1,953 research outputs found
Imaging correlates of molecular signatures in oligodendrogliomas.
Molecular subsets of oligodendroglioma behave in biologically distinct ways. Their locations in the brain, rates of growth, and responses to therapy differ with their genotypes. Retrospectively, we inquired whether allelic loss of chromosomal arms 1p and 19q, an early molecular event and favorable prognostic marker in oligodendrogliomas, were reflected in their appearance on magnetic resonance imaging. Loss of 1p and 19q was associated with an indistinct border on T(1) images and mixed intensity signal on T(1) and T(2). Loss of 1p and 19q was also associated with paramagnetic susceptibility effect and with calcification, a common histopathological finding in oligodendrogliomas. These data encourage prospective evaluation of molecular alterations and magnetic resonance imaging characteristics of glial neoplasms
SOLAR CYCLE DEPENDENCE OF THE DIURNAL ANISOTROPY OF 0.6 TeV COSMIC-RAY INTENSITY OBSERVED WITH THE MATSUSHIRO UNDERGROUND MUON DETECTOR
We analyze the temporal variation of the diurnal anisotropy of sub-TeV cosmic-ray intensity observed with the Matsushiro (Japan) underground muon detector over two full solar activity cycles in 1985-2008. We find an anisotropy component in the solar diurnal anisotropy superimposed on the Compton-Getting anisotropy due to Earth's orbital motion around the Sun. The phase of this additional anisotropy is almost constant at similar to 15:00 local solar time corresponding to the direction perpendicular to the average interplanetary magnetic field at Earth's orbit, while the amplitude varies between a maximum (0.043% +/- 0.002%) and minimum (similar to 0.008% +/- 0.002%) in a clear correlation with the solar activity. We find a significant time lag between the temporal variations of the amplitude and the sunspot number (SSN) and obtain the best correlation coefficient of +0.74 with the SSN delayed for 26 months. We suggest that this anisotropy might be interpreted in terms of the energy change due to the solar-wind-induced electric field expected for galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) crossing the wavy neutral sheet. The average amplitude of the sidereal diurnal variation over the entire period is 0.034% +/- 0.003%, which is roughly one-third of the amplitude reported from air shower and deep-underground muon experiments monitoring multi-TeVGCR intensity suggesting a significant attenuation of the anisotropy due to the solar modulation. We find, on the other hand, only a weak positive correlation between the sidereal diurnal anisotropy and the solar activity cycle in which the amplitude in the "active" solar activity epoch is about twice the amplitude in the "quiet" solar activity epoch. This implies that only one-fourth of the total attenuation varies in correlation with the solar activity cycle and/or the solar magnetic cycle. We finally examine the temporal variation of the "single-band valley depth" (SBVD) quoted by the Milagro experiment and, in contrast with recent Milagro's report, we find no steady increase in the Matsushiro observations in a seven-year period between 2000 and 2007. We suggest, therefore, that the steady increase of the SBVD reported by the Milagro experiment is not caused by the decreasing solar modulation in the declining phase of the 23rd solar activity cycle.ArticleThe Astrophysical Journal. 712(2):1100-1106 (2010)journal articl
On the sigma-model structure of type IIA supergravity action in doubled field approach
In this letter we describe how to string together the doubled field approach
by Cremmer, Julia, Lu and Pope with Pasti-Sorokin-Tonin technique to construct
the sigma-model-like action for type IIA supergravity. The relation of the
results with that of obtained in the context of searching for
Superstring/M-theory hidden symmetry group is discussed.Comment: 9 pp, LATEX; published in JETP Let
Charge and orbital order in Fe_3O_4
Charge and orbital ordering in the low-temperature monoclinic structure of
magnetite (Fe_3O_4) is investigated using LSDA+U. While the difference between
t_{2g} minority occupancies of Fe^{2+}_B and Fe^{3+}_B cations is large and
gives direct evidence for charge ordering, the screening is so effective that
the total 3d charge disproportion is rather small. The charge order has a
pronounced [001] modulation, which is incompatible with the Anderson criterion.
The orbital order agrees with the Kugel-Khomskii theory.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
E10 and a "small tension expansion" of M Theory
A formal ``small tension'' expansion of D=11 supergravity near a spacelike
singularity is shown to be equivalent, at least up to 30th order in height, to
a null geodesic motion in the infinite dimensional coset space E10/K(E10) where
K(E10) is the maximal compact subgroup of the hyperbolic Kac-Moody group
E10(R). For the proof we make use of a novel decomposition of E10 into
irreducible representations of its SL(10,R) subgroup. We explicitly show how to
identify the first four rungs of the E10 coset fields with the values of
geometric quantities constructed from D=11 supergravity fields and their
spatial gradients taken at some comoving spatial point.Comment: 4 page
Homogeneous heterotic supergravity solutions with linear dilaton
I construct solutions to the heterotic supergravity BPS-equations on products
of Minkowski space with a non-symmetric coset. All of the bosonic fields are
homogeneous and non-vanishing, the dilaton being a linear function on the
non-compact part of spacetime.Comment: 36 pages; v2 conclusion updated and references adde
Comments on D-branes in Kazama-Suzuki models and Landau-Ginzburg theories
We study D-branes in Kazama-Suzuki models by means of the boundary state
description. We can identify the boundary states of Kazama-Suzuki models with
the solitons in N=2 Landau-Ginzburg theories. We also propose a geometrical
interpretation of the boundary states in Kazama-Suzuki models.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figure
Diagrammar and metamorphosis of coset symmetries in dimensionally reduced type IIB supergravity
Studying the reduction of type IIB supergravity from ten to three space-time
dimensions we describe the metamorphosis of Dynkin diagram for gravity line
"caterpillar" into a type IIB supergravity "dragonfly" that is triggered by
inclusion of scalars and antisymmetric tensor fields. The final diagram
corresponds to type IIB string theory E8 global symmetry group which is the
subgroup of the conjectured E11 hidden symmetry group. Application of the
results for getting the type IIA/IIB T-duality rules and for searching for type
IIB vacua solutions is considered.Comment: 9 pp, 7 figs, LATEX; to be published in JETP Let
Modified Hagedorn formula including temperature fluctuation - Estimation of temperatures at RHIC experiments -
We have systematically estimated the possible temperatures obtained from an
analysis of recent data on distributions observed at RHIC experiments.
Using the fact that observed distributions cannot be described by the
original Hagedorn formula in the whole range of transverse momenta (in
particular above 6 GeV/c), we propose a modified Hagedorn formula including
temperature fluctuation. We show that by using it we can fit
distributions in the whole range and can estimate consistently the relevant
temperatures, including their fluctuations.Comment: Some misprints corrected, references updated. To be published in Eur.
Phys. J. C (2006
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