266 research outputs found
Monitoring DC anode current of a grounded-cathode photomultiplier tube
Abstract The Pierre Auger Observatories (PAO) for the highest energy cosmic rays will make use of both the Cherenkov and Air Fluorescence techniques. Surface Detectors (SD) and Fluorescence Detectors (FD) will have to operate in a desert-type environment during at least 15 years. In order to avoid dust deposition, due to electrostatics, and other practical inconveniences derived from biasing the cathode with a negative potential, the 15 000 PMTs of the FD will operate in the grounded cathode configuration. Despite the fact that the anodes will remain at high voltage with respect to ground, the DC anode current, which varies with background light, will have to be recorded. We have developed a current monitoring system based on a novel optocoupled feedback circuit that allows sensitive, linear, and temperature-independent measurements of the DC anode current. A distinctive feature of this circuit is that it uses optical coupling between passive components at high voltage and active components near the ground potential. This represents a substantial improvement over classical solutions which require the supply of power to an active circuit at high voltage. We report on the first tests performed with both active and passive biasing networks which demonstrate the validity of this new method
Electronic structure of superconducting graphite intercalate compounds: The role of the interlayer state
Although not an intrinsic superconductor, it has been long--known that, when
intercalated with certain dopants, graphite is capable of exhibiting
superconductivity. Of the family of graphite--based materials which are known
to superconduct, perhaps the most well--studied are the alkali metal--graphite
intercalation compounds (GIC) and, of these, the most easily fabricated is the
CK system which exhibits a transition temperature K. By increasing the alkali metal concentration (through high pressure
fabrication techniques), the transition temperature has been shown to increase
to as much as K in CNa. Lately, in an important recent
development, Weller \emph{et al.} have shown that, at ambient conditions, the
intercalated compounds \cyb and \cca exhibit superconductivity with transition
temperatures K and K respectively, in excess
of that presently reported for other graphite--based compounds. We explore the
architecture of the states near the Fermi level and identify characteristics of
the electronic band structure generic to GICs. As expected, we find that charge
transfer from the intercalant atoms to the graphene sheets results in the
occupation of the --bands. Yet, remarkably, in all those -- and only
those -- compounds that superconduct, we find that an interlayer state, which
is well separated from the carbon sheets, also becomes occupied. We show that
the energy of the interlayer band is controlled by a combination of its
occupancy and the separation between the carbon layers.Comment: 4 Figures. Please see accompanying experimental manuscript
"Superconductivity in the Intercalated Graphite Compounds C6Yb and C6Ca" by
Weller et a
Contribution to the understanding of tribological properties of graphite intercalation compounds with metal chloride
Intrinsic tribological properties of lamellar compounds are usually attributed to the presence of van der Waals gaps in their structure through which interlayer interactions are weak. The controlled variation of the distances and interactions between graphene layers by intercalation of electrophilic species in graphite is used in order to explore more deeply the friction reduction properties of low-dimensional compounds. Three graphite intercalation compounds with antimony pentachloride, iron trichloride and aluminium trichloride are studied. Their tribological properties are correlated to their structural parameters, and the interlayer interactions are deduced from ab initio bands structure calculations
Analysis of acoustic emission during the melting of embedded indium particles in an aluminum matrix: a study of plastic strain accommodation during phase transformation
Acoustic emission is used here to study melting and solidification of
embedded indium particles in the size range of 0.2 to 3 um in diameter and to
show that dislocation generation occurs in the aluminum matrix to accommodate a
2.5% volume change. The volume averaged acoustic energy produced by indium
particle melting is similar to that reported for bainite formation upon
continuous cooling. A mechanism of prismatic loop generation is proposed to
accommodate the volume change and an upper limit to the geometrically necessary
increase in dislocation density is calculated as 4.1 x 10^9 cm^-2 for the
Al-17In alloy. Thermomechanical processing is also used to change the size and
distribution of the indium particles within the aluminum matrix. Dislocation
generation with accompanied acoustic emission occurs when the melting indium
particles are associated with grain boundaries or upon solidification where the
solid-liquid interfaces act as free surfaces to facilitate dislocation
generation. Acoustic emission is not observed for indium particles that require
super heating and exhibit elevated melting temperatures. The acoustic emission
work corroborates previously proposed relaxation mechanisms from prior internal
friction studies and that the superheat observed for melting of these
micron-sized particles is a result of matrix constraint.Comment: Presented at "Atomistic Effects in Migrating Interphase Interfaces -
