1,518 research outputs found
Pengaruh Senam Lansia Terhadap Kadar Kolesterol Total Pada Lansia Di BPLU Senja Cerah Manado
: Many changes occur in the elderly include changes in body composition, muscle, bones and joints, cardiovascular system, respiratory and cognition. One of the efforts to maintain, improve health and physical fitness for the elderly is to exercise. The aim of this research is to know the effect of the elderly gymnastics on the levels of total cholesterol in elderly at BPLU Senja Cerah Manado. This research is experimental study with one group pre-post test design. The research respondents are 18 elderly people in BPLU Senja Cerah Manado. Cholesterol levels are measured before the first gymnastics session and after final gymnastics session. Respondents do gymnastics three times a week for eight weeks. The research results is analyzed by Wilcoxon test using a computer program. The result of the research shows that the mean level of cholesterol before first elderly gymnastics 222,17 mg/dL and after final elderly gymnastics 231,50 mg/dL. There is no significant effect on respondents total cholesterol after doing elderly gymnastics for three times a week for eight weeks
Measurements and tests on FBK silicon sensors with an optimized electronic design for a CTA camera
In October 2013, the Italian Ministry approved the funding of a Research &
Development (R&D) study, within the "Progetto Premiale TElescopi CHErenkov made
in Italy (TECHE)", devoted to the development of a demonstrator for a camera
for the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) consortium. The demonstrator consists
of a sensor plane based on the Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM) technology and on
an electronics designed for signal sampling. Preliminary tests on a matrix of
sensors produced by the Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK-Trento, Italy) and on
electronic prototypes produced by SITAEL S.p.A. will be presented. In
particular, we used different designs of the electronics in order to optimize
the output signals in terms of tail cancellation. This is crucial for
applications where a high background is expected, as for the CTA experiment.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures; Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on Science with
the New Generation of High-Energy Gamma-ray experiments (SciNeGHE) -
PoS(Scineghe2014)00
Galactic center at very high-energies
Employing data collected during the first 25 months' observations by the
Fermi-LAT, we describe and subsequently seek to model the very high energy
(>300 MeV) emission from the central few parsecs of our Galaxy. We analyze the
morphological, spectral and temporal characteristics of the central source,
1FGL J1745.6-2900. Remarkably, the data show a clear, statistically significant
signal at energies above 10 GeV, where the Fermi-LAT has an excellent angular
resolution comparable to the angular resolution of HESS at TeV energies, which
makes meaningful the joint analysis of the Fermi and HESS data. Our analysis
does not show statistically significant variability of 1FGL J1745.6-2900. Using
the combination of Fermi data on 1FGL J1745.6-2900 and HESS data on the
coincident, TeV source HESS J1745-290, we show that the spectrum of the central
gamma-ray source is inflected with a relatively steep spectral region matching
between the flatter spectrum found at both low and high energies. We seek to
model the gamma-ray production in the inner 10 pc of the Galaxy and examine, in
particular, cosmic ray (CR) proton propagation scenarios that reproduce the
observed spectrum of the central source. We show that a model that instantiates
a transition from diffusive propagation of the CR protons at low energy to
almost rectilinear propagation at high energies (given a reasonable
energy-dependence of the assumed diffusion coefficient) can well explain the
spectral phenomenology. In general, however, we find considerable degeneracy
between different parameter choices which will only be broken with the addition
of morphological information that gamma-ray telescopes cannot deliver given
current angular resolution limits.We argue that a future analysis done in
combination with higher-resolution radio continuum data holds out the promise
of breaking this degeneracy.Comment: submitted to Ap
Simulating the High Energy Gamma-ray sky seen by the GLAST Large Area Telescope
This paper presents the simulation of the GLAST high energy gamma-ray
telescope. The simulation package, written in C++, is based on the Geant4
toolkit, and it is integrated into a general framework used to process events.
