317 research outputs found
Order continuous extensions of positive compact operators on Banach lattices
Let and be Banach lattices. Let be a vector sublattice of and
be an order continuous positive compact (resp. weakly
compact) operators. We show that if is an ideal or an order dense
sublattice of , then has a norm preserving compact (resp. weakly
compact) positive extension to which is likewise order continuous on .
In particular, we prove that every compact positive orthomorphism on an order
dense sublattice of extends uniquely to a compact positive orthomorphism on
.Comment: 7 page
Colorectal cancer screening with fecal occult blood test: A 22-year cohort study.
The aim of the present study was to investigate the efficacy of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening with a three-tier fecal occult blood test (FOBT) in the Chinese population. The study was performed between 1987 and 2008 at the Beijing Military General Hospital, in a cohort of army service males and females aged >50 years. Between 1987 and 2005, a three-tier screening program, comprising guaiac-based FOBTs (gFOBTs), followed by immunochemical FOBTs for positive guaiac test samples and then colonoscopy for positive immunochemical test subjects, was performed annually. The cohort was followed up until 2008. The cohort included 5,104 subjects, of which, 3,863 subjects participated in screening (screening group) and 1,241 did not (non-screening group). The two groups did not differ in age, gender or other major risk factors for colon cancer. Overall, 36 CRCs occurred in the screening group and 21 in the non-screening group. Compared with the non-screening group, the relative risk for the incidence and mortality of CRC was 0.51 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.30-0.87] and 0.36 (95% CI, 0.18-0.71), respectively, in the screening group. The general sensitivity of this three-tier FOBT was 80.6% (95% CI, 65.3-91.1). Thus, annual screening using the three-tier FOBT program may reduce the CRC incidence and mortality rate
Effects of vertical shaft geometry on natural ventilation in urban road tunnel fires
A set of burning experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of vertical shaft geometry on natural ventilation in urban road tunnel fires. Results show that using vertical shafts to discharge smoke leads to a boundary layer separation near the right-angle connection of the shaft and the tunnel ceiling. In a low shaft, the turbulent-boundary-layer separation phenomenon causes relatively large-scale vortexes and restricts smoke from being exhausted, resulting in a negative effect on natural ventilation. Replacing the right-angle connection with the bevel-angle connection was proposed to split one separation point into two separation points, to attenuate the negative effect. The detailed characteristics of the separation phenomenon were analysed and the proposition was verified by Large Eddy Simulation. Results show that there are no relatively large-scale vortexes in shafts with bevel-angle connections, resulting in improved natural ventilation effectiveness. For lower shafts, the advantage of using the bevel-angle connection is more significant, and for shafts of the same height, the mass flow rate of smoke discharged by shafts with the bevel-angle connection increases up to 1.5 times of that by shafts with the right-angle connection. For relatively high shafts, it is about 1.2 times
Myofilament Ca2+ desensitization mediates positive lusitropic effect of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in left ventricular myocytes from murine hypertensive heart
AbstractNeuronal nitric oxide synthase (NOS1 or nNOS) exerts negative inotropic and positive lusitropic effects through Ca2+ handling processes in cardiac myocytes from healthy hearts. However, underlying mechanisms of NOS1 in diseased hearts remain unclear. The present study aims to investigate this question in angiotensin II (Ang II)-induced hypertensive rat hearts (HP). Our results showed that the systolic function of left ventricle (LV) was reduced and diastolic function was unaltered (echocardiographic assessment) in HP compared to those in shams. In isolated LV myocytes, contraction was unchanged but peak [Ca2+]i transient was increased in HP. Concomitantly, relaxation and time constant of [Ca2+]i decay (tau) were faster and the phosphorylated fraction of phospholamban (PLN-Ser16/PLN) was greater. NOS1 protein expression and activity were increased in LV myocyte homogenates from HP. Surprisingly, inhibition of NOS1 did not affect contraction but reduced peak [Ca2+]i transient; prevented faster relaxation without affecting the tau of [Ca2+]i transient or PLN-Ser16/PLN in HP, suggesting myofilament Ca2+ desensitization by NOS1. Indeed, relaxation phase of the sarcomere length–[Ca2+]i relationship of LV myocytes shifted to the right and increased [Ca2+]i for 50% of sarcomere shortening (EC50) in HP. Phosphorylations of cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C282 and cMyBP-C273) were increased and cardiac troponin I (cTnI23/24) was reduced in HP. Importantly, NOS1 or PKG inhibition reduced cMyBP-C273 and cTnI23/24 and reversed myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity. These results reveal that NOS1 is up-regulated in LV myocytes from HP and exerts positive lusitropic effect by modulating myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity through phosphorylation of key regulators in sarcomere
Near-infrared and mid-infrared semiconductor broadband light emitters
