285 research outputs found
A chemical shift encoding (CSE) approach for spectral selection in fluorine-19 MRI.
To develop a chemical shift encoding (CSE) approach for fluorine-19 MRI of perfluorocarbons in the presence of multiple known fluorinated chemical species.
A multi-echo CSE technique is applied for spectral separation of the perfluorocarbon perfluoro-15-crown-5-ether (PFCE) and isoflurane (ISO) based on their chemical shifts at 4.7 T. Cramér-Rao lower bound analysis is used to identify echo combinations with optimal signal-to-noise performance. Signal contributions are fit with a multispectral fluorine signal model using a non-linear least squares estimation reconstruction directly from k-space data. This CSE approach is tested in fluorine-19 phantoms and in a mouse with a 2D and 3D spoiled gradient-echo acquisition using multiple echo times determined from Cramér-Rao lower bound analysis.
Cramér-Rao lower bound analysis for PFCE and ISO separation shows signal-to-noise performance is maximized with a 0.33 ms echo separation. A linear behavior (R <sup>2</sup> = 0.987) between PFCE signal and known relative PFCE volume is observed in CSE reconstructed images using a mixed PFCE/ISO phantom. Effective spatial and spectral separation of PFCE and ISO is shown in phantoms and in vivo.
Feasibility of a gradient-echo CSE acquisition and image reconstruction approach with optimized noise performance is demonstrated through fluorine-19 MRI of PFCE with effective removal of ISO signal contributions. Magn Reson Med 79:2183-2189, 2018. © 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Correlation decay and conformal anomaly in the two-dimensional random-bond Ising ferromagnet
The two-dimensional random-bond Ising model is numerically studied on long
strips by transfer-matrix methods. It is shown that the rate of decay of
correlations at criticality, as derived from averages of the two largest
Lyapunov exponents plus conformal invariance arguments, differs from that
obtained through direct evaluation of correlation functions. The latter is
found to be, within error bars, the same as in pure systems. Our results
confirm field-theoretical predictions. The conformal anomaly is calculated
from the leading finite-width correction to the averaged free energy on strips.
Estimates thus obtained are consistent with , the same as for the pure
Ising model.Comment: RevTeX 3, 11 pages +2 figures, uuencoded, IF/UFF preprin
Plateaux Transitions in the Pairing Model:Topology and Selection Rule
Based on the two-dimensional lattice fermion model, we discuss transitions
between different pairing states. Each phase is labeled by an integer which is
a topological invariant and characterized by vortices of the Bloch
wavefunction. The transitions between phases with different integers obey a
selection rule. Basic properties of the edge states are revealed. They reflect
the topological character of the bulk. Transitions driven by randomness are
also discussed numerically.Comment: 8 pages with 2 postscript figures, RevTe
Spontaneous edge currents for the Dirac equation in two space dimensions
Spontaneous edge currents are known to occur in systems of two space
dimensions in a strong magnetic field. The latter creates chirality and
determines the direction of the currents. Here we show that an analogous effect
occurs in a field-free situation when time reversal symmetry is broken by the
mass term of the Dirac equation in two space dimensions. On a half plane, one
sees explicitly that the strength of the edge current is proportional to the
difference between the chemical potentials at the edge and in the bulk, so that
the effect is analogous to the Hall effect, but with an internal potential. The
edge conductivity differs from the bulk (Hall) conductivity on the whole plane.
