18,406 research outputs found
Supersymmetric analysis for the Dirac equation with spin-symmetric and pseudo-spin-symmetric interactions
A supersymmetric analysis is presented for the d-dimensional Dirac equation
with central potentials under spin-symmetric
(S(r) = V(r)) and pseudo-spin-symmetric (S(r) = - V(r)) regimes. We construct
the explicit shift operators that are required to factorize the Dirac
Hamiltonian with the Kratzer potential. Exact solutions are provided for both
the Coulomb and Kratzer potentials.Comment: 12 page
Entanglement genesis by ancilla-based parity measurement in 2D circuit QED
We present an indirect two-qubit parity meter in planar circuit quantum
electrodynamics, realized by discrete interaction with an ancilla and a
subsequent projective ancilla measurement with a dedicated, dispersively
coupled resonator. Quantum process tomography and successful entanglement by
measurement demonstrate that the meter is intrinsically quantum non-demolition.
Separate interaction and measurement steps allow commencing subsequent data
qubit operations in parallel with ancilla measurement, offering time savings
over continuous schemes.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; supplemental material with 5 figure
Quantum Correction in Exact Quantization Rules
An exact quantization rule for the Schr\"{o}dinger equation is presented. In
the exact quantization rule, in addition to , there is an integral term,
called the quantum correction. For the exactly solvable systems we find that
the quantum correction is an invariant, independent of the number of nodes in
the wave function. In those systems, the energy levels of all the bound states
can be easily calculated from the exact quantization rule and the solution for
the ground state, which can be obtained by solving the Riccati equation. With
this new method, we re-calculate the energy levels for the one-dimensional
systems with a finite square well, with the Morse potential, with the symmetric
and asymmetric Rosen-Morse potentials, and with the first and the second
P\"{o}schl-Teller potentials, for the harmonic oscillators both in one
dimension and in three dimensions, and for the hydrogen atom.Comment: 10 pages, no figure, Revte
Apoptotic and chemotherapeutic properties of iron(III)-salophene in an ovarian cancer animal model
The cytotoxicity of organometallic compounds iron(III)-, cobalt(III)-, manganese(II)-, and copper(II)-salophene (-SP) on platinum-resistant ovarian cancer cell lines was compared. Fe-SP displayed selective cytotoxicity (IC 50 at âŒ1 ÎŒM) against SKOV-3 and OVCAR-3 cell lines while Co-SP caused cytotoxic effects only at higher concentrations (IC50 at 60 ?M) and Cu-SP effects were negligible. High cytotoxicity of Mn-SP (30-60 ÎŒM) appeared to be nonspecific because the Mn-chloride salt reduced cell viability similarly. The effect of Fe-SP at 1 ÎŒM proved to be ovarian cancer cell selective when compared to a panel of cell lines derived from different tumors. The first irreversible step in the induction of cell death by Fe-SP occurred after 3 hrs as indicated by the mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ÎΚm) and was mainly linked to apoptotic, not necrotic events. To evaluate the toxicity of Fe-SP in vivo we conducted an acute toxicity study in rats. The LD 50 of Fe-SP is >2000 mg/kg orally and >5.5 mg/kg body weight by intraperitoneal injection. An ovarian cancer animal model showed that the chemotherapeutic relevant dose of Fe-SP in rats is 0.5-1 mg/kg body weight. The present report suggests that Fe-SP is a potential therapeutic drug to treat ovarian cancer. © 2009 Lange et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd
Indomethacin decreases viscosity of gallbladder bile in patients with cholesterol gallstone disease
There is experimental evidence that inhibition of cyclooxygenase with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may decrease cholesterol gall-stone formation and mitigate biliary pain in gall-stone patients. The mechanisms by which NSAIDs exert these effect are unclear. In a prospective, controlled clinical trial we examined the effects of oral indomethacin on the composition of human gall-bladder bile. The study included 28 patients with symptomatic cholesterol or mixed gallstones. Of these, 8 were treated with 3 à 25 mg indomethacin daily for 7 days prior to elective cholecystectomy while 20 received no treatment and served as controls. Bile and tissue samples from the gallbladder were obtained during cholecystectomy. Indomethacin tissue levels in the gallbladder mucosa, as assessed by HPLC, were 1.05±0.4 ng/mg wet weight, a concentration known to inhibit effectively cyclooxygenase activity. Nevertheless, no differences between the treated and untreated groups were found in the concentrations of biliary mucus glycoprotein (0.94±0.27 versus 0.93±0.32 mg/ml) or total protein (5.8±0.9 versus 6.4±1.3 mg/ml), cholesterol saturation (1.3±0.2 versus 1.5±0.2), or nucleation time (2.0±3.0 versus 1.5±2.0 days). However, biliary viscosity, measured using a low-shear rotation viscosimeter, was significantly lower in patients receiving indomethacin treatment (2.9±0.6 versus 5.6±1.2 mPa.s; P < 0.02). In conclusion, in man oral indomethacin decreases bile viscosity without alteration of bile lithogenicity or biliary mucus glycoprotein content. Since mucus glycoproteins are major determinants of bile viscosity, an alteration in mucin macromolecular composition may conceivably cause the indomethacin-induced decrease in biliary viscosity and explain the beneficial effects of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in gallstone disease
Investigation of a direction sensitive sapphire detector stack at the 5 GeV electron beam at DESY-II
Extremely radiation hard sensors are needed in particle physics experiments
to instrument the region near the beam pipe. Examples are beam halo and beam
loss monitors at the Large Hadron Collider, FLASH or XFEL. Currently artificial
diamond sensors are widely used. In this paper single crystal sapphire sensors
are considered as a promising alternative. Industrially grown sapphire wafers
are available in large sizes, are of low cost and, like diamond sensors, can be
operated without cooling. Here we present results of an irradiation study done
with sapphire sensors in a high intensity low energy electron beam. Then, a
multichannel direction-sensitive sapphire detector stack is described. It
comprises 8 sapphire plates of 1 cm^2 size and 525 micro m thickness,
metallized on both sides, and apposed to form a stack. Each second metal layer
is supplied with a bias voltage, and the layers in between are connected to
charge-sensitive preamplifiers. The performance of the detector was studied in
a 5 GeV electron beam. The charge collection efficiency measured as a function
of the bias voltage rises with the voltage, reaching about 10 % at 950 V. The
signal size obtained from electrons crossing the stack at this voltage is about
22000 e, where e is the unit charge.
