel at periherm in five different spectral
bands.
The system consists of two sub-channels looking at
\ub120\ub0 from nadir. They share the detector and all the
optical components with the exception of the first
element, a rhomboid prism. The field of view of each
channel is 5.3\ub0 \ub4 4.5\ub0 and the scale factor is 23
arcsec/pixel. The system guarantees an aberration
balancing over all the field of view and wavelength
range with optimal optical performance.
For stray-light suppression, an efficient baffling system
able to well decouple the optical paths of the two subchannels
has been designed
Method for studying the effects of thermal deformations on optical systems for space application
In this paper, the results of the thermo-elastic analysis performed on the stereo channel of the imaging
system Integrated Observatory System for the BepiColombo European Space Agency mission to Mercury
are presented. The aim of the work is to determine the effects of ambient parameter variations on the
equipment performance; the optical performance is changing during the mission lifetime primarily
because of the optics misalignments and deformations induced by temperature variations. The camera
optics and their mountings are modeled and processed by a thermo-mechanical finite element model
(FEM) program, which reproduces the expected optics and structure thermo-elastic deformations in
the instrument foreseen operative temperature range, i.e., between 1220 \ub0C and 30 \ub0C. The FEM outputs
are elaborated using a MATLAB optimization routine: an algorithm based on nonlinear least square data
fitting is adopted to determine the surface equation (plane, spherical, nth polynomial) which best fits the
deformed optical surfaces. The obtained surfaces are then directly imported into a ZEMAX code for
sequential ray-tracing analysis. Variations of the optical spot diagrams, modulation transfer function
curves, and ensquared energy are then computed. The overall analysis shows that the preferred solution
for mounting the optical elements is adopting the kinematic constraints instead of using the classical glue
solution
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