111 research outputs found

    Effect of noise in open chaotic billiards

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    We investigate the effect of white-noise perturbations on chaotic trajectories in open billiards. We focus on the temporal decay of the survival probability for generic mixed-phase-space billiards. The survival probability has a total of five different decay regimes that prevail for different intermediate times. We combine new calculations and recent results on noise perturbed Hamiltonian systems to characterize the origin of these regimes, and to compute how the parameters scale with noise intensity and billiard openness. Numerical simulations in the annular billiard support and illustrate our results.Comment: To appear in "Chaos" special issue: "Statistical Mechanics and Billiard-Type Dynamical Systems"; 9 pages, 5 figure

    K- and L-shell theoretical fluorescence yields for the Fe isonuclear sequence

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    Funding Information: This research was funded in part by FCT (Portugal) under research center grant UID/FIS/04559/2020 (LIBPhys). This work was also funded through the project PTDC/FIS-AQM/31969/2017, “Ultra-high-accuracy X-ray spectroscopy of transition metal oxides and rare earths”. F.G. acknowledges support from FCT, Portugal through contract UI/BD/151000/2021 . J. M and J.P.S acknowledge the support of EMPIR, Germany , under Contract No. 20FUN04 PrimA-LTD. The EMPIR initiative is co-funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the EMPIR, Germany participating States. Part of this work has been carried out under the High Performance Computing Chair - a R&D infrastructure (based at the University of Évora; PI: M. Avillez), endorsed by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), and involving a consortium of higher education institutions (University of Algarve, University of Évora, NOVA University Lisbon, and University of Porto), research centres (CIAC, CIDEHUS, CHRC), enterprises (HPE, ANIET, ASSIMAGRA, Cluster Portugal Mineral Resources, DECSIS, FastCompChem, GeoSense, GEOtek, Health Tech, Starkdata), and public/private organizations (Alentejo Tourism-ERT, KIPT Colab). Funding Information: This research was funded in part by FCT (Portugal) under research center grant UID/FIS/04559/2020 (LIBPhys). This work was also funded through the project PTDC/FIS-AQM/31969/2017, “Ultra-high-accuracy X-ray spectroscopy of transition metal oxides and rare earths”. F.G. acknowledges support from FCT, Portugal through contract UI/BD/151000/2021. J. M and J.P.S acknowledge the support of EMPIR, Germany, under Contract No. 20FUN04 PrimA-LTD. The EMPIR initiative is co-funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the EMPIR, Germany participating States. Part of this work has been carried out under the High Performance Computing Chair - a R&D infrastructure (based at the University of Évora; PI: M. Avillez), endorsed by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), and involving a consortium of higher education institutions (University of Algarve, University of Évora, NOVA University Lisbon, and University of Porto), research centres (CIAC, CIDEHUS, CHRC), enterprises (HPE, ANIET, ASSIMAGRA, Cluster Portugal Mineral Resources, DECSIS, FastCompChem, GeoSense, GEOtek, Health Tech, Starkdata), and public/private organizations (Alentejo Tourism-ERT, KIPT Colab). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s)In this work, we present K- and L- shell fluorescence yield values of the full isonuclear sequence of Fe ions, using a state-of-the-art multiconfiguration Dirac–Fock approach. These results may be of importance for spectral fitting and plasma modeling, both in laboratory and astrophysical studies, where Fe is an important benchmark element. The K-shell fluorescence yields were found to be very similar up to the removal of 14 electrons.publishersversionpublishe