Semiconductor broadband light emitters have emerged as ideal and vital light sources for a range of biomedical sensing/imaging applications, especially for optical coherence tomography systems. Although near-infrared broadband light emitters have found increasingly wide utilization in these imaging applications, the requirement to simultaneously achieve both a high spectral bandwidth and output power is still challenging for such devices. Owing to the relatively weak amplified spontaneous emission, as a consequence of the very short non-radiative carrier lifetime of the inter-subband transitions in quantum cascade structures, it is even more challenging to obtain desirable mid-infrared broadband light emitters. There have been great efforts in the past 20 years to pursue high-efficiency broadband optical gain and very low reflectivity in waveguide structures, which are two key factors determining the performance of broadband light emitters. Here we describe the realization of a high continuous wave light power of >20 mW and broadband width of >130 nm with near-infrared broadband light emitters and the first mid-infrared broadband light emitters operating under continuous wave mode at room temperature by employing a modulation p-doped InGaAs/GaAs quantum dot active region with a ‘J’-shape ridge waveguide structure and a quantum cascade active region with a dual-end analogous monolithic integrated tapered waveguide structure, respectively. This work is of great importance to improve the performance of existing near-infrared optical coherence tomography systems and describes a major advance toward reliable and cost-effective mid-infrared imaging and sensing systems, which do not presently exist due to the lack of appropriate low-coherence mid-infrared semiconductor broadband light sources
Superconductivity emerged from density-wave order in a kagome bad metal
Unconventional superconductivity (USC) in a highly correlated kagome system
has been theoretically proposed for years, yet the experimental realization is
hard to achieve. The recently discovered vanadium-based kagome materials, which
exhibit both superconductivity and charge density wave (CDW) orders, are
nonmagnetic and weakly correlated, thus unlikely host USC as theories proposed.
Here we report the discovery of a chromium-based kagome bad metal,
CsCrSb, which is contrastingly characterised by significant electron
correlations and frustrated magnetism. Successive phase transitions at 54
K with stripe-like structural modulations are observed, probably
associated with CDW and antiferromagnetic spin-density-wave (SDW) orderings.
Under moderately high pressures of 4-8 GPa, these density-wave orders are
suppressed and, remarkably, superconductivity emerges with a maximum
of 6.4 K. A quantum critical point at 4
GPa is revealed, by which non-Fermi-liquid behaviours show up, reminiscent of
USC in iron-based superconductors. The electronic structure calculations
indicate that the electron filling is close to the characteristic flat bands of
the kagome lattice. Our work offers an unprecedented platform for investigating
the mechanism of USC in a correlated kagome system.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
A simulation study on the measurement of D0-D0bar mixing parameter y at BES-III
We established a method on measuring the \dzdzb mixing parameter for
BESIII experiment at the BEPCII collider. In this method, the doubly
tagged events, with one decays to
CP-eigenstates and the other decays semileptonically, are used to
reconstruct the signals. Since this analysis requires good separation,
a likelihood approach, which combines the , time of flight and the
electromagnetic shower detectors information, is used for particle
identification. We estimate the sensitivity of the measurement of to be
0.007 based on a fully simulated MC sample.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
CHES: a space-borne astrometric mission for the detection of habitable planets of the nearby solar-type stars
The Closeby Habitable Exoplanet Survey (CHES) mission is proposed to discover
habitable-zone Earth-like planets of the nearby solar-type stars ( away from our solar system) via micro-arcsecond relative
astrometry. The major scientific objectives of CHES are: to search for Earth
Twins or terrestrial planets in habitable zones orbiting 100 FGK nearby stars;
further to conduct a comprehensive survey and extensively characterize the
nearby planetary systems. The primary payload is a high-quality,
low-distortion, high-stability telescope. The optical subsystem is a coaxial
three-mirror anastigmat (TMA) with a -aperture, field of view and
working waveband. The camera focal plane is composed of 81 MOSAIC scientific
CMOS detectors each with pixels. The
heterodyne laser interferometric calibration technology is employed to ensure
micro-arcsecond level (1 as) relative astrometry precision to meet the
requirements for detection of Earth-like planets. CHES satellite operates at
the Sun-Earth L2 point and observes the entire target stars for 5 years. CHES
will offer the first direct measurements of true masses and inclinations of
Earth Twins and super-Earths orbiting our neighbor stars based on
micro-arcsecond astrometry from space. This will definitely enhance our
understanding of the formation of diverse nearby planetary systems and the
emergence of other worlds for solar-type stars, and finally to reflect the
evolution of our own solar system.Comment: 39 pages, 37 figures, Invited Review, accepted to Research in
Astronomy and Astrophysic
- …