544 research outputs found

    Generation of Antibunched Light by Excited Molecules in a Microcavity Trap

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    The active microcavity is adopted as an efficient source of non-classical light. By this device, excited by a mode-locked laser at a rate of 100 MHz, single-photons are generated over a single field mode with a nonclassical sub-poissonian distribution. The process of adiabatic recycling within a multi-step Franck-Condon molecular optical-pumping mechanism, characterized in our case by a quantum efficiency very close to one, implies a pump self-regularization process leading to a striking n-squeezing effect. By a replication of the basic single-atom excitation process a beam of quantum photon (Fock states) can be created. The new process represents a significant advance in the modern fields of basic quantum-mechanical investigation, quantum communication and quantum cryptography

    Modélisation de systèmes électrotechniques par couplage des équations électriques et magnétiques

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    Pour modéliser des systèmes électromagnétiques en tenant compte du couplage entre les circuits magnétiques et électriques, on est amené à résoudre un système d'équations différentielles spatio-temporelles. En ayant recours à une discrétisation spatiale de type éléments finis et une discrétisation temporelle de type pas-à-pas, on aboutit à un système d'équations algébriques, dont les inconnues sont les valeurs nodales du potentiel vecteur et les courants. A ce niveau, deux approches peuvent être envisagées ; dans la première on conserve comme inconnues le potentiel vecteur et les courants, dans la seconde on se ramène à un système d'équations où les inconnues sont uniquement les valeurs nodales du potentiel vecteur. Dans cet article les deux stratégies sont développées ainsi que leurs influences sur le système matriciel à résoudre. Les résultats obtenus pour diverses applications sont donnés avec des comparaisons entre le calcul et l'expérience

    Study about the Influence of Powder Mixed Water Based Fluid on Micro-EDM Process

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    This paper discusses the performance of micro-electro-discharge machining (micro-EDM) process using different flushing media. Several tests have been performed considering a hardened steel thin workpiece machined via micro-EDM drilling and through-trench and different flushing fluids: deionized water, tap water, deionized water with Garnet, tap water with Garnet. Garnet is the abrasive material exploited in the micro-AWJ and the concentration per liter of water considered in micro-EDM experiments is the same as required in micro-abrasive water jet (micro-AWJ) machining. A customized system has been built on micro-EDM Sarix SX 200 HP machine to allow the water-based fluid refill and liquid level monitoring during the experiments. The micro-EDM trials have been carried out considering two machining regimes, roughing and semi finishing. The different water-based fluids have different electrical conductivities, which lead to different machining performance. Material removal rate (MRR) and tool wear ratio (TWR) have been estimated in terms of average and standard deviation. The results show that the presence of Garnet does not affect MRR consistently, since the particles do not play an active role in the erosion process but affect surface quality, as proved by the inspection of crater morphology and dimensions estimation performed via confocal microscope. For the considered experiments, MRR is generally increased as the conductivity decreases, in particular when semi-finishing regime is used. Also TWR decreases dramatically with the use of water-based fluids, since a protective recast layer is also deposited on the tool tip preventing wearing. Our analysis shows that micro-EDM can be successfully performed using the same liquid (water and abrasive) used in micro-AWJ, and so paves the way towards the implementation of a hybrid process based on micro-AWJ and micro-EDM technologies

    Thoracic Endovascular Aortic Repair for Type B Acute Aortic Dissection Complicated by Descending Thoracic Aneurysm

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    OBJECTIVES: To analyse the results and review the literature about thoracic aortic endovascular repair (TEVAR) for type B acute aortic dissection (TBAAD) complicated by descending thoracic aortic aneurysm (DTA) in the hyperacute or acute phases. METHODS: This was a multicentre, observational descriptive study. Inclusion criteria were TBAAD with a DTA of 6550 mm, TBAAD on an already known aneurysmal descending thoracic aorta, and TBAAD presenting with an enlarged aorta with a total diameter <50 mm, but with >50% diameter increase compared with a previous computed tomography angiography (CTA) showing a non-dissected aorta with normal sizing. Primary endpoints were early and long-term survival, freedom from TEVAR and aortic related mortality (ARM), and freedom from re-intervention. RESULTS: Twenty-two patients were included in the analysis. The mean aortic diameter was 66 \ub1 26 mm (range 42-130; IQR 51-64). The in hospital TEVAR related mortality was 14% (n = 3). The mean radiological follow-up was 56 \ub1 45 months (range 6-149; IQR 12-82), and the follow-up index 0.97 \ub1 0.1. All surviving patients were available for follow-up. During follow-up the cumulative mortality was 26% (n = 5) and TEVAR related mortality was 5% (n = 1). Overall the estimate of survival was 82% (95%CI: 61.5-93) at 1 year, and 64% at 5 years. Ongoing primary clinical success was 79% (re-intervention n = 4). Freedom from aortic related mortality was 86% (95%CI: 66-95) at 1 and 5 year, while freedom from re-intervention was 95% (95%CI: 75.5-95) at 1 year, and 77% (95%CI: 50-92) at 5 years. CONCLUSIONS: In our experience, DTA is a frequent complication from the very beginning of the clinical onset of TBAAD. In this high-risk cohort, TEVAR showed satisfactory results, better than those predicted by the risk score for open repair, with favourable stability of the aortic diameter and no aortic related adverse events during follow-up

