8,767 research outputs found
Magnetic induction plasma engine Final report
Wall interaction reduction in magnetic induction plasma accelerato
Feasibility of Photofrin II as a radiosensitizing agent in solid tumors - Preliminary results
Background: Photofrin II has been demonstrated to serve as a specific and selective radiosensitizing agent in in vitro and in vivo tumor models. We aimed to investigate the feasibility of a clinical application of Photofrin II. Material and Methods: 12 patients were included in the study (7 unresectable solid tumors of the pelvic region, 3 malignant gliomas, 1 recurrent oropharyngeal cancer, 1 recurrent adenocarcinoma of the sphenoid sinus). The dose of ionizing irradiation was 30-50.4 Gy; a boost irradiation of 14 Gy was added for the pelvic region. All patients were intravenously injected with 1 mg/kg Photofrin II 24 h prior to the commencement of radiotherapy. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) controls and in some cases positron emission tomography (PET) were performed in short intervals. The mean follow-up was 12.9 months. Results: No major adverse events were noted. Minor adverse events consisted of mild diarrhea, nausea and skin reactions. A complete remission was observed in 4/12 patients. A reduction in local tumor volume of > 45% was achieved in 4/12 patients. Stable disease was observed in 4/12 patients. 1 patient showed local disease progression after 5 months. Conclusion: The early follow-up results are encouraging regarding the feasibility of the application of Photofrin II as a radiosensitizing agent
Mass modification of D-meson in hot hadronic matter
We evaluate the in-medium and -meson masses in hot hadronic
matter induced by interactions with the light hadron sector described in a
chiral SU(3) model. The effective Lagrangian approach is generalized to SU(4)
to include charmed mesons. We find that the D-mass drops substantially at
finite temperatures and densities, which open the channels of the decay of the
charmonium states (, , ) to pairs in
the thermal medium. The effects of vacuum polarisations from the baryon sector
on the medium modification of the -meson mass relative to those obtained in
the mean field approximation are investigated. The results of the present work
are compared to calculations based on the QCD sum-rule approach, the
quark-meson coupling model, chiral perturbation theory, as well as to studies
of quarkonium dissociation using heavy quark potential from lattice QCD.Comment: 18 pages including 7 figures, minor revision of the text, figure
styles modified, to appear in Phys. Rev.
A measurement of CMB cluster lensing with SPT and DES year 1 data
Clusters of galaxies gravitationally lens the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, resulting in a distinct imprint in the CMB on arcminute scales. Measurement of this effect offers a promising way to constrain the masses of galaxy clusters, particularly those at high redshift. We use CMB maps from the South Pole Telescope Sunyaev–Zel'dovich (SZ) survey to measure the CMB lensing signal around galaxy clusters identified in optical imaging from first year observations of the Dark Energy Survey. The cluster catalogue used in this analysis contains 3697 members with mean redshift of z = 0.45. We detect lensing of the CMB by the galaxy clusters at 8.1σ significance. Using the measured lensing signal, we constrain the amplitude of the relation between cluster mass and optical richness to roughly 17 percent precision, finding good agreement with recent constraints obtained with galaxy lensing. The error budget is dominated by statistical noise but includes significant contributions from systematic biases due to the thermal SZ effect and cluster miscentring
Local stabilisation of polar order at charged antiphase boundaries in antiferroelectric (Bi<sub>0.85</sub>Nd<sub>0.15</sub>)(Ti<sub>0.1</sub>Fe<sub>0.9</sub>)O<sub>3</sub>
Observation of an unusual, negatively-charged antiphase boundary in (Bi<sub>0.85</sub>Nd<sub>0.15</sub>)(Ti<sub>0.1</sub>Fe<sub>0.9</sub>)O<sub>3</sub> is reported. Aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy is used to establish the full three dimensional structure of this boundary including O-ion positions to ~ ± 10 pm. The charged antiphase boundary stabilises tetragonally distorted regions with a strong polar ordering to either side of the boundary, with a characteristic length scale determined by the excess charge trapped at the boundary. Far away from the boundary the crystal relaxes into the well-known Nd-stabilised antiferroelectric phase
Can gender categorization influence the perception of animated virtual humans?
Animations have become increasingly realistic with the evolution of Computer
Graphics (CG). In particular, human models and behaviors were represented
through animated virtual humans, sometimes with a high level of realism. In
particular, gender is a characteristic that is related to human identification,
so that virtual humans assigned to a specific gender have, in general,
stereotyped representations through movements, clothes, hair and colors, in
order to be understood by users as desired by designers. An important area of
study is finding out whether participants' perceptions change depending on how
a virtual human is visually presented. Findings in this area can help the
industry to guide the modeling and animation of virtual humans to deliver the
expected impact to the audience. In this paper, we reproduce, through CG, a
perceptual study that aims to assess gender bias in relation to a simulated
baby. In the original study, two groups of people watched the same video of a
baby reacting to the same stimuli, but one group was told the baby was female
and the other group was told the same baby was male, producing different
perceptions. The results of our study with virtual babies were similar to the
findings with real babies. First, it shows that people's emotional response
change depending on the character gender attribute, in this case the only
difference was the baby's name. Our research indicates that by just informing
the name of a virtual human can be enough to create a gender perception that
impact the participant emotional answer.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, 2 table
Benefit-cost methodology study with example application of the use of wind generators
An example application for cost-benefit methodology is presented for the use of wind generators. The approach adopted for the example application consisted of the following activities: (1) surveying of the available wind data and wind power system information, (2) developing models which quantitatively described wind distributions, wind power systems, and cost-benefit differences between conventional systems and wind power systems, and (3) applying the cost-benefit methodology to compare a conventional electrical energy generation system with systems which included wind power generators. Wind speed distribution data were obtained from sites throughout the contiguous United States and were used to compute plant factor contours shown on an annual and seasonal basis. Plant factor values (ratio of average output power to rated power) are found to be as high as 0.6 (on an annual average basis) in portions of the central U. S. and in sections of the New England coastal area. Two types of wind power systems were selected for the application of the cost-benefit methodology. A cost-benefit model was designed and implemented on a computer to establish a practical tool for studying the relative costs and benefits of wind power systems under a variety of conditions and to efficiently and effectively perform associated sensitivity analyses
QCD Corrections to Production of Higgs Pseudoscalars
Models of electroweak symmetry breaking with more than a single doublet of
Higgs scalars contain a neutral pseudoscalar boson. The production of such a
pseudoscalar in hadron collisions proceeds primarily via gluon fusion through a
top-quark loop (except for those models in which the pseudoscalar coupling to
bottom quarks is strongly enhanced). We compute the QCD corrections to this
process in the heavy-quark limit, using an effective Lagrangian derived from
the axial anomaly.Comment: 9 pages, (BNL number added, 1 typo corrected, PHYZZX format, 4
figures not included, available on request), BNL-4906
Typical-Medium Theory of Mott-Anderson Localization
The Mott and the Anderson routes to localization have long been recognized as
the two basic processes that can drive the metal-insulator transition (MIT).
Theories separately describing each of these mechanisms were discussed long
ago, but an accepted approach that can include both has remained elusive. The
lack of any obvious static symmetry distinguishing the metal from the insulator
