2,273 research outputs found
Nuclear effects in Neutrino Nuclear Cross-sections
Nuclear effects in the quasielastic and inelastic scattering of
neutrinos(antineutrinos) from nuclear targets have been studied. The
calculations are done in the local density approximation which take into
account the effect of nucleon motion as well as renormalisation of weak
transition strengths in the nuclear medium. The inelastic reaction leading to
production of pions is calculated in a dominance model taking into
account the renormalization of properties in the nuclear medium.Comment: 4 pages,3 figures, Ninth International Workshop on Neutrino
Factories, Superbeams and Betabeams (NuFact07), August 6-11, 2007, Okayama
University, Okayama, Japa
Recording system for the solar neutron monitoring at Mt. Norikura
To monitor solar neutron events, a new recording system will be installed at Mt. Norikura Cosmic Ray Observatory. The recording system is composed of a pulse counter with clock and a microcomputer with minifloppy disk. The counter and the microcomputer are connected through the General Purpose Interface Bus line. The one minute total count of the neutron monitor is recorded on the minifloppy disk
Tachyon Vacuum in Cubic Superstring Field Theory
In this paper we give an exact analytic solution for tachyon condensation in
the modified (picture 0) cubic superstring field theory. We prove the absence
of cohomology and, crucially, reproduce the correct value for the D-brane
tension. The solution is surprising for two reasons: First, the existence of a
tachyon vacuum in this theory has not been definitively established in the
level expansion. Second, the solution {\it vanishes} in the GSO sector,
implying a ``tachyon vacuum'' solution exists even for a {\it BPS} D-brane.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figure
Concentration of vascular endothelial growth factor in the tumour tissue as a prognostic factor of soft tissue sarcomas
Previous studies have shown that the prognosis of patients who have tumours with high microvessel density (MVD) is worse than that of patients who have a lower density in a variety of cancers. In this study, we investigated the clinical relevance of neovascularity assessed by MVD and the concentration of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the tumour tissue of patients with soft tissue sarcoma in comparison with major clinicohistologic parameters by univariate and multivariate analysis. In 115 patients with soft tissue sarcoma, MVD was measured by counting vessels stained with factor VIII antibody. The concentration of VEGF in the tumour tissue was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. These parameters were then compared with disease outcome. The concentration of VEGF in the tumour tissue, but not MVD, was found to be correlated with disease outcome in patients with soft tissue, sarcoma. VEGF concentration in the tumour tissue showed a relationship with the clinical stage and histologic grade of the tumour. There was no significant difference in the levels of tissue VEGF concentration and MVD among soft tissue sarcomas classified according to histologic type. The level of tissue VEGF concentration in patients who had subsequent local recurrence and metastasis were significantly higher than the respective values in patients who did not have such disease outcome. No significant correlation existed between MVD and the concentration of VEGF in the tumour tissue. Univariate analysis showed that a high tissue VEGF concentration was associated with poor overall survival of the patient and a greater probability that local recurrence and metastasis had occurred. Multivariate analysis revealed that the tissue concentration of VEGF is an independent prognostic factor for the disease outcome of patients with soft tissue sarcoma. VEGF concentration in the tumour tissue, but not MVD, is an additional prognostic parameter for disease outcome in patients with soft tissue sarcoma, regardless of histologic type. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co
A perturbative analysis of tachyon condensation
Tachyon condensation in the open bosonic string is analyzed using a
perturbative expansion of the tachyon potential around the unstable D25-brane
vacuum. Using the leading terms in the tachyon potential, Pad\'e approximants
can apparently give the energy of the stable vacuum to arbitrarily good
accuracy. Level-truncation approximations up to level 10 for the coefficients
in the tachyon potential are extrapolated to higher levels and used to find
approximants for the full potential. At level 14 and above, the resulting
approximants give an energy less than -1 in units of the D25-brane tension, in
agreement with recent level-truncation results by Gaiotto and Rastelli. The
extrapolated energy continues to decrease below -1 until reaching a minimum
near level 26, after which the energy turns around and begins to approach -1
from below. Within the accuracy of this method, these results are completely
consistent with an energy which approaches -1 as the level of truncation is
taken to be arbitrarily large.Comment: 8 pages, 3 eps figures, Latex; v2: typo correcte
Spatiotemporal Analysis of the Molecular Interaction between PICK1 and PKC
PICK1 is a protein which was initially identified as a protein kinase Cα (αPKC) binding protein using the yeast two-hybrid system. In addition to αPKC, the PICK1 complex binds to and regulates various transmembrane proteins including receptors and transporters. However, it has not been clarified when and where PICK1 binds to αPKC. We examined the spatioÂtemporal interaction of PICK1 and PKC using live imaging techniques and showed that the activated αPKC binds to PICK1 and transports it to the plasma membrane. Although the membrane translocation of PICK1 requires the activation of αPKC, PICK1 is retained on the membrane even after PKC moves back to the cytosol. These results suggest that the interaction between αPKC and PICK1 is transient and may not be necessary for the regulation of receptors/transporters by PICK1 or by αPKC on the membrane
Toward Open-Closed String Theoretical Description of Rolling Tachyon
We consider how the time-dependent decay process of an unstable D-brane
should be described in the full (quantum) open-closed string theory. It is
argued that the system, starting from the unstable D-brane configuration, will
evolve in time into the time-independent open string tachyon vacuum
configuration which we assume to be finite, with the total energy conserved. As
a concrete realization of this idea, we construct a toy model describing the
open and closed string tachyons which admits such a time-dependent solution.
The structure of our model has some resemblance to that of open-closed string
field theory.Comment: 1+10 pages, 6 figures. v2: a reference adde
Tachyon Kink on non-BPS Dp-brane in the General Background
This paper is devoted to the study of the tachyon kink on the worldvolume of
a non-BPS Dp-brane that is embedded in general background, including NS-NS two
form B and also general Ramond-Ramond field. We will explicitly show that the
dynamics of the kink is described by the equations of motion that arrise from
the DBI and WZ action for D(p-1)-brane.Comment: 28 page
NASDA knowledge-based network planning system
One of the SODS (space operation and data system) sub-systems, NP (network planning) was the first expert system used by NASDA (national space development agency of Japan) for tracking and control of satellite. The major responsibilities of the NP system are: first, the allocation of network and satellite control resources and, second, the generation of the network operation plan data (NOP) used in automated control of the stations and control center facilities. Up to now, the first task of network resource scheduling was done by network operators. NP system automatically generates schedules using its knowledge base, which contains information on satellite orbits, station availability, which computer is dedicated to which satellite, and how many stations must be available for a particular satellite pass or a certain time period. The NP system is introduced
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