10,001 research outputs found

    Error Voltage Components in Quantitative Voltage Contrast Measurement Systems

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    This paper presents the results of computer simulation studies into the respective contributions of the potential barrier, the off-normal incidence injection of secondary electrons (SEs) into the retarding field and analyser geometry on Types I and II local field error voltages for a practical 20 mm wide planar retarding field energy analyser. Results show that the error voltage component due to the off-normal incidence injection effect of SEs into the retarding field dominates the Type I local field error. For type II LFE, the error voltage component due to analyser geometry effect is the higher contributing factor. The presence of a neighbouring electrode voltage tends to draw SEs away from the central axis of the energy analyser, thus causing the electron trajectories to be more sensitive to the influence of the analyser geometry

    Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins: Implications in Neurological Diseases

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    Heterogenous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) are a complex and functionally diverse family of RNA binding proteins with multifarious roles. They are involved, directly or indirectly, in alternative splicing, transcriptional and translational regulation, stress granule formation, cell cycle regulation, and axonal transport. It is unsurprising, given their heavy involvement in maintaining functional integrity of the cell, that their dysfunction has neurological implications. However, compared to their more established roles in cancer, the evidence of hnRNP implication in neurological diseases is still in its infancy. This review aims to consolidate the evidences for hnRNP involvement in neurological diseases, with a focus on spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), Alzheimer's disease (AD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), multiple sclerosis (MS), congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS), and fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS). Understanding more about hnRNP involvement in neurological diseases can further elucidate the pathomechanisms involved in these diseases and perhaps guide future therapeutic advances

    The NASA Spitzer Space Telescope

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    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Spitzer Space Telescope (formerly the Space Infrared Telescope Facility) is the fourth and final facility in the Great Observatories Program, joining Hubble Space Telescope (1990), the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (1991–2000), and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (1999). Spitzer, with a sensitivity that is almost three orders of magnitude greater than that of any previous ground-based and space-based infrared observatory, is expected to revolutionize our understanding of the creation of the universe, the formation and evolution of primitive galaxies, the origin of stars and planets, and the chemical evolution of the universe. This review presents a brief overview of the scientific objectives and history of infrared astronomy. We discuss Spitzer's expected role in infrared astronomy for the new millennium. We describe pertinent details of the design, construction, launch, in-orbit checkout, and operations of the observatory and summarize some science highlights from the first two and a half years of Spitzer operations. More information about Spitzer can be found at http://spitzer.caltech.edu/

    Formation of Primordial Protostars

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    The evolution of collapsing metal free protostellar clouds is investigated for various masses and initial conditions. We perform hydrodynamical calculations for spherically symmetric clouds taking account of radiative transfer of the molecular hydrogen lines and the continuum, as well as of chemistry of the molecular hydrogen. The collapse is found to proceed almost self-similarly like Larson-Penston similarity solution. In the course of the collapse, efficient three-body processes transform atomic hydrogen in an inner region of \sim 1 M_{\sun} entirely into molecular form. However, hydrogen in the outer part remains totally atomic although there is an intervening transitional layer of several solar masses, where hydrogen is in partially molecular form. No opaque transient core is formed although clouds become optically thick to H2_{2} collision-induced absorption continuum, since H2_{2} dissociation follows successively. When the central part of the cloud reaches stellar densities (102gcm3\sim 10^{-2} {\rm g cm^{-3}}), a very small hydrostatic core (\sim 5 \times 10^{-3} M_{\sun}) is formed and subsequently grows in mass as the ambient gas accretes onto it. The mass accretion rate is estimated to be 3.7 \times 10^{-2} M_{\sun} {\rm yr^{-1}} (M_{\ast}/M_{\sun})^{-0.37}, where MM_{\ast} is instantaneous mass of the central core, by using a similarity solution which reproduces the evolution of the cloud before the core formation.Comment: 20 pages, 5 Postscript figures, uses AAS LaTe

