198 research outputs found
Architectural changes of the biceps femoris long head after concentric or eccentric training
Purpose: To determine i) the architectural adaptations of the biceps femoris long head (BFlf) following concentric or eccentric strength training interventions; ii) the time course of adaptation during training and detraining.
Methods: Participants in this randomized controlled trial (control [n=28], concentric training group [n=14], eccentric training group [n=14], males) completed a 4-week control period, followed by 6 weeks of either concentric- or eccentric-only knee flexor training on an isokinetic dynamometer and finished with 28 days of detraining. Architectural characteristics of BFlf were assessed at rest and during graded isometric contractions utilizing two-dimensional ultrasonography at 28 days pre-baseline, baseline, days 14, 21 and 42 of the intervention and then again following 28 days of detraining.
Results: BFlf fascicle length was significantly longer in the eccentric training group (p < 0.05, d range: 2.65 to 2.98) and shorter in the concentric training group (p < 0.05, d range: -1.62 to -0.96) after 42 days of training compared to baseline at all isometric contraction intensities. Following the 28-day detraining period, BFlf fascicle length was significantly reduced in the eccentric training group at all contraction intensities compared to the end of the intervention (p < 0.05, d range: -1.73 to -1.55). There was no significant change in fascicle length of the concentric training group following the detraining period.
Conclusions: These results provide evidence that short term resistance training can lead to architectural alterations in the BFlf. In addition, the eccentric training-induced lengthening of BFlf fascicle length was reversed and returned to baseline values following 28 days of detraining. The contraction mode specific adaptations in this study may have implications for injury prevention and rehabilitation
Reliability of corticospinal excitability and intracortical inhibition in biceps femoris during different contraction modes
This study aimed to determine the test–retest reliability of a range of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) outcomes in the biceps femoris during isometric, eccentric and concentric contractions. Corticospinal excitability (active motor threshold 120% [AMT120%] and area under recruitment curve [AURC]), short- and long-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI and LICI) and intracortical facilitation (ICF) were assessed from the biceps femoris in 10 participants (age 26.3 ± 6.0 years; height 180.2 ± 6.6 cm, body mass 77.2 ± 8.0 kg) in three sessions. Single- and paired-pulse stimuli were delivered under low-level muscle activity (5% ± 2% of maximal isometric root mean squared surface electromyography [rmsEMG]) during isometric, concentric and eccentric contractions. Participants were provided visual feedback on their levels of rmsEMG during all contractions. Single-pulse outcomes measured during isometric contractions (AURC, AMT110%, AMT120%, AMT130%, AMT150%, AMT170%) demonstrated fair to excellent reliability (ICC range, .51 to .92; CV%, 21% to 37%), whereas SICI, LICI and ICF demonstrated good to excellent reliability (ICC range, .62 to .80; CV%, 19 to 42%). Single-pulse outcomes measured during concentric contractions demonstrated excellent reliability (ICC range, .75 to .96; CV%, 15% to 34%), whereas SICI, LICI and ICF demonstrated good to excellent reliability (ICC range, .65 to .76; CV%, 16% to 71%). Single-pulse outcomes during eccentric contractions demonstrated fair to excellent reliability (ICC range, .56 to .96; CV%, 16% to 41%), whereas SICI, LICI and ICF demonstrated good to excellent (ICC range, .67 to .86; CV%, 20% to 42%). This study found that both single- and paired-pulse TMS outcomes can be measured from the biceps femoris muscle across all contraction modes with fair to excellent reliability. However, coefficient of variation values were typically greater than the smallest worthwhile change which may make tracking physiological changes in these variables difficult without moderate to large effect sizes
Beam Halo on the LHC TCDQ Diluter System and Thermal Load on the Downstream Superconducting Magnets
The moveable single-jawed graphite TCDQ diluter must be positioned very close to the circulating LHC beam in order to prevent damage to downstream components in the event of an unsynchronised beam abort. A two-jawed graphite TCS.IR6 collimator forms part of the TCDQ system. The requirement to place the jaws close to the beam means that the system can intercept a substantial beam halo load. Initial investigations indicated a worryingly high heat load on the Q4 coils. This paper presents the updated load cases, shielding and simulation geometry, and the results of simulations of the energy deposition in the TCDQ system and in the downstream superconducting Q4 magnet. The implications for the operation of the LHC are discussed
Implications of the isotope effects on the magnetization, magnetic torque and susceptibility
We analyze the magnetization, magnetic torque and susceptibility data of
La2-xSrxCu(16,18)O4 and YBa2(63,65)CuO7-x near Tc in terms of the universal
3D-XY scaling relations. It is shown that the isotope effect on Tc mirrors that
on the anisotropy. Invoking the generic behavior of the anisotropy the doping
dependence of the isotope effects on the critical properties, including Tc,
correlation lengths and magnetic penetration depths are traced back to a change
of the mobile carrier concentration.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Unusual T_c variation with hole concentration in Bi_2Sr_{2-x}La_xCuO_{6+\delta}
