123 research outputs found
Filamentational Instability of Partially Coherent Femtosecond Optical Pulses in Air
The filamentational instability of spatially broadband femtosecond optical
pulses in air is investigated by means of a kinetic wave equation for spatially
incoherent photons. An explicit expression for the spatial amplification rate
is derived and analyzed. It is found that the spatial spectral broadening of
the pulse can lead to stabilization of the filamentation instability. Thus,
optical smoothing techniques could optimize current applications of ultra-short
laser pulses, such as atmospheric remote sensing.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Optics Letter
Tester for space micro-accelerometer
AbstractMicro-accelerometer MAC04 has been developed in order to measure very low accelerations such as those caused to satellites by atmospheric drag and other non-gravitational forces. The instrument uses a cubic proof-mass inside a small cavity. In an open loop the change of capacitance between the cube and 12 electrodes on the inner cavity surface is a measure of the applied acceleration. It is very difficult to ground test and calibrate such a device due to gravity. The tester simulates the change of capacitances (base capacitance 13,5pF, changes in a range of ±1.5pF). Complete closed loop system is presented
Dynamic Nonlinear X-waves for Femtosecond Pulse Propagation in Water
Recent experiments on femtosecond pulses in water displayed long distance
propagation analogous to that reported in air. We verify this phenomena
numerically and show that the propagation is dynamic as opposed to self-guided.
Furthermore, we demonstrate that the propagation can be interpreted as due to
dynamic nonlinear X-waves whose robustness and role in long distance
propagation is shown to follow from the interplay between nonlinearity and
chromatic dispersion.Comment: 4 page
Targeting of the Plzf gene in the rat by transcription activator-like effector nuclease results in caudal regression syndrome in spontaneously hypertensive rats
Recently, it has been found that spontaneous mutation Lx (polydactyly-luxate syndrome) in the rat is determined by deletion of a conserved intronic sequence of the Plzf (Promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger protein) gene. In addition, Plzf is a prominent candidate gene for quantitative trait loci (QTLs) associated with cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). In the current study, we tested the effects of Plzf gene targeting in the SHR using TALENs (transcription activator-like effector nucleases). SHR ova were microinjected with constructs pTAL438/439 coding for a sequence-specific endonuclease that binds to target sequence in the first coding exon of the Plzf gene. Out of 43 animals born after microinjection, we detected a single male founder. Sequence analysis revealed a deletion of G that resulted in frame shift mutation starting in codon 31 and causing a premature stop codon at position of amino acid 58. The Plzftm1Ipcv allele is semi-lethal since approximately 95% of newborn homozygous animals died perinatally. All homozygous animals exhibited manifestations of a caudal regression syndrome including tail anomalies and serious size reduction and deformities of long bones, and oligo- or polydactyly on the hindlimbs. The heterozygous animals only exhibited the tail anomalies. Impaired development of the urinary tract was also revealed: one homozygous and one heterozygous rat exhibited a vesico-ureteric reflux with enormous dilatation of ureters and renal pelvis. In the homozygote, this was combined with a hypoplastic kidney. These results provide evidence for the important role of Plzf gene during development of the caudal part of a body-column vertebrae, hindlimbs and urinary system in the rat
Stability of narrow beams in bulk Kerr-type nonlinear media
We consider (2+1)-dimensional beams, whose transverse size may be comparable
to or smaller than the carrier wavelength, on the basis of an extended version
of the nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger equation derived from the Maxwell`s equations.
As this equation is very cumbersome, we also study, in parallel to it, its
simplified version which keeps the most essential term: the term which accounts
for the {\it nonlinear diffraction}. The full equation additionally includes
terms generated by a deviation from the paraxial approximation and by a
longitudinal electric-field component in the beam. Solitary-wave stationary
solutions to both the full and simplified equations are found, treating the
terms which modify the nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger equation as perturbations.