    Urinary porphyrin excretion in normal children and adolescentes

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    Background—Urinary porphyrins are diagnostic of various metabolic disorders and xenobiotic exposures, but comprehensive normative data for urinary porphyrin concentrations in children are currently unavailable. Methods—Subjects were participants in a prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial of dental materials safety, 8 to 12 y at inception, who were followed longitudinally for 7 y after baseline with an extensive battery of neurobehavioral, neurological, renal function and urinary porphyrin assessments. Porphyrins were quantified by HPLC. Linear regression analyses were used to measure associations of porphyrin levels with age and gender. Results—Mean concentrations, 95% confidence intervals, and 10th 50th, and 90th percentiles for all 5 typically excreted urinary porphyrins are presented by year of age and by gender. Unadjusted urinary concentrations (μg/l) of all 5 porphyrins remained relatively constant throughout the age range of 8–18 y for both males and females. In contrast, creatinine-adjusted urinary porphyrin concentrations (μg/g) declined significantly throughout this age range in both genders. Boys had significantly higher pentacarboxyl- and copro- porphyrin levels compared with girls both before and after creatinine adjustment. Conclusions—Normative longitudinal data provided herein may facilitate the clinical assessment of pediatric metabolic disorders and may be of particular relevance in evaluating porphyrin changes as a biological indicator of disease or xenobiotic exposures among children and adolescents.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The Contribution of Dental Amalgam to Urinary Mercury Excretion in Children

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    BACKGROUND: Urinary mercury concentrations are widely used as a measure of mercury exposure from dental amalgam fillings. No studies have evaluated the relationship of these measures in a longitudinal context in children. OBJECTIVE: We evaluated urinary mercury in children 8–18 years of age in relation to number of amalgam surfaces and time since placement over a 7-year course of amalgam treatment. METHODS: Five hundred seven children, 8–10 years of age at baseline, participated in a clinical trial to evaluate the neurobehavioral effects of dental amalgam in children. Subjects were randomized to either dental amalgam or resin composite treatments. Urinary mercury and creatinine concentrations were measured at baseline and annually on all participants. RESULTS: Treatment groups were comparable in baseline urinary mercury concentration (~ 1.5 μg/L). Mean urinary mercury concentrations in the amalgam group increased to a peak of ~ 3.2 μg/L at year 2 and then declined to baseline levels by year 7 of follow-up. There was a strong, positive association between urinary mercury and both number of amalgam surfaces and time since placement. Girls had significantly higher mean urinary mercury concentrations than boys throughout the course of amalgam treatment. There were no differences by race in urinary mercury concentration associated with amalgam exposure. CONCLUSIONS: Urinary mercury concentrations are highly correlated with both number of amalgam fillings and time since placement in children. Girls excrete significantly higher concentrations of mercury in the urine than boys with comparable treatment, suggesting possible sex-related differences in mercury handling and susceptibility to mercury toxicity.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Biomarkers of kidney integrity in children and adolescents with dental amalgam mercury exposure: findings from the casa pia children’s amalgam trial.

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    Mercury is toxic to the kidney, and dental amalgam is a source of mercury exposure. Few studies have evaluated the effects of dental amalgam on kidney function in a longitudinal context in children. Here, we evaluated urinary concentrations of glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) α and π as biomarkers of renal proximal and distal tubular integrity, respectively, and albumin as a biomarker of glomerular integrity in children and adolescents 8-18 years of age over a 7 year course of dental amalgam treatment. Five hundred seven children, 8-12 years of age at baseline, participated in a clinical trial to evaluate the neurobehavioral and renal effects of dental amalgam in children. Subjects were randomized to either dental amalgam or resin composite treatments. Urinary GSTs α and π, albumin and creatinine concentrations were measured at baseline and annually on all subjects. Results were evaluated using linear regression analysis. GST-α concentrations were similar between treatment groups and in each sex and race (white vs nonwhite) group in each follow-up year. GST-π levels tended upward over the course of follow-up by 4- to 6-fold. This increase was seen in all groups irrespective of treatment, race or gender. Females had GST-π levels approximately twice those of males at all ages. Albumin concentrations were constant throughout the follow-up period and did not differ by treatment, although females had 39% higher albumin levels than males. Additionally, we found no significant effects of amalgam treatment on the proportion of children with microalbuminuria (>30 mg/g creatinine). These findings are relevant within the context of children’s health risk assessment as relates to the safety of mercury exposure from dental amalgam on kidney function. These data also provide normative values for sensitive indices of renal functional integrity that may serve in the evaluation of children and adolescents with renal disorders.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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