We have investigated the variation with the hole concentration in
the La-doped Bi 2201 system, BiSrLaCuO. It is
found that the Bi 2201 system does not follow the systematics in and
observed in other high- cuprate superconductors (HTSC's). The vs
characteristics are quite similar to what observed in Zn-doped HTSC's. An
exceptionally large residual resistivity component in the inplane resistivity
indicates that strong potential scatterers of charge carriers reside in CuO
planes and are responsible for the unusual variation with , as in the
Zn-doped systems. However, contrary to the Zn-doped HTSC's, the strong scatter
in the Bi 2201 system is possibly a vacancy in the Cu site.Comment: RevTeX, 3 figures, to be published in the Physical Review
Thermopower in the strongly overdoped region of single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d superconductor
The evolution of the thermoelectric power S(T) with doping, p, of
single-layer Bi2Sr2CuO6+d ceramics in the strongly overdoped region is studied
in detail. Analysis in term of drag and diffusion contributions indicates a
departure of the diffusion from the T-linear metallic behavior. This effect is
increased in the strongly overdoped range (p~0.2-0.28) and should reflect the
proximity of some topological change.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coherent quasiparticle weight and its connection to high-T_c superconductivity from angle-resolved photoemission
In conventional superconductors, the pairing energy gap (\Delta) and
superconducting phase coherence go hand-in-hand. As the temperature is lowered,
both the energy gap and phase coherence appear at the transition temperature
T_c. In contrast, in underdoped high-T_c superconductors (HTSCs), a pseudogap
appears at a much higher temperature T^*, smoothly evolving into the
superconducting gap at T_c. Phase coherence on the other hand is only
established at T_c, signaled by the appearance of a sharp quasiparticle (QP)
peak in the excitation spectrum. Another important difference between the two
types of superconductors is in the ratio of 2\Delta / T_c=R. In BCS theory,
R~3.5, is constant. In the HTSCs this ratio varies widely, continuing to
increase in the underdoped region, where the gap increases while T_c decreases.
Here we report that in HTSCs it is the ratio z_A\Delta_m/T_c which is
approximately constant, where \Delta_m is the maximum value of the d-wave gap,
and z_A is the weight of the coherent excitations in the spectral function.
This is highly unusual, since in nearly all phase transitions, T_c is
determined by an energy scale alone. We further show that in the
low-temperature limit, z_{\it A} increases monotonically with increasing doping
x. The growth is linear, i.e. z_A(x)\propto x, in the underdoped to optimally
doped regimes, and slows down in overdoped samples. The reduction of z_A with
increasing temperature resembles that of the c-axis superfluid density.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, revised versio
Relation between the superconducting gap energy and the two-magnon Raman peak energy in Bi2Sr2Ca{1-x}YxCu2O{8+\delta}
The relation between the electronic excitation and the magnetic excitation
for the superconductivity in Bi2Sr2Ca{1-x}YxCu2O{8+\delta} was investigated by
wide-energy Raman spectroscopy. In the underdoping region the B1g scattering
intensity is depleted below the two-magnon peak energy due to the "hot spots"
effects. The depleted region decreases according to the decrease of the
two-magnon peak energy, as the carrier concentration ncreases. This two-magnon
peak energy also determines the B1g superconducting gap energy as
from under to overdoping hole concentration.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Anomalous superconducting state gap size versus Tc behavior in underdoped Bi_2Sr_2Ca_1-xDy_xCu_2O_8+d
We report angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy measurements of the
excitation gap in underdoped superconducting thin films of
Bi_2Sr_2Ca_{1-x}Dy_xCu_2O_{8+d}. As Tc is reduced by a factor of 2 by
underdoping, the superconducting state gap \Delta does not fall proportionally,
but instead stays constant or increases slightly, in violation of the BCS
mean-field theory result. The different doping dependences of \Delta and kT_c
indicate that they represent different energy scales. The measurements also
show that \Delta is highly anisotropic and consistent with a d_{x^2-y^2} order
parameter, as in previous studies of samples with higher dopings. However, in
these underdoped samples, the anisotropic gap persists well above T_c. The
existence of a normal state gap is related to the failure of \Delta to scale
with T_c in theoretical models that predict pairing without phase coherence
above T_c.Comment: 10 pages, 4 postscript figures, revtex forma
Anomalous peak in the superconducting condensate density of cuprate high T_{c} superconductors at a unique critical doping state
The doping dependence of the superconducting condensate density, n_{s}^{o},
has been studied by muon-spin-rotation for
Y_{0.8}Ca_{0.2}Ba_{2}(Cu_{1-z}Zn_{z})_{3}O_{7-\delta} and
Tl_{0.5-y}Pb_{0.5+y}Sr_{2}Ca_{1-x}Y_{x}Cu_{2}O_{7}. We find that n_{s}^{o}
exhibits a pronounced peak at a unique doping state in the slightly overdoped
regime. Its position coincides with the critical doping state where the normal
state pseudogap first appears depleting the electronic density of states. A
surprising correlation between n_{s}^{o} and the condensation energy U_{o} is
observed which suggests unconventional behavior even in the overdoped region.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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