Recent Progress and Future Study" TMS 201
Photoperiod affects the phenotype of mitochondrial complex I mutants
Plant mutants for genes encoding subunits of mitochondrial Complex I (CI, NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase), the first enzyme of the respiratory chain, display various phenotypes depending on growth conditions. Here, we examined the impact of photoperiod, a major environmental factor controlling plant development, on two Arabidopsis thaliana CI mutants: a new insertion mutant interrupted in both ndufs8.1 and ndufs8.2 genes encoding the NDUFS8 subunit, and the previously characterized ndufs4 CI mutant. In long day (LD) condition, both ndufs8.1 and ndufs8.2 single mutants were indistinguishable from Col-0 at phenotypic and biochemical levels, whereas the ndufs8.1 ndufs8.2 double mutant was devoid of detectable holo-CI assembly/activity, showed higher AOX content/activity and displayed a growth-retardation phenotype similar to that of the ndufs4 mutant. Although growth was more affected in ndufs4 than ndufs8.1 ndufs8.2 under short day (SD) condition, both mutants displayed a similar impairment of growth acceleration after transfer to LD as compared to the WT. Untargeted and targeted metabolomics showed that overall metabolism was less responsive to the SD-to-LD transition in mutants than in the WT. The typical LD acclimation of carbon, nitrogen-assimilation and redox-related parameters was not observed in ndufs8.1 ndufs8. Similarly, NAD(H) content, that was higher in SD condition in both mutants than in Col-0, did not adjust under LD. We propose that altered redox homeostasis and NAD(H) content/redox state control the phenotype of Complex I mutants and photoperiod acclimation in Arabidopsis
Superconductivity in the Intercalated Graphite Compounds C6Yb and C6Ca
In this letter we report the discovery of superconductivity in the
isostructural graphite intercalation compounds C6Yb and C6Ca, with transition
temperatures of 6.5K and 11.5K respectively. A structural characterisation of
these compounds shows them to be hexagonal layered systems in the same class as
other graphite intercalates. If we assume that all the outer s-electrons are
transferred from the intercalant to the graphite sheets, then the charge
transfer in these compounds is comparable to other superconducting graphite
intercalants such as C8K 1,2 . However, the superconducting transition
temperatures of C6Yb and C6Ca are up to two orders of magnitude greater.
Interestingly, superconducting upper critical field studies and resistivity
measurements suggest that these compounds are significantly more isotropic than
pure graphite. This is unexpected as the effect of introducing the intercalant
is to move the graphite layer further apart.Comment: 2 Figures. Please see accompanying theoretical manuscript,
"Electronic Structure of the Superconducting Graphite Intercalates" by Csanyi
et al., cond-mat/050356
Multimodal Biomarkers That Predict the Presence of Gleason Pattern 4: Potential Impact for Active Surveillance
AbstractPurpose:Latent grade group ≥2 prostate cancer can impact the performance of active surveillance protocols. To date, molecular biomarkers for active surveillance have relied solely on RNA or protein. We trained and independently validated multimodal (mRNA abundance, DNA methylation, and/or DNA copy number) biomarkers that more accurately separate grade group 1 from grade group ≥2 cancers.Materials and Methods:Low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer patients were assigned to training (n=333) and validation (n=202) cohorts. We profiled the abundance of 342 mRNAs, 100 DNA copy number alteration loci, and 14 hypermethylation sites at 2 locations per tumor. Using the training cohort with cross-validation, we evaluated methods for training classifiers of pathological grade group ≥2 in centrally reviewed radical prostatectomies. We trained 2 distinct classifiers, PRONTO-e and PRONTO-m, and validated them in an independent radical prostatectomy cohort.Results:PRONTO-e comprises 353 mRNA and copy number alteration features. PRONTO-m includes 94 clinical, mRNAs, copy number alterations, and methylation features at 14 and 12 loci, respectively. In independent validation, PRONTO-e and PRONTO-m predicted grade group ≥2 with respective true-positive rates of 0.81 and 0.76, and false-positive rates of 0.43 and 0.26. Both classifiers were resistant to sampling error and identified more upgrading cases than a well-validated presurgical risk calculator, CAPRA (Cancer of the Prostate Risk Assessment; P < .001).Conclusions:Two grade group classifiers with superior accuracy were developed by incorporating RNA and DNA features and validated in an independent cohort. Upon further validation in biopsy samples, classifiers with these performance characteristics could refine selection of men for active surveillance, extending their treatment-free survival and intervals between surveillance.Active surveillance (AS) is recommended for men with low- and favorable intermediate–risk prostate cancer.1 Compared to AS for low-risk men, AS for intermediate-risk men would likely benefit from more intensive surveillance to stave off disease progression. Despite increased use of advanced imaging tools, risk calculators, and molecular biomarkers, a third or more of men initially classified as low risk actually have intermediate or higher risk, heralded by subsequent detection of occult Gleason pattern 4.2,3 Strategies to identify such men have limited accuracy. They include attention to traditional risk factors such as