2,040 research outputs found
Evaluation of the stability of human erythropoietin in samples for radioimmunoassay
Radioimmunoassays for erythropoietin are limited so far to a few specialized laboratories and this requires transport and storage of samples. We therefore tested the stability of immunoreactive erythropoietin in serum and plasma samples obtained from a uremic and a nonuremic anemic patient. No significant change in the concentration of immunoreactive erythropoietin was found in either serum or plasma samples for up to 14 days of storage. This type of stability was observed no matter whether the samples were stored at room temperature, 4 degrees C, or -20 degrees C. There was no difference between the estimates of erythropoietin in serum and heparinized plasma. Validity of the radioimmunoassay used in this study was demonstrated by parallelism of dilution curves of test specimens and the 2nd International Reference Preparation for erythropoietin and by a close correlation between the immunoreactivity and the bioactivity of the hormone, as assessed in the same samples by the exhypoxic polycythemic mouse bioassay. In conclusion the data obtained clearly indicate that the necessity of storage and transport of clinical samples does not limit the practicability of the radioimmunoassay for erythropoietin
Isostatic equilibrium in spherical coordinates and implications for crustal thickness on the Moon, Mars, Enceladus, and elsewhere
Isostatic equilibrium is commonly defined as the state achieved when there
are no lateral gradients in hydrostatic pressure, and thus no lateral flow, at
depth within the lower viscosity mantle that underlies a planetary body's outer
crust. In a constant-gravity Cartesian framework, this definition is equivalent
to the requirement that columns of equal width contain equal masses. Here we
show, however, that this equivalence breaks down when the spherical geometry of
the problem is taken into account. Imposing the "equal masses" requirement in a
spherical geometry, as is commonly done in the literature, leads to significant
lateral pressure gradients along internal equipotential surfaces, and thus
corresponds to a state of disequilibrium. Compared with the "equal pressures"
model we present here, the "equal masses" model always overestimates the
compensation depth--by ~27% in the case of the lunar highlands and by nearly a
factor of two in the case of Enceladus.Comment: 23 pages of text; 3 figures; accepted for publication in GR
Experimental implementation of a four-player quantum game
Game theory is central to the understanding of competitive interactions
arising in many fields, from the social and physical sciences to economics.
Recently, as the definition of information is generalized to include entangled
quantum systems, quantum game theory has emerged as a framework for
understanding the competitive flow of quantum information. Up till now only
two-player quantum games have been demonstrated. Here we report the first
experiment that implements a four-player quantum Minority game over tunable
four-partite entangled states encoded in the polarization of single photons.
Experimental application of appropriate quantum player strategies give
equilibrium payoff values well above those achievable in the classical game.
These results are in excellent quantitative agreement with our theoretical
analysis of the symmetric Pareto optimal strategies. Our result demonstrate for
the first time how non-trivial equilibria can arise in a competitive situation
involving quantum agents and pave the way for a range of quantum transaction
applications.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
An Approach to Solid Phase Identification in a Ca-S-O System by Quantitative Energy Dispersive X-Ray Microanalysis
Solid phases formed in the limestone sulphation reaction were identified by scanning electron microscopy with backscattered electron (BSE) imaging and by quantitative energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) microanalysis of calcium and sulphur. Since calcium and sulphur can form several compounds in the Ca-S-O system, two quantities, the sum of oxides (CaO+SO3) and the molar ratio (CaO/SO3), were used to calculate empirical formulae for the compounds actually present.
A method for analysing the experimental results is proposed, the mathematical expressions employed are presented and the numerical coefficients tabulated. It is shown with some examples that the method used here provides useful criteria for the identification of limestone sulphation products
3/Evaluation of set-up deviations during the irradiation of patients suffering from breast cancer treated with two different techniques
PurposeTo present results of patient positioning during routine radiotherapy for patients treated after mastectomy and to compare the inaccuracies in patient set-up for this group of patients and for the patients treated after breast conserving therapy with tangential fields.Methods and materialsIn total, the analysis comprised 56 pairs of portal and simulator films for 14 consecutive patients treated following breast conserving therapy and 98 pairs of portal and simulator films for 20 consecutive patients treated after mastectomy. For the first group the tangential field technique (TF technique) was used, for the second the inverse hockey stick technique (IHS technique). The comparison of the treatment reproducibility obtained for both groups of patients was performed in terms of systematic and random error calculated for the whole groups and by the comparison of cumulative distribution of the length of the displacement vector.ResultsIn the IHS and TF techniques for medial and lateral fields, displacement larger than 5 mm occurred in 28.3%, 15.8% and 25.4% respectively. For the IHS technique, the systematic errors for lateral and cranial-caudal direction were 1.9 and 1.7 mm respectively (1 standard deviation – SD), the random errors for lateral and cranial-caudal direction were 2.0 and 2.5 mm. For the TF technique, the systematic errors for lateral and cranial-caudal direction were 2.6 and 1.3 mm for medial field and 3.7 and 0.7 mm for lateral fields respectively, the random errors for lateral and cranial-caudal direction were 2.2 and 1.0 mm for medial field and 2.9 and 1.1 for lateral field respectively. Rotations were negligible in the HIS technique. For the TF technique the systematic component and random component amounted to about 2.0 degrees (1 SD).ConclusionsBoth the inverse hockey stick and standard tangential techniques showed good reproducibility of patients set-up with respect to cranial-caudal direction. For the TF technique, the accuracy should be improved for the medial field with respect to the ventral-dorsal direction
Фактор страху в ранньомодерних теоріях держави: проект Томаса Гоббса
Стаття присвячена висвітленню трансформаційних форм та місця феномену страху в політичній теорії
Т. Гоббса, значення страху в принципах державного суверенітету.Статья посвящена исследованию трансформационных форм и места феномена страха в политической теории
Т. Гоббса, его значение в принципе государственного суверенитета.The article is devoted to research the transformation forms and place of the phenomenon of fear in the political
theory of Thomas Hobbs, its value in the principle of state sovereignty
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