    Linking and causality in globally hyperbolic spacetimes

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    The linking number lklk is defined if link components are zero homologous. Our affine linking invariant alkalk generalizes lklk to the case of linked submanifolds with arbitrary homology classes. We apply alkalk to the study of causality in Lorentz manifolds. Let MmM^m be a spacelike Cauchy surface in a globally hyperbolic spacetime (Xm+1,g)(X^{m+1}, g). The spherical cotangent bundle STMST^*M is identified with the space NN of all null geodesics in (X,g).(X,g). Hence the set of null geodesics passing through a point xXx\in X gives an embedded (m1)(m-1)-sphere SxS_x in N=STMN=ST^*M called the sky of x.x. Low observed that if the link (Sx,Sy)(S_x, S_y) is nontrivial, then x,yXx,y\in X are causally related. This motivated the problem (communicated by Penrose) on the Arnold's 1998 problem list to apply link theory to the study of causality. The spheres SxS_x are isotopic to fibers of (STM)2m1Mm.(ST^*M)^{2m-1}\to M^m. They are nonzero homologous and lk(Sx,Sy)lk(S_x,S_y) is undefined when MM is closed, while alk(Sx,Sy)alk(S_x, S_y) is well defined. Moreover, alk(Sx,Sy)Zalk(S_x, S_y)\in Z if MM is not an odd-dimensional rational homology sphere. We give a formula for the increment of \alk under passages through Arnold dangerous tangencies. If (X,g)(X,g) is such that alkalk takes values in Z\Z and gg is conformal to gg' having all the timelike sectional curvatures nonnegative, then x,yXx, y\in X are causally related if and only if alk(Sx,Sy)0alk(S_x,S_y)\neq 0. We show that x,yx,y in nonrefocussing (X,g)(X, g) are causally unrelated iff (Sx,Sy)(S_x, S_y) can be deformed to a pair of Sm1S^{m-1}-fibers of STMMST^*M\to M by an isotopy through skies. Low showed that if (\ss, g) is refocussing, then MM is compact. We show that the universal cover of MM is also compact.Comment: We added: Theorem 11.5 saying that a Cauchy surface in a refocussing space time has finite pi_1; changed Theorem 7.5 to be in terms of conformal classes of Lorentz metrics and did a few more changes. 45 pages, 3 figures. A part of the paper (several results of sections 4,5,6,9,10) is an extension and development of our work math.GT/0207219 in the context of Lorentzian geometry. The results of sections 7,8,11,12 and Appendix B are ne

    Power Corrections in QCD: A Matter of Energy Resolution

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    We consider power-like corrections in QCD which can be viewed as power surpressed infrared singularities. We argue that the presence of these singularities depends crucially on the energy resolution. In case of poor energy resolution, i.e., inclusive cross sections, there are constraints on infrared singularities expressed by the Kinoshita-Lee-Nauenberg (KLN) theorem. We rewrite the theorem in covariant notations and argue that the KLN theorem implies the extension of the Bloch-Nordsieck cancellation of logarithmic singularities to the case of linear corrections.Comment: 11 pages, Latex file, uses epsf.sty, 5 figures in a uufil

    Nonlinear force-free magnetic field extrapolations: comparison of the Grad-Rubin and Wheatland-Sturrock-Roumeliotis algorithm

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    We compare the performance of two alternative algorithms which aim to construct a force-free magnetic field given suitable boundary conditions. For this comparison, we have implemented both algorithms on the same finite element grid which uses Whitney forms to describe the fields within the grid cells. The additional use of conjugate gradient and multigrid iterations result in quite effective codes. The Grad-Rubin and Wheatland-Sturrock-Roumeliotis algorithms both perform well for the reconstruction of a known analytic force-free field. For more arbitrary boundary conditions the Wheatland-Sturrock-Roumeliotis approach has some difficulties because it requires overdetermined boundary information which may include inconsistencies. The Grad-Rubin code on the other hand loses convergence for strong current densities. For the example we have investigated, however, the maximum possible current density seems to be not far from the limit beyond which a force free field cannot exist anymore for a given normal magnetic field intensity on the boundary.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure

    Test results of Spacelab 2 infrared telescope focal plane

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    The small helium cooled infrared telescope for Spacelab 2 is designed for sensitive mapping of extended, low-surface-brightness celestial sources as well as highly sensitive investigations of the shuttle contamination environment (FPA) for this mission is described as well as the design for a thermally isolated, self-heated J-FET transimpedance amplifier. This amplifier is Johnson noise limited for feedback resistances from less than 10 to the 8th power Omega to greater than 2 x 10 to the 10th power Omega at T = 4.2K. Work on the focal plane array is complete. Performance testing for qualification of the flight hardware is discussed, and results are presented. All infrared data channels are measured to be background limited by the expected level of zodiacal emission
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