age, tumor size and extent, and PSA level, measured by tests such as digital rectal examination, multiparametric (mp) MRI, and biopsy and blood analyses. Despite its increasing use in prostate cancer risk assessment, expert prostate mpMRI is a limited resource with low (circa 59%) sensitivity for intermediate-risk cases.4 A biomarker that more accurately distinguishes between grade group (GG) 1 and GG ≥2 could be helpful in deintensifying AS for men with truly low-risk cancers.Several commercially available and guideline-approved tests use gene (mRNA or protein) expression levels in prostate cancer biopsies to detect adverse pathology (AP; ie, GG ≥3 or nonorgan-confined disease) in the subsequent prostatectomy. However, no existing molecular test has been adopted in current guidelines as standard of care to distinguish between GG1 and GG ≥2 cancers.1,5,6 Despite indications that such tests could be useful,6,7 uptake has been limited, perhaps because of low accuracy, which in turn may derive from limitations in the number and types of molecular features included in each test. Since cardinal molecular features of early prostate carcinogenesis include not only altered gene expression but also DNA methylation events and copy number alterations (CNAs),8-10 we hypothesized that tests combining these features could provide superior performance in separating low-grade (GG1) cancers from their higher-grade (GG ≥2) counterparts.The personalized risk stratification for patients with early prostate cancer (PRONTO) program is a pan-Canadian effort that aims to develop a GG classifier to stratify risk in prostate cancer and achieve technical and clinical validation in statistically powered cohorts. Here, we report the development of 2 candidate classifiers comprising different types of molecular features. These classifiers, developed and independently validated, achieve superior performance by integrating tumor mRNA abundance, DNA copy number, and/or DNA methylation profiles. We demonstrate that these classifiers could add value above and beyond routinely captured clinical data and are remarkably resistant to sampling error. We discuss how adoption of classifiers with these attributes has the potential to improve current AS approaches without increasing patient morbidity. By identifying men at increased risk of occult GG ≥2 cancer, surveillance biopsies could be taken earlier to confirm the presence and extent of Gleason pattern 4 cancer. By confirming GG1 cancers, such biomarkers could identify men for whom it would be safe to forgo MRI or increase the intervals between surveillance biopsies, reducing burdens on health care systems and patients
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How do things become strategic? ‘Strategifying’ corporate social responsibility
How do things become ‘strategic’? Despite the development of strategy-as-practice studies and the recognized institutional importance of strategy as a social practice, little is known about how strategy boundaries change within organizations. This article focuses on this gap by conceptualizing ‘strategifying’ – or making something strategic – as a type of institutional work that builds on the institution of strategy to change the boundaries of what is regarded as strategy within organizations. We empirically investigate how corporate social responsibility has been turned into strategy at a UK electricity company, EnergyCorp. Our findings reveal the practices that constitute three types of strategifying work – cognitive coupling, relational coupling and material coupling – and show how, together and over time, these types of work changed the boundaries of strategy so that corporate social responsibility became included in EnergyCorp’s official strategy, became explicitly attended to by strategists and corporate executives and became inscribed within strategy devices. By disambiguating the notions of strategifying and strategizing, our study introduces new perspectives for analysing the institutional implications of the practice of strategy
Homologous Recombination Is Stimulated by a Decrease in dUTPase in Arabidopsis
Deoxyuridine triphosphatase (dUTPase) enzyme is an essential enzyme that protects DNA against uracil incorporation. No organism can tolerate the absence of this activity. In this article, we show that dUTPase function is conserved between E. coli (Escherichia coli), yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and that it is essential in Arabidopsis as in both micro-organisms. Using a RNA interference strategy, plant lines were generated with a diminished dUTPase activity as compared to the wild-type. These plants are sensitive to 5-fluoro-uracil. As an indication of DNA damage, inactivation of dUTPase results in the induction of AtRAD51 and AtPARP2, which are involved in DNA repair. Nevertheless, RNAi/DUT1 constructs are compatible with a rad51 mutation. Using a TUNEL assay, DNA damage was observed in the RNAi/DUT1 plants. Finally, plants carrying a homologous recombination (HR) exclusive substrate transformed with the RNAi/DUT1 construct exhibit a seven times increase in homologous recombination events. Increased HR was only detected in the plants that were the most sensitive to 5-fluoro-uracils, thus establishing a link between uracil incorporation in the genomic DNA and HR. Our results show for the first time that genetic instability provoked by the presence of uracils in the DNA is poorly tolerated and that this base misincorporation globally stimulates HR in plants
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