    Anxiety-like behavior of prenatally stressed rats is associated with a selective reduction of glutamate release in the ventral hippocampus

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    Abnormalities of synaptic transmission and plasticity in the hippocampus represent an integral part of the altered programming triggered by early life stress. Prenatally restraint stressed (PRS) rats develop long-lasting biochemical and behavioral changes, which are the expression of an anxious/depressive-like phenotype. We report here that PRS rats showed a selective impairment of depolarization- or kainate-stimulated glutamate and 3HD-aspartate release in the ventral hippo campus, a region encoding memories related to stress and emotions. GABA release was un affected in PRS rats. As a consequence of reduced glutamate release, PRS rats were also highly resistant to kainate-induced seizures. Abnormalities of glutamate release were associated with large reductions in the levels of synaptic vesicle-related proteins, such as VAMP (synaptobrevin), syntaxin-1, synaptophysin, synapsin Ia/b and IIa, munc-18, and Rab3A in the ventral hippocampus of PRS rats. Anxiety-like behavior in male PRS (and control) rats was inversely related to the extent of depolarization-evoked glutamate release in the ventral hippocampus. A causal relationship between anxiety-like behavior and reduction in glutamate release was demonstrated usingamixtureofthemGlu2/3 receptor antagonist, LY341495, and the GABAB receptor antagonist, CGP52432, which was shown to amplify depolarization-evoked 3HD-aspartate release in the ventral hippocampus. Bilateral micro infusion of CGP52432 plus LY341495 in the ventral hippocampus abolished anxiety-like behavior in PRS rats. These findings indicate that an impairment of glutamate release in the ventral hippocampus is a key component of the neuro plastic program induced by PRS, and that strategies aimed at enhancing glutamate release in the ventral hippocampus correct the "anxious phenotype" caused by early life stress

    Inclusion of a degron reduces levelsof undesired inteins after AAV-mediated proteintrans-splicing in the retina

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    Split intein-mediated protein trans-splicing expands AAV transfer capacity, thus overcoming the limited AAV cargo. However, non-mammalian inteins persist as trans-splicing by-products, and this could raise safety concerns for AAV intein clinical applications. In this study, we tested the ability of several degrons to selectively decrease levels of inteins after protein trans-splicing and found that a version of E. coli dihydrofolate reductase, which we have shortened to better fit into the AAV vector, is the most effective. We show that subretinal administration of AAV intein armed with this short degron is both safe and effective in a mouse model of Stargardt disease (STGD1), which is the most common form of inherited macular degeneration in humans. This supports the use of optimized AAV intein for gene therapy of both STGD1 and other conditions that require transfer of large genes

    Zinc-finger-based transcriptional repression of rhodopsin in a model of dominant retinitis pigmentosa

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    Despite the recent success of gene-based complementation approaches for genetic recessive traits, the development of therapeutic strategies for gain-of-function mutations poses great challenges. General therapeutic principles to correct these genetic defects mostly rely on post-transcriptional gene regulation (RNA silencing). Engineered zinc-finger (ZF) protein-based repression of transcription may represent a novel approach for treating gain-of-function mutations, although proof-of-concept of this use is still lacking. Here, we generated a series of transcriptional repressors to silence human rhodopsin (hRHO), the gene most abundantly expressed in retinal photoreceptors. The strategy was designed to suppress both the mutated and the wild-type hRHO allele in a mutational-independent fashion, to overcome mutational heterogeneity of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa due to hRHO mutations. Here we demonstrate that ZF proteins promote a robust transcriptional repression of hRHO in a transgenic mouse model of autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. Furthermore, we show that specifically decreasing the mutated human RHO transcript in conjunction with unaltered expression of the endogenous murine Rho gene results in amelioration of disease progression, as demonstrated by significant improvements in retinal morphology and function. This zinc-finger-based mutation-independent approach paves the way towards a ‘repression–replacement’ strategy, which is expected to facilitate widespread applications in the development of novel therapeutics for a variety of disorders that are due to gain-of-function mutations

    Gauge theories as a geometrical issue of a Kaluza-Klein framework

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    We present a geometrical unification theory in a Kaluza-Klein approach that achieve the geometrization of a generic gauge theory bosonic component. We show how it is possible to derive the gauge charge conservation from the invariance of the model under extra-dimensional translations and to geometrize gauge connections for spinors, thus we can introduce the matter just by free spinorial fields. Then, we present the applications to i)a pentadimensional manifold V4S1V^{4}\otimes S^{1}, so reproducing the original Kaluza-Klein theory, unless some extensions related to the rule of the scalar field contained in the metric and the introduction of matter by spinors with a phase dependence from the fifth coordinate, ii)a seven-dimensional manifold V4S1S2V^{4}\otimes S^{1}\otimes S^{2}, in which we geometrize the electro-weak model by introducing two spinors for any leptonic family and quark generation and a scalar field with two components with opposite hypercharge, responsible of spontaneous symmetry breaking.Comment: 37 pages, no figure

    High sensitivity photonic crystal pressure sensor

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    A two-dimensional photonic crystal microcavity coupled with a waveguide is proposed to realise a high sensitive force sensor, designed on a GaAs membrane. A theoretical model is developed to evaluate the change of the refractive index induced by the application of the force onto a sensing surface. A linear calibration curve is obtained relating the resonant drop position to the applied force
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