1,012 research outputs found
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PRISMS: remote high resolution in situ multispectral imaging of wall paintings
The non-invasive monitoring and examination of wall paintings in grotto sites, tombs and buildings is particularly important since these paintings are often extremely vulnerable. Traditionally, inspection of wall paintings at high resolution (i.e. sub-millimetre resolution) requires either scaffolding or some heavy and cumbersome mechanical structure to lift a person or camera to the upper parts of a wall or ceiling. We have developed a proto-type portable remote imaging multi-spectral camera that operates at ground level for in situ high-resolution colour and spectral imaging of wall paintings. We present here the latest developments for the instrument and examples of how the instrument can be used for diagnosis of wall paintings
PRISMS: a portable multispectral imaging system for remote in situ examination of wall paintings
We present a proto-type portable remote multispectral imaging system, PRISMS (Portable Remote Imaging System for Multispectral Scanning), that is light-weight, flexible and without any cumbersome mechanical structure for in situ high resolution colour and spectral imaging of large and inaccessible paintings such as wall paintings. This is the first instrument to be able to image paintings at inaccessible heights in situ from ground level to produce not only high resolution colour images but also multispectral images
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Pigment identification with optical coherence tomography and multispectral imaging
We describe a new method for non-invasive pigment identification by combining the spectral reflectance in the visible spectrum with near infrared OCT cross-section images of the subsurface layer structure
Generalized susceptibility of quasi-one dimensional system with periodic potential: model for the organic superconductor (TMTSF)ClO
The nesting vector and the magnetic susceptibility of the
quasi-one-dimensional system having imperfectly nested Fermi surface are
studied analytically and numerically. The magnetic susceptibility has the
plateau-like maximum in ``\textit{sweptback}'' region in the momentum space,
which is surrounded by ( is the
Fermi wave number, , and , and
are given in this paper). The best nesting vector, at which
the susceptibility has the absolute maximum at T=0, is
obtained near but not at the inflection point, . The effect of the periodic potential on the
susceptibility is studied, which is important for the successive transitions of
the field-induced spin density wave in (TMTSF)ClO. We obtain that the
sweptback region (surrounded by , and
when ) becomes small as increases and it shrinks to
for , where gives the degree of imperfect
nesting of the Fermi surface, i.e. the second harmonics of the warping in the
Fermi surface. The occurrence of the sign reversal of the Hall coefficient in
the field-induced spin density wave states is discussed to be possible only
when , where is the amplitude of the fourth harmonics of
the warping in the Fermi surface. This gives the novel limitation for the
magnitude of
The cetaceans of Guinea, a first check-list of documented species. Scientific Committee document SC/58/O15, International Whaling Commission, May-June 2006, St. Kitts
A CMS workshop on West African Cetacea (Conakry, May 2000), called for i.a. âcarrying out .. inventory of cetacean species; collection, treatment and compilation of data for each state.â The present paper is a preliminary faunal checklist of cetaceans occurring in Guineaâs EEZ. Information was gleaned from strandings, bycatches, scientific and opportunistic sightings and a literature review. Ten species are included for which supporting voucher material and data were available for examination. These are, three baleen whales: Balaenoptera brydei, Balaenoptera acutorostrata and Megaptera novaeangliae; and seven species of odontocetes: Kogia breviceps, Tursiops truncatus, Sousa teuszii, Stenella frontalis, Delphinus delphis, Steno bredanensis and Globicephala macrorhynchus. Another two species, Physeter macrocephalus and Stenella attenuate were sighted off Guinea but no photographic evidence was obtained. The current account is thought to reflect an incomplete picture of Guineaâs cetacean biodiversity. Future surveys are expected to update and investigate spatial and temporal distribution patterns for each species along Guineaâs coast. A few bycatches landed by artisanal fishers were utilised locally, but there are no signs of any substantial captures. Nonetheless, monitoring should be continued. The set-up of a national reference collection and database is recommended. The population identities of the encountered Atlantic humpback dolphin, minke whale and humpback whale are of particular interest
Freely falling 2-surfaces and the quasi-local energy
We derive an expression for effective gravitational mass for any closed
spacelike 2-surface. This effective gravitational energy is defined directly
through the geometrical quantity of the freely falling 2-surface and thus is
well adapted to intuitive expectation that the gravitational mass should be
determined by the motion of test body moving freely in gravitational field. We
find that this effective gravitational mass has reasonable positive value for a
small sphere in the non-vacuum space-times and can be negative for vacuum case.
Further, this effective gravitational energy is compared with the quasi-local
energy based on the formalism of the General Relativity. Although some
gauge freedoms exist, analytic expressions of the quasi-local energy for vacuum
cases are same as the effective gravitational mass. Especially, we see that the
contribution from the cosmological constant is the same in general cases.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, REVTeX. Estimation of the effective mass of
small spheres in non-vaccum spacetime and Schwarzschild spacetime are added.
The negativity of the latter is discusse
Translocation of Crohn's disease Escherichia coli across M-cells: contrasting effects of soluble plant fibres and emulsifiers
Background Crohns disease is common in developed nations where the typical diet is low in fibre and high in processed food. Primary lesions overlie Peyers patches and colonic lymphoid follicles where bacterial invasion through M-cells occurs. We have assessed the effect of soluble non-starch polysaccharide (NSP) and food emulsifiers on translocation of Escherichia coli across M-cells. Methods To assess effects of soluble plant fibres and food emulsifiers on translocation of mucosa-associated E coli isolates from Crohns disease patients and from non-Crohns controls, we used M-cell monolayers, generated by co-culture of Caco2-cl1 and Raji B cells, and human Peyers patches mounted in Ussing chambers. Results E coli translocation increased across M-cells compared to parent Caco2-cl1 monocultures; 15.8-fold (IQR 6.2-32.0) for Crohns disease E coli (N=8) and 6.7-fold (IQR 3.7-21.0) for control isolates (N=5). Electronmicroscopy confirmed E coli within M-cells. Plantain and broccoli NSP markedly reduced E coli translocation across M-cells at 5 mg/ml (range 45.3-82.6% inhibition, pandlt;0.01); apple and leek NSP had no significant effect. Polysorbate-80, 0.01% vol/vol, increased E coli translocation through Caco2-cl1 monolayers 59-fold (pandlt;0.05) and, at higher concentrations, increased translocation across M-cells. Similarly, E coli translocation across human Peyers patches was reduced 45+/-7% by soluble plantain NSP (5 mg/ml) and increased 2-fold by polysorbate-80 (0.1% vol/vol). Conclusions Translocation of E coli across M-cells is reduced by soluble plant fibres, particularly plantain and broccoli, but increased by the emulsifier Polysorbate-80. These effects occur at relevant concentrations and may contribute to the impact of dietary factors on Crohns disease pathogenesis
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