1,961 research outputs found
Tests of Transfer Reaction Determinations of Astrophysical S-Factors
The reaction has been used to determine
asymptotic normalization coefficients for transitions to the ground and first
excited states of . The coefficients provide the normalization for
the tails of the overlap functions for and allow us
to calculate the S-factors for at astrophysical
energies. The calculated S-factors are compared to measurements and found to be
in very good agreement. This provides the first test of this indirect method to
determine astrophysical direct capture rates using transfer reactions. In
addition, our results yield S(0) for capture to the ground and first excited
states in , without the uncertainty associated with extrapolation from
higher energies.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Convergence and stability theorems for the Picard-Mann hybrid iterative scheme for a general class of contractive-like operators
In this paper we use the general class of contractive-like operators introduced by
Bosede and Rhoades (J. Adv. Math. Stud. 3(2):1-3, 2010) to prove strong convergence
and stability results for Picard-Mann hybrid iterative schemes considered in a real
normed linear space. We establish the strong convergence and stability of the Picard
iterative scheme as a corollary. Our results generalize and improve a multitude of
results in the literature, including the recent results of Chidume (Fixed Point Theory
Appl. 2014:233, 2014)
Conformational changes of calmodulin upon Ca2+ binding studied with a microfluidic mixer
A microfluidic mixer is applied to study the kinetics of calmodulin conformational changes upon Ca2+ binding. The device facilitates rapid, uniform mixing by decoupling hydrodynamic focusing from diffusive mixing and accesses time scales of tens of microseconds. The mixer is used in conjunction with multiphoton microscopy to examine the fast Ca2+-induced transitions of acrylodan-labeled calmodulin. We find that the kinetic rates of the conformational changes in two homologous globular domains differ by more than an order of magnitude. The characteristic time constants are â490 ÎŒs for the transitions in the C-terminal domain and â20 ms for those in the N-terminal domain of the protein. We discuss possible mechanisms for the two distinct events and the biological role of the stable intermediate, half-saturated calmodulin
Asymptotic Normalization Coefficients for 13C+p->14N
The proton exchange reaction has been measured
at an incident energy of 162 MeV. Angular distributions were obtained for
proton transfer to the ground and low lying excited states in . Elastic
scattering of on also was measured out to the rainbow angle
region in order to find reliable optical model potentials. Asymptotic
normalization coefficients for the system have been
found for the ground state and the excited states at 2.313, 3.948, 5.106 and
5.834 MeV in . These asymptotic normalization coefficients will be used
in a determination of the S-factor for at solar
energies from a measurement of the proton transfer reaction
.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
A new algorithm for anisotropic solutions
We establish a new algorithm that generates a new solution to the Einstein
field equations, with an anisotropic matter distribution, from a seed isotropic
solution. The new solution is expressed in terms of integrals of an isotropic
gravitational potential; and the integration can be completed exactly for
particular isotropic seed metrics. A good feature of our approach is that the
anisotropic solutions necessarily have an isotropic limit. We find two examples
of anisotropic solutions which generalise the isothermal sphere and the
Schwarzschild interior sphere. Both examples are expressed in closed form
involving elementary functions only.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in Pramana - J. Phy
Collective Modes of Tri-Nuclear Molecules
A geometrical model for tri-nuclear molecules is presented. An analytical
solution is obtained provided the nuclei, which are taken to be prolately
deformed, are connected in line to each other. Furthermore, the tri-nuclear
molecule is composed of two heavy and one light cluster, the later sandwiched
between the two heavy clusters. A basis is constructed in which Hamiltonians of
more general configurations can be diagonalized. In the calculation of the
interaction between the clusters higher multipole deformations are taken into
account, including the hexadecupole one. A repulsive nuclear core is introduced
in the potential in order to insure a quasi-stable configuration of the system.
The model is applied to three nuclear molecules, namely Sr + Be +
Ba, Mo + Be + Te and Ru + Be +
Sn.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure
Weighing Super-Massive Black Holes with Narrow Fe K Line
It has been suggested that the narrow cores of the Fe K emission
lines in Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) are likely produced in the torus, the
inner radius of which can be measured by observing the lag time between the
and band flux variations. In this paper we compare the virial products of
the infrared time lags and the narrow Fe K widths for 10 type 1 AGNs
with the black hole masses from other techniques. We find the narrow Fe
K line width is in average 2.6 times broader than
expected assuming an isotropic velocity distribution of the torus at the
distance measured by the infrared lags. We propose the thick disk model of the
torus could explain the observed larger line width. Another possibility is the
contamination by emission from the broad line region or the outer accretion
disk. Alternatively, the narrow iron line might originate from the inner most
part of the obscuring torus within the sublimation radius, while the infrared
emission from outer cooler part. We note the correlation between the black hole
masses based on this new technique and those based on other known techniques is
statistically insignificant. We argue that this could be attributed to the
small sample size and the very large uncertainties in the measurements of iron
K line widths. The next generation of X-ray observatories could help verify the
origin of the narrow iron K line and the reliability of this new
technique.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, Science China G, in pres
Higher Order Processes in Electromagnetic Production of Electron Positron Pairs in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
We study higher-order effects in the electromagnetic production of
electron-positron pairs in relativistic heavy ion collisions. Treating the
field of the heavy ions as an external field and neglecting the interaction
among electrons and positrons, we show that the -pair creation amplitude is
the antisymmetrised product of one-pair creation amplitudes and the vacuum
amplitude. Neglecting contributions coming from exchange terms, we show that
the total probability for pairs is approximately a Poisson distribution. We
investigate further the structure of the reduced one-pair amplitude,
concentrating especially on multiple-particle corrections. We calculate the
first of these corrections in second order Magnus theory based on our previous
result in second-order Born approximation for impact parameter zero.
Explicit calculations show that the total probability is increased up to 10 \%
by this correction for realistic collider parameters. The calculations can also
be used to confirm the use of the Poisson distribution for the total
probability.Comment: 29 pages RevTeX and 12 uuencoded figures (compressed postscript
Combined systemic and ocular chemotherapy for anterior segment metastasis of systemic mantle cell lymphoma.
BACKGROUND: Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an aggressive subtype of non-Hodgkin\u27s lymphoma that rarely metastasizes to the iris and the anterior segment. Blastic/pleomorphic morphology is thought to have an adverse effect on prognosis in MCL. MCL is resistant to conventional chemotherapeutic regimens with a tendency for multiple relapses. Management of anterior segment metastasis of systemic MCL has not been described in literature.
FINDINGS: A 58-year-old male presented with an aggressive, relapsing, metastatic, systemic blastic variant of MCL with ocular involvement. At the time of initial presentation, large tumor cells were visible in the anterior chamber (AC) along with hypopyon and fibrin. The AC cells stained positively for CD20. The iris was thickened and coated with lymphoma cells. Iris neovascularization was present. Given extensive systemic and ocular involvement, the patient was given combination chemotherapy with systemic ibrutinib and intravitreal injections of methotrexate and rituximab. The disease response was monitored using multimodal imaging, including anterior segment optical coherence tomography and ultrasound biomicroscopy. Following combination of systemic and intraocular chemotherapy, there was a marked decrease in the ocular tumor load and the systemic disease.
CONCLUSIONS: Combination therapy with intravitreal injections of chemotherapeutic agents targeting monoclonal B-cell population and novel systemic agents may help to achieve remission in anterior segment metastasis of aggressive subtypes of NHL such as blastic variant of MCL. Multimodal imaging may assist in the management of these cases
- âŠ