The signal size is measured as a function of the hit position, showing
variations of up to 20 % in the direction perpendicular to the beam and to the
electric field. The measurement of the signal size as a function of the
coordinate parallel to the electric field confirms the prediction that mainly
electrons contribute to the signal. Also evidence for the presence of a
polarisation field was observed.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
Refined Factorizations of Solvable Potentials
A generalization of the factorization technique is shown to be a powerful
algebraic tool to discover further properties of a class of integrable systems
in Quantum Mechanics. The method is applied in the study of radial oscillator,
Morse and Coulomb potentials to obtain a wide set of raising and lowering
operators, and to show clearly the connection that link these systems.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX file, no figure
Bias in the journal impact factor
The ISI journal impact factor (JIF) is based on a sample that may represent
half the whole-of-life citations to some journals, but a small fraction (<10%)
of the citations accruing to other journals. This disproportionate sampling
means that the JIF provides a misleading indication of the true impact of
journals, biased in favour of journals that have a rapid rather than a
prolonged impact. Many journals exhibit a consistent pattern of citation
accrual from year to year, so it may be possible to adjust the JIF to provide a
more reliable indication of a journal's impact.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures; one reference correcte
Saturation of Cs2 Photoassociation in an Optical Dipole Trap
We present studies of strong coupling in single-photon photoassociation of
cesium dimers using an optical dipole trap. A thermodynamic model of the trap
depletion dynamics is employed to extract absolute rate coefficents. From the
dependence of the rate coefficient on the photoassociation laser intensity, we
observe saturation of the photoassociation scattering probability at the
unitarity limit in quantitative agreement with the theoretical model by Bohn
and Julienne [Phys. Rev. A, 60, 414 (1999)]. Also the corresponding power
broadening of the resonance width is measured. We could not observe an
intensity dependent light shift in contrast to findings for lithium and
rubidium, which is attributed to the absence of a p or d-wave shape resonance
in cesium
Three new diatom species from spring habitats in the northern apennines (Emilia-Romagna, Italy)
Using light (LM, including plastid characterization on fresh material) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), as well as a thorough morphological, physical, chemical, and biological characterization of the habitats, the present study aims at describing three species new to science. They belong to the genera Eunotia Ehrenb., Planothidium Round and L. Bukht., and Delicatophycus M.J. Wynne, and were found in two contrasting spring types in the northern Apennines. The three new species described differ morphologically from the most similar species by: less dense striae and areolae, and the absence of a ridge at the valve face-mantle transition (SEM feature) [Eunotia crassiminor Lange-Bert. et Cantonati sp. nov.; closest established species: Eunotia minor (KuÌtz.) Grunow]; narrower and shorter cells [Planothidium angustilanceolatum Lange-Bert. et Cantonati sp. nov.; most similar species: Planothidium lanceolatum (BreÌb. ex KuÌtz.) Lange-Bert.]; barely-dorsiventral symmetry, set off ends, and lower density of the central dorsal striae [Delicatophycus crassiminutus Lange-Bert. et Cantonati sp. nov.; most similar species: Delicatophycus minutus M.J.Wynne]. Two of the three species we described are separated from the closest species by dimensions. Their description improved knowledge on two taxa (Eunotia minor s.l. and Planothidium lanceolatum s.l.) likely to be only partially resolved species complexes. We could also refine knowledge on the ecological profiles of the three newly-described species. Eunotia crassiminor sp. nov., as compared to Eunotia minor, appears to occur in colder inland waters with a circumneutral pH and a strict oligotrophy as well with respect to nitrogen. The typical habitat of Planothidium angustilanceolatum sp. nov. appears to be oligotrophic mountain flowing springs with low conductivity. Delicatophycus crassiminutus sp. nov. was observed only in limestone-precipitating springs, and is therefore likely to be restricted to hard water springs and comparable habitats where CO2 degassing leads to carbonate precipitation. Springs are a unique but severely threatened wetland type. Therefore, the in-depth knowledge of the taxonomy and ecology of characteristic diatom species is important, because diatoms are excellent indicators of the quality and integrity of these peculiar ecosystems in the face of direct and indirect human impacts
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