2,091 research outputs found

    Glueball production in hadron and nucleus collisions

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    We elaborate on the hypothesis that in high energy hadron hadron and nucleus nucleus collisions the lowest mass glueballs are copiously produced from the gluon rich environment especially at high energy density. We discuss the particular glueball decay modes: 0++,2++→KKˉ0^{++}, 2^{++} \to K \bar{K} and 0++→π+π−ℓ+ℓ−0^{++} \to \pi^{+} \pi^{-} \ell^{+} \ell^{-}.Comment: 14 pages, six figure

    Hadronic centrality dependence in nuclear collisions

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    The kaon number density in nucleus+nucleus and p+p reactions is investigated for the first time as a function of the initial energy density ϵ\epsilon and is found to exhibit a discontinuity around ϵ\epsilon=1.3 GeV/fm3^3. This suggests a higher degree of chemical equilibrium for ϵ>\epsilon > 1.3 GeV/fm3^3. It can also be interpreted as reflection of the same discontinuity, appearing in the chemical freeze out temperature (T) as a function of ϵ\epsilon. The Nα∼1N^{\alpha \sim 1} dependence of (u,d,s) hadrons, whith N the number of participating nucleons, also indicates a high degree of chemical equilibrium and T saturation, reached at ϵ>\epsilon >1.3 GeV/fm3^3. Assuming that the intermediate mass region (IMR) dimuon enhancement seen by NA50 is due to open charm (DDˉD \bar{D}), the following observation can be made: a) Charm is not equilibrated. b) J/Ψ/DDˉJ/\Psi/D \bar{D} suppression -unlike J/Ψ/DYJ/\Psi/DY- appears also in S+A collisions, above ϵ\epsilon ∼\sim1 GeV/fm3^3. c) Both charm and strangeness show a discontinuity near the same ϵ\epsilon. d) J/ΨJ/\Psi could be formed mainly through ccˉc \bar{c} coalescence. e) The enhancement factors of hadrons with u,d,s,c quarks may be connected in a simple way to the mass gain of these particles if they are produced out of a quark gluon plasma (QGP). We discuss these results as possible evidence for the QCD phase transition occuring near ϵ∼\epsilon \sim 1.3 GeV/fm3^3.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of Vth International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter, 20-25 July 2000, Berkeley, California. To appear in Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physic

    Fully Automatic and Real-Time Catheter Segmentation in X-Ray Fluoroscopy

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    Augmenting X-ray imaging with 3D roadmap to improve guidance is a common strategy. Such approaches benefit from automated analysis of the X-ray images, such as the automatic detection and tracking of instruments. In this paper, we propose a real-time method to segment the catheter and guidewire in 2D X-ray fluoroscopic sequences. The method is based on deep convolutional neural networks. The network takes as input the current image and the three previous ones, and segments the catheter and guidewire in the current image. Subsequently, a centerline model of the catheter is constructed from the segmented image. A small set of annotated data combined with data augmentation is used to train the network. We trained the method on images from 182 X-ray sequences from 23 different interventions. On a testing set with images of 55 X-ray sequences from 5 other interventions, a median centerline distance error of 0.2 mm and a median tip distance error of 0.9 mm was obtained. The segmentation of the instruments in 2D X-ray sequences is performed in a real-time fully-automatic manner.Comment: Accepted to MICCAI 201

    Improved Image Guidance in TACE Procedures

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    Purpose of the work in this thesis is to improve the image guidance in TACE procedures. More specifically, we intend to develop and evaluate technology that permits dynamic roadmapping based on a 3D model of the liver vasculature

    Calculation Of Secondary Particles In Atmosphere And Hadronic Interactions

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    Calculation of secondary particles produced by the interaction of cosmic rays with the nuclei of Earth's atmosphere pose important requirements to particle production models. Here we summarize the important features of hadronic simulations, stressing the importance of the so called ``microscopic'' approach, making explicit reference to the case of the FLUKA code. Some benchmarks are also presented.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Extended version of report given at the IInd Workshop on Matter and anti-Matter, Trento, Oct. 200

    Stable quark stars beyond neutran stars : can they account for the missing matter ?