This results from the dependence of the edge conductivity on the choice of a
selfadjoint extension of the Dirac Hamiltonian. The invariance of the edge
conductivity with respect to small perturbations is studied in this example by
topological techniques.Comment: 10 pages; final versio
Crossover and self-averaging in the two-dimensional site-diluted Ising model
Using the newly proposed probability-changing cluster (PCC) Monte Carlo
algorithm, we simulate the two-dimensional (2D) site-diluted Ising model. Since
we can tune the critical point of each random sample automatically with the PCC
algorithm, we succeed in studying the sample-dependent and the sample
average of physical quantities at each systematically. Using the
finite-size scaling (FSS) analysis for , we discuss the importance of
corrections to FSS both in the strong-dilution and weak-dilution regions. The
critical phenomena of the 2D site-diluted Ising model are shown to be
controlled by the pure fixed point. The crossover from the percolation fixed
point to the pure Ising fixed point with the system size is explicitly
demonstrated by the study of the Binder parameter. We also study the
distribution of critical temperature . Its variance shows the power-law
dependence, , and the estimate of the exponent is consistent
with the prediction of Aharony and Harris [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 77}, 3700
(1996)]. Calculating the relative variance of critical magnetization at the
sample-dependent , we show that the 2D site-diluted Ising model
exhibits weak self-averaging.Comment: 6 pages including 6 eps figures, RevTeX, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Separation of spin and charge in paired spin-singlet quantum Hall states
We propose a series of paired spin-singlet quantum Hall states, which exhibit
a separation of spin and charge degrees of freedom. The fundamental excitations
over these states, which have filling fraction \nu=2/(2m+1) with m an odd
integer, are spinons (spin-1/2 and charge zero) or fractional holons (charge
+/- 1/(2m+1) and spin zero). The braid statistics of these excitations are
non-abelian. The mechanism for the separation of spin and charge in these
states is topological: spin and charge excitations are liberated by binding to
a vortex in a p-wave pairing condensate. We briefly discuss related, abelian
spin-singlet states and possible transitions.Comment: 4 pages, uses revtex
Low-energy p-d Scattering: High Precision Data, Comparisons with Theory, and Phase-Shift Analyses
Angular distributions of sigma(theta), A_y, iT_11, T_20, T_21, and T_22 have
been measured for d-p scattering at E_c.m.=667 keV. This set of high-precision
data is compared to variational calculations with the nucleon-nucleon potential
alone and also to calculations including a three-nucleon (3N) potential.
Agreement with cross-section and tensor analyzing power data is excellent when
a 3N potential is used. However, a comparison between the vector analyzing
powers reveals differences of approximately 40% in the maxima of the angular
distributions which is larger than reported at higher energies for both p-d and
n-d scattering. Single-energy phase-shift analyses were performed on this data
set and a similar data set at E_c.m.=431.3 keV. The role of the different
phase-shift parameters in fitting these data is discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
Dimensional Crossover of Localisation and Delocalisation in a Quantum Hall Bar
The 2-- to 1--dimensional crossover of the localisation length of electrons
confined to a disordered quantum wire of finite width is studied in a
model of electrons moving in the potential of uncorrelated impurities. An
analytical formula for the localisation length is derived, describing the
dimensional crossover as function of width , conductance and
perpendicular magnetic field . On the basis of these results, the scaling
analysis of the quantum Hall effect in high Landau levels, and the
delocalisation transition in a quantum Hall wire are reconsidered.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Trisomy 21 activates the kynurenine pathway via increased dosage of interferon receptors
Altres ajuts: This work has also been supported by a "Marató TV3" grant (20141210 to J.F. and 044412 to R.B.).Trisomy 21 (T21) causes Down syndrome (DS), affecting immune and neurological function by ill-defined mechanisms. Here we report a large metabolomics study of plasma and cerebrospinal fluid, showing in independent cohorts that people with DS produce elevated levels of kynurenine and quinolinic acid, two tryptophan catabolites with potent immunosuppressive and neurotoxic properties, respectively. Immune cells of people with DS overexpress IDO1, the rate-limiting enzyme in the kynurenine pathway (KP) and a known interferon (IFN)-stimulated gene. Furthermore, the levels of IFN-inducible cytokines positively correlate with KP dysregulation. Using metabolic tracing assays, we show that overexpression of IFN receptors encoded on chromosome 21 contribute to enhanced IFN stimulation, thereby causing IDO1 overexpression and kynurenine overproduction in cells with T21. Finally, a mouse model of DS carrying triplication of IFN receptors exhibits KP dysregulation. Together, our results reveal a mechanism by which T21 could drive immunosuppression and neurotoxicity in DS
Gluon polarization in the nucleon from quasi-real photoproduction of high-pT hadron pairs
We present a determination of the gluon polarization Delta G/G in the
nucleon, based on the helicity asymmetry of quasi-real photoproduction events,
Q^2<1(GeV/c)^2, with a pair of large transverse-momentum hadrons in the final
state. The data were obtained by the COMPASS experiment at CERN using a 160 GeV
polarized muon beam scattered on a polarized 6-LiD target. The helicity
asymmetry for the selected events is = 0.002 +- 0.019(stat.) +-
0.003(syst.). From this value, we obtain in a leading-order QCD analysis Delta
G/G=0.024 +- 0.089(stat.) +- 0.057(syst.) at x_g = 0.095 and mu^2 =~ 3
(GeV}/c)^2.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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