Within the framework of the perturbative approach, a conserved power of the
beam is obtained in an explicit form. It is found that the nonlinear
diffraction affects stationary beams much stronger than nonparaxiality and
longitudinal field. Stability of the beams is directly tested by simulating the
simplified equation, with initial configurations taken as predicted by the
perturbation theory. The numerically generated solitary beams are always stable
and never start to collapse, although they display periodic internal
vibrations, whose amplitude decreases with the increase of the beam power.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures Accepted for publication in PR
Genetically Determined Folate Deficiency Is Associated With Abnormal Hepatic Folate Profiles in the Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat
Increased levels of plasma cysteine are associated with obesity
and metabolic disturbances. Our recent genetic analyses in
spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) revealed a mutated Folr1
(folate receptor 1) as the quantitative trait gene associated with
diminished renal Folr1 expression, lower plasma folate levels,
hypercysteinemia, hyperhomocysteinemia and metabolic
disturbances. To further analyse the effects of the Folr1 gene
expression on folate metabolism, we used mass spectrometry to
quantify folate profiles in the plasma and liver of an SHR-1
congenic strain, with wild type Folr1 allele on the SHR genetic
background, and compared them with the SHR strain. In the
plasma, concentration of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate (5mTHF) was
significantly higher in SHR-1 congenic rats compared to SHR
(60±6 vs. 42±2 nmol/l, P<0.01) and 5mTHF monoglutamate was
the predominant form in both strains (>99 % of total folate). In
the liver, SHR-1 congenic rats showed a significantly increased
level of 5mTHF and decreased concentrations of dihydrofolate
(DHF), tetrahydrofolate (THF) and formyl-THF when compared to
the SHR strain. We also analysed the extent of folate
glutamylation in the liver. Compared with the SHR strain,
congenic wild-type Folr1 rats had significantly higher levels of
5mTHF monoglutamate. On the other hand, 5mTHF penta- and
hexaglutamates were significantly higher in SHR when compared
to SHR-1 rats. This inverse relationship of rat hepatic folate
polyglutamate chain length and folate sufficiency was also true
for other folate species. These results strongly indicate that the
whole body homeostasis of folates is substantially impaired in
SHR rats compared to the SHR-1 congenic strain and might be
contributing to the associated metabolic disturbances observed in
our previous studies
Ultrashort filaments of light in weakly-ionized, optically-transparent media
Modern laser sources nowadays deliver ultrashort light pulses reaching few
cycles in duration, high energies beyond the Joule level and peak powers
exceeding several terawatt (TW). When such pulses propagate through
optically-transparent media, they first self-focus in space and grow in
intensity, until they generate a tenuous plasma by photo-ionization. For free
electron densities and beam intensities below their breakdown limits, these
pulses evolve as self-guided objects, resulting from successive equilibria
between the Kerr focusing process, the chromatic dispersion of the medium, and
the defocusing action of the electron plasma. Discovered one decade ago, this
self-channeling mechanism reveals a new physics, widely extending the frontiers
of nonlinear optics. Implications include long-distance propagation of TW beams
in the atmosphere, supercontinuum emission, pulse shortening as well as
high-order harmonic generation. This review presents the landmarks of the
10-odd-year progress in this field. Particular emphasis is laid to the
theoretical modeling of the propagation equations, whose physical ingredients
are discussed from numerical simulations. Differences between femtosecond
pulses propagating in gaseous or condensed materials are underlined. Attention
is also paid to the multifilamentation instability of broad, powerful beams,
breaking up the energy distribution into small-scale cells along the optical
path. The robustness of the resulting filaments in adverse weathers, their
large conical emission exploited for multipollutant remote sensing, nonlinear
spectroscopy, and the possibility to guide electric discharges in air are
finally addressed on the basis of experimental results.Comment: 50 pages, 38 figure
Measurement of the 8B solar neutrino flux in SNO+ with very low backgrounds
A measurement of the 8B solar neutrino flux has been made using a 69.2 kt-day dataset acquired with the SNO+ detector during its water commissioning phase. At energies above 6 MeV the dataset is an extremely pure sample of solar neutrino elastic scattering events, owing primarily to the detector’s deep location, allowing an accurate measurement with relatively little exposure. In that energy region the best fit background rate is 0.25+0.09−0.07 events/kt−day, significantly lower than the measured solar neutrino event rate in that energy range, which is 1.03+0.13−0.12 events/kt−day. Also using data below this threshold, down to 5 MeV, fits of the solar neutrino event direction yielded an observed flux of 2.53+0.31−0.28(stat)+0.13−0.10(syst)×106 cm−2 s−1, assuming no neutrino oscillations. This rate is consistent with matter enhanced neutrino oscillations and measurements from other experiments
Search for invisible modes of nucleon decay in water with the SNO+ detector
This paper reports results from a search for nucleon decay through invisible modes, where no visible energy is directly deposited during the decay itself, during the initial water phase of SNO+. However, such decays within the oxygen nucleus would produce an excited daughter that would subsequently deexcite, often emitting detectable gamma rays. A search for such gamma rays yields limits of 2.5×1029 y at 90% Bayesian credibility level (with a prior uniform in rate) for the partial lifetime of the neutron, and 3.6×1029 y for the partial lifetime of the proton, the latter a 70% improvement on the previous limit from SNO. We also present partial lifetime limits for invisible dinucleon modes of 1.3×1028 y for nn, 2.6×1028 y for pn and 4.7×1028 y for pp, an improvement over existing limits by close to 3 orders of magnitude for the latter two
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