A detailed simulation of the electronic signals inside Silicon detectors has
been provided and it is used for the particle tracking, which is handled by a
dedicated software. A unique repository for the geometrical description of the
detector has been realized using the XML language and a C++ library to access
this information has been designed and implemented. A new event display based
on the HepRep protocol was implemented. The full simulation was used to
simulate a full week of GLAST high energy gamma-ray observations. This paper
outlines the contribution developed by the Italian GLAST software group.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to be published in the Proceedings of the 6th
International Symposium ''Frontiers of Fundamental and Computational
Physics'' (FFP6), Udine (Italy), Sep. 26-29, 200
INFN Camera demonstrator for the Cherenkov Telescope Array
The Cherenkov Telescope Array is a world-wide project for a new generation of
ground-based Cherenkov telescopes of the Imaging class with the aim of
exploring the highest energy region of the electromagnetic spectrum. With two
planned arrays, one for each hemisphere, it will guarantee a good sky coverage
in the energy range from a few tens of GeV to hundreds of TeV, with improved
angular resolution and a sensitivity in the TeV energy region better by one
order of magnitude than the currently operating arrays. In order to cover this
wide energy range, three different telescope types are envisaged, with
different mirror sizes and focal plane features. In particular, for the highest
energies a possible design is a dual-mirror Schwarzschild-Couder optical
scheme, with a compact focal plane. A silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) based
camera is being proposed as a solution to match the dimensions of the pixel
(angular size of ~ 0.17 degrees). INFN is developing a camera demonstrator made
by 9 Photo Sensor Modules (PSMs, 64 pixels each, with total coverage 1/4 of the
focal plane) equipped with FBK (Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Italy) Near
UltraViolet High Fill factor SiPMs and Front-End Electronics (FEE) based on a
Target 7 ASIC, a 16 channels fast sampler (up to 2GS/s) with deep buffer,
self-trigger and on-demand digitization capabilities specifically developed for
this purpose. The pixel dimensions of mm lead to a very compact
design with challenging problems of thermal dissipation. A modular structure,
made by copper frames hosting one PSM and the corresponding FEE, has been
conceived, with a water cooling system to keep the required working
temperature. The actual design, the adopted technical solutions and the
achieved results for this demonstrator are presented and discussed.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherlands. All CTA contributions at
arXiv:1508.0589
CHEOPS: The ESA Mission for Exo-Planets Characterization Ready for Launch
The European Space Agency (ESA) Science Programme Committee (SPC) selected CHEOPS (Characterizing Exoplanets Satellite) in October 2012 as the first Small-class mission (S1) within the Agency’s Scientific Programme. It is considered as a pilot case for implementing “small science missions” in the agency with the following requirements: science driven mission selected through an open Call; an implementation cycle, from the Call to launch, drastically shorter than for Medium-class (M) and Large-class (L) missions; a strict cost-cap to ESA, with possibly higher Member States involvement than for M or L missions.
The CHEOPS mission is devoted to the characterization of known exoplanets orbiting bright stars, achieved through the precise measurement of exoplanet radii using the technique of transit photometry. It was adopted for implementation in February 2014 as a partnership between the ESA Science Programme and Switzerland, with a number of other Member States delivering significant contributions to the instrument development and to operations.
The CHEOPS instrument is an optical Ritchey-Chrétien telescope with 300 mm effective aperture diameter and a large external baffle to minimize straylight. The compact CHEOPS spacecraft (approx. 300 kg, 1.5 m size), based on a flight-proven platform, will orbit the Earth in a dawn-dusk Sun Synchronous Orbit at 700 km altitude. CHEOPS completed the Preliminary Design Review at the end of September 2014, and passed the Critical Design Review in May 2016. In the course of 2017, flight platform and payload have been integrated and tested, and then followed by satellite level activities, targeting flight readiness by the end of year 2019. Implementation and validation of the ground segment, which is composed of the MOC (Mission Operations Centre), located in Torrejón (Madrid, Spain) and the SOC (Science Operations Centre), located at the University of Geneva (Switzerland) was achieved in parallel. CHEOPS will be launched as a secondary passenger on a Soyuz from Kourou by end of 2019.
The paper describes the latest CHEOPS development status, focusing on the activities for verification and validation of the satellite and the system at large, including the ground segment and the activities in preparation for S/C launch and its operations. Additional details can be found on the ESA and UBE websites referred in [8]
Design of a SiPM-based cluster for the Large Size Telescope camera of CTA
A Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM)-based photodetector is being built to
demonstrate its feasibility for an alternative silicon-based camera design for
the Large Size Telescope (LST) of the Cherenkov Telescope Array. It has been
designed to match the size of the standard Photomultiplier Tube (PMT) cluster
unit and to be compatible with mechanics, electronics and focal plane optics of
the first LST camera. Here, we describe the overall SiPM cluster design along
with the main differences with respect to the currently used PMT cluster unit.
The fast electronics of the SiPM pixel and its layout are also presented. In
order to derive the best working condition for the final unit, we measured the
SiPM performances in terms of gain, photo-detection efficiency and cross-talk.
