16,279 research outputs found
Environmental Measurements Session summaries
Emphasis was placed on data from payloads flown on the subject flights including results from the Induced Environment Contamination monitor (IECM). Brief summaries of the vibroacoustics, loads, electromagnetic and thermal aspects of the environment, as derived from Shuttle system measurements, were presented primarily to indicate where the environment was different than observed and, therefore, where specification changes may be forthcoming. In addition, brief summaries of two somewhat unexpected effects, the vehicle glow and interaction between the low Earth environment and Shuttle payload by materials were presented as an aid in interpreting other environmental data. Papers for each payload/experiment involved in Shuttle flights were presented essentially in flight related chronological order. A significant portion of time was allocated for presentation of IECM data since this payload was flown on STS-2, STS-3, and STS-4 and, therefore, represents the largest data base relative to the contamination environment. Summaries of papers are presented
Report of the infrared, ultraviolet and space plasma panels
The status of the payload bay and the needs of infrared, ultraviolet and space plasma experiments were discussed. Those measurements important in each area were reviewed. Issues of concern and how these environmental conditions might impact experiments were considered. Several common issues were revealed, and recommendations were made
The Shuttle Environment Workshop, executive summary and workshop procedures
One of the main experimental monitors used to determine the environment in the payload bay was the Induced Environment Contamination Monitor. This package of instruments has made environmental measurements during STS flights with a high degree of success. This has shown that the shuttle environment is relatively free of contaminants, except for special instances of increased abundance of methane, water vapor and particulates. Results of these measurements are rapidly becoming more available. In establishing the Shuttle Environment Workshop, the findings were shared with scientific experimenters, users and other individuals who need to know what the Shuttle is like and what experimenters may expect in the payload bay. The Workshop was centered around results obtained from the environmental measurements made on the Shuttle. The program agenda for the workshop is given. The procedures and flow of communications for the workshop are indicated
Future outlook and comments
The events of the workshop panel sessions are summarized and a synopsis of the future of the shuttle and the shuttle environment is given. Comments and projections in a number of areas addressed include: environmental measurements, contamination effects, orbiter constraints on deployable payloads, documentation and environmental information, ultraviolet experiments, infrared experiments, plasma experiments, and shuttle lidar
The Shuttle Environment Workshop
Results of shuttle environmental measurement programs were presented. The implications for plasma, infrared and ultraviolet experiments were discussed. The prelaunch environmental conditions, results of key environmental measurements made during the flights of STS 1, 2, 3, 4, and postlanding environmental conditions were covered
Two-photon transport through a waveguide coupling to a whispering gallery resonator containing an atom and photon-blockade effect
We investigate the two-photon transport through a waveguide side-coupling to
a whispering-gallery-atom system. Using the Lehmann-Symanzik-Zimmermann (LSZ)
reduction approach, we present the general formula for the two-photon processes
including the two-photon scattering matrices, the wavefunctions and the second
order correlation functions of the out-going photons. Based on the exact
results of the second order correlation functions, we analyze the quantum
statistics behaviors of the out-going photons for two different cases: (a) the
ideal case without the inter-modal coupling in the whispering gallery
resonator; (b) the case in the presence of the inter-modal coupling which leads
to more complex nonlinear behavior. In the ideal case, we show that the system
consists of two independent scattering pathways, a free pathway by a cavity
mode without atomic excitation, and a "Jaynes-Cummings" pathway described by
the Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian of a single-mode cavity coupling to an atom.
The free pathway does not contribution to correlated two-photon processes. In
the presence of intermodal mixing, the system no longer exhibit a free resonant
pathway. Instead, both the single-photon and the two photon transport
properties depend on the position of the atom. Thus, in the presence of
intermodal mixing one can in fact tune the photon correlation properties by
changing the position of the atom. Our formalism can be used to treat resonator
and cavity dissipation as well.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Overview of the 2005 cross-language image retrieval track (ImageCLEF)
The purpose of this paper is to outline efforts from the 2005 CLEF crosslanguage image retrieval campaign (ImageCLEF). The aim of this CLEF track is to explore
the use of both text and content-based retrieval methods for cross-language image retrieval. Four tasks were offered in the ImageCLEF track: a ad-hoc retrieval from an historic photographic collection, ad-hoc retrieval from a medical collection, an automatic image annotation task, and a user-centered (interactive) evaluation task that is explained in the iCLEF summary. 24 research groups from a variety of backgrounds and nationalities (14 countries) participated in ImageCLEF. In this paper we describe the ImageCLEF tasks, submissions from participating groups and summarise the main fndings
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Nasal administration of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65) peptides induces Th2 responses and prevents murine insulin-dependent diabetes.
We previously demonstrated that a spontaneous Th1 response against glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65) arises in NOD mice at four weeks in age and subsequently T cell autoimmunity spreads both intramolecularly and intermolecularly. Induction of passive tolerance to GAD65, through inactivation of reactive T cells before the onset of autoimmunity, prevented determinant spreading and the development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Here, we examined whether an alternative strategy, designed to induce active tolerance via the engagement of Th2 immune responses to GAD65, before the spontaneous onset of autoimmunity, could inhibit the cascade of Th1 responses that lead to IDDM. We observed that a single intranasal administration of GAD65 peptides to 2-3-wk-old NOD mice induced high levels of IgG1 antibodies to GAD65. GAD65 peptide treated mice displayed greatly reduced IFN gamma responses and increased IL-5 responses to GAD65, confirming the diversion of the spontaneous GAD65 Th1 response toward a Th2 phenotype. Consistent with the induction of an active tolerance mechanism, splenic CD4+ (but not CD8+) T cells from GAD65 peptide-treated mice, inhibited the adoptive transfer of IDDM to NOD-scid/scid mice. This active mechanism not only inhibited the development of proliferative T cell responses to GAD65, it also limited the expansion of autoreactive T cell responses to other beta cell antigens (i.e., determinant spreading). Finally, GAD65 peptide treatment reduced insulitis and long-term IDDM incidence. Collectively, these data suggest that the nasal administration of GAD65 peptides induces a Th2 cell response that inhibits the spontaneous development of autoreactive Th1 responses and the progression of beta cell autoimmunity in NOD mice
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