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The Mineralogy And Chemistry Of Micrometeorites
Prior to their retrieval from low Earth orbit (LEO), the individual solar cells that make up the 'V2' solar array panel from the Huhble Space Telescope (HST) were prone to hypervelocity (>5 km/s ) impact damage from micrometeoroids and space debris. The analysis of such passive collector surfaces allows sampling of micrometeoroids that have not undergone any terrestrial atmospheric alteration and better defines the population of space debris particles below the 1mm size range.
Herein a new approach has been taken to try and identify the nature and origin of impact derived residues generated in the individual solar cells from the HST. A total of 25 solar cells were selected on the basis that they contained impact craters (100-1000μm diameter) rather than larger impact holes (1-3mm diameter), as preliminary studies indicated that they were more likely to retain impact residues. These were subsequently analysed using digitised hack-scattered electron imaging, coupled with digitised x-ray elemental mapping and micro-spot analysis to locate, identify and classify the residues.
29 impact craters were located on solar cells. In the analysis of the residues; 3 were identified residues as space debris in origin, 6 unclassified and 20 as micrometeoroid. The space debris derived residues were identified as remnants of a paint fragment, a stainless steel particle and a fragment of a printed circuit board. The micrometeoroid derived residues were sub-classified in terms of mineral chemistry, with apparent mafic- and phyllo- silicates being the dominant components, with minor iron-nickel metal and iron sulfides, suggesting a broadly chondritic origin. Fe-Ni rich residue was also identified that would appear to belong to a group of non-chondritic particles previously unrecognised. Possible refractory or Ca/Al rich inclusions from a primitive micrometeoroid were also observed as near intact Ca-rich fragments, the textures of the individual grains suggested that they were not merely terrestrial contamination.
Laboratory impact studies, using a light-gas-gun to accelerate small fragments (125- 250μm) of known meteorite mineralogies up to 5km/s, and then impact them into solar cells have generated a suite of residues that are analogues of those observed from LEO studies. The silicate minerals generated residues that were intimately associated with the host melt glass. Metallic sulfides and metals generated surface and sub-surface immiscible droplets. Several craters also contained near-intact fragments of minerals. Overall. despite the small sample set examined. the observed dominance of micrometeoroid to space debris residue chemistry (correlating to particle size range of 8-80μm) corresponds well to the accepted flux models
Sub-shot-noise shadow sensing with quantum correlations
The quantised nature of the electromagnetic field sets the classical limit to the sensitivity of position measurements. However, techniques based on the properties of quantum states can be exploited to accurately measure the relative displacement of a physical object beyond this classical limit. In this work, we use a simple scheme based on the split-detection of quantum correlations to measure the position of a shadow at the single-photon light level, with a precision that exceeds the shot-noise limit. This result is obtained by analysing the correlated signals of bi-photon pairs, created in parametric downconversion and detected by an electron multiplying CCD (EMCCD) camera employed as a split-detector. By comparing the measured statistics of spatially anticorrelated and uncorrelated photons we were able to observe a significant noise reduction corresponding to an improvement in position sensitivity of up to 17% (0.8dB). Our straightforward approach to sub-shot-noise position measurement is compatible with conventional shadow-sensing techniques based on the split-detection of light-fields, and yields an improvement that scales favourably with the detector’s quantum efficiency
Circulating resistin levels and risk of multiple myeloma in three prospective cohorts
BACKGROUND: Resistin is a polypeptide hormone secreted by adipose tissue. A prior hospital-based case-control study reported serum resistin levels to be inversely associated with risk of multiple myeloma (MM). To date, this association has not been investigated prospectively. METHODS: We measured resistin concentrations for pre-diagnosis peripheral blood samples from 178 MM cases and 358 individually matched controls from three cohorts participating in the MM cohort consortium. RESULTS: In overall analyses, higher resistin levels were weakly associated with reduced MM risk. For men, we observed a statistically significant inverse association between resistin levels and MM (odds ratio, 0.44; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.24-0.83 and 0.54; 95% CI 0.29-0.99, for the third and fourth quartiles, respectively, vs the lowest quartile; Ptrend=0.03). No association was observed for women. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides the first prospective evidence that low circulating resistin levels may be associated with an increased risk of MM, particularly for men
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