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    The structure of a spherically symmetric stable dark 'star' is discussed, at zero temperature, containing 1) a core of quarks in the deconfined phase and antileptons 2) a shell of hadrons in particular nn, pp, Λ\Lambda and Σ−\Sigma^- and leptons or antileptons and 3) a shell of hydrogen in the superfluid phase. If the superfluid hydrogen phase goes over into the electromagnetic plasma phase at densities well below one atom / (10fm)3(10 fm)^{3}, as is usually assumed, the hydrogen shell is insignificant for the mass and the radius of the 'star'. These quantities are then determined approximatively : mass = 1.8 solar masses and radius = 9.2 km. On the contrary if densities of the order of one atom / (10fm)3(10 fm)^{3} do form a stable hydrogen superfluid phase, we find a large range of possible masses from 1.8 to 375 solar masses. The radii vary accordingly from 9 to 1200 km.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, contribution to Strange Quark Matter conference, Frankfurt, Germany, Sept. 200

    Adolescent dietary patterns are associated with lifestyle family psycho-social factors

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    Background/ Objectives: Dietary intake during adolescence contributes to lifelong eating habits and the development of early risk factors for disease in adulthood. Few studies have examined the dietary patterns of adolescents and the social and environmental factors that may affect them during this life stage. The present study describes dietary patterns in a cohort of adolescents and examines their associations with socioeconomic factors, as well as parental and adolescent risk factor behaviours. Design: A semi quantitative FFQ was used to assess study adolescents’ usual dietary intake over the previous year. Information was collected on family functioning and various socio economic and risk factor variables via questionnaire. Adolescents visited the clinic for anthropometric measurements. Setting: The Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study (Raine Study), Perth, Western Australia. Subjects: Adolescents (n 1631) aged 14 years from a pregnancy cohort study. Results: Factor analysis identified two distinct dietary patterns that differed predominantly in fat and sugar intakes. The ‘Western’ pattern consisted of high intakes of take away foods, soft drinks, confectionery, French fries, refined grains, full fat dairy products and processed meats. The ‘Healthy’’ pattern included high intakes of whole grains, fruit, vegetables, legumes and fish. ANOVA showed that the ‘Western’ dietary pattern was positively associated with greater television viewing and having a parent that smoked, and was inversely associated with family income. The ‘Healthy’’ pattern was positively associated with female gender, greater maternal education, better family functioning and being in a two parent family, and was inversely associated with television viewing. Conclusions: This study suggests that both lifestyle factors and family psycho social environment are related to eating patterns in Australian adolescents

    Continuous roadmapping in liver TACE procedures using 2D–3D catheter-based registration

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    PURPOSE: Fusion of pre/perioperative images and intra-operative images may add relevant information during image-guided procedures. In abdominal procedures, respiratory motion changes the position of organs, and thus accurate image guidance requires a continuous update of the spatial alignment of the (pre/perioperative) information with the organ position during the intervention. METHODS: In this paper, we propose a method to register in real time perioperative 3D rotational angiography images (3DRA) to intra-operative single-plane 2D fluoroscopic images for improved guidance in TACE interventions. The method uses the shape of 3D vessels extracted from the 3DRA and the 2D catheter shape extracted from fluoroscopy. First, the appropriate 3D vessel is selected from the complete vascular tree using a shape similarity metric. Subsequently, the catheter is registered to this vessel, and the 3DRA is visualized based on the registration results. The method is evaluated on simulated data and clinical data. RESULTS: The first selected vessel, ranked with the shape similarity metric, is used more than 39 % in the final registration and the second more than 21 %. The median of the closest corresponding points distance between 2D angiography vessels and projected 3D vessels is 4.7–5.4 mm when using the brute force optimizer and 5.2–6.6 mm when using the Powell optimizer. CONCLUSION: We present a catheter-based registration method to continuously fuse a 3DRA roadmap arterial tree onto 2D fluoroscopic images with an efficient shape similarity
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