One pixel, a unit of 14 SiPMs, has been built. We will discuss also some
preliminary results regarding this device and we will highlight the future
steps of this project.Comment: submitted to NIM
Fermi Large Area Telescope Observations of the Cygnus Loop Supernova Remnant
We present an analysis of the gamma-ray measurements by the Large Area
Telescope(LAT) onboard the \textit{Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope} in the
region of the supernova remnant(SNR) Cygnus Loop(G74.08.5). We detect
significant gamma-ray emission associated with the SNR in the energy band
0.2--100 GeV. The gamma-ray spectrum shows a break in the range 2--3 GeV. The
gamma-ray luminosity is erg s between 1--100
GeV, much lower than those of other GeV-emitting SNRs. The morphology is best
represented by a ring shape, with inner/outer radii 0.7
0.1 and 1.6 0.1. Given the association among
X-ray rims, \halpha filaments and gamma-ray emission, we argue that gamma rays
originate in interactions between particles accelerated in the SNR and
interstellar gas or radiation fields adjacent to the shock regions. The decay
of neutral pions produced in nucleon-nucleon interactions between accelerated
hadrons and interstellar gas provides a reasonable explanation for the
gamma-ray spectrum.Comment: accepted by ApJ, 34 pages, 6 figure
CHEOPS launch in 2019! – Payload Capabilities and In-Orbit Commissioning Preview
ESA Science Programme Committee (SPC) selected CHEOPS as the first small class science mission in 2012. CHEOPS is considered as a pilot case for the implementation of “small science missions” and its success is key for the continuation of fast-paced, small missions. The mission has been developed and brought into a flight readiness state within 5-6 years from selection, which is about half the time of other ESA missions. This paper focuses on the CHEOPS payload and its predicted capabilities. The 300mm effective aperture Ritchey-Chretien telescope provided by the CHEOPS consortium has been tested and characterized on ground in a 2 months calibration campaign after the qualification for flight. The results have led to performance estimations, which are discussed here. We show that the performance requirements in flight are expected to be met by the instrument. A preview is given towards the 2 months lasting In Orbit Commissioning (IOC) phase of the CHEOPS payload after LEOP and platform check-out. The activities in orbit range from dark current measurements, PSF characterization and parasitic stray light determination to AOCS and instrument performance verifications to science validation using reference transits
Standardized Hepatitis B Virus RNA Quantification in Untreated and Treated Chronic Patients: a Promising Marker of Infection Follow-Up.
The measurement and interpretation of HBV DNA and RNA levels in HBV infected patients treated with antiviral therapy supports the objective of HBV disease management. Here, we quantified circulating HBV RNA through a standardized and sensitive assay in follow-up samples from both naive and treated patients as a marker of infection evolution. HBV DNA (HBV DNA for use in Cobas 6800/8800 Automated Roche Molecular Systems), RNA (Roche HBV RNA Investigational Assay for use in the Cobas 6800/8800; Roche), HBeAg and HBsAg (Elycsys HBsAg chemiluminescence immunoassay by Cobas 8000; Roche), and core-related antigen (Lumipulse G chemiluminescence assay; Fujirebio) levels were measured in cohorts of untreated or nucleos(t)ide treated, HBV-infected subjects in an outpatient hospital setting. HBV DNA levels in untreated people were 3.6 log10 higher than corresponding RNA levels and were stable over 5 years of observation. While only five of 52 treated patients had DNA levels below the lower limit of quantification (10 IU/mL) at the end of follow-up, 13 had HBV RNA levels persistently above this limit, including eight with undetectable DNA. In samples with undetectable core-related antigen we observed a median HBsAg titer 2.7-fold higher than in samples with undetectable RNA (adjusted P = 0.012). Detectable HBV RNA with undetectable HBV DNA was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL (P = 0.03). In naive patients the difference between HBV DNA and RNA was higher than previously reported. HBV RNA rapidly decreased during treatment. However, in some cases, it was detectable even after years of effective therapy, being a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease. The investigational RNA assay for use on the Cobas 6800/8800 instruments is a sensitive and standardized method that could be applied in general management of HBV infection. IMPORTANCE This study focused on the quantification of circulating HBV RNA by using a standardized and sensitive assay. Thanks to this system we observed a higher difference between circulating HBV DNA and RNA than previously reported. In treated patients, HBV RNA decreased together with DNA, although some patients presented detectable levels even after years of successful antiviral treatment, suggesting a persistent viral transcription. Of note, the detection of viral RNA when HBV DNA is undetectable was a negative predictor of HBsAg decrease to a level ≤100 IU/mL. This assay could be extremely helpful in HBV patients management to study viral transcription and to identify those treated patients that may achieve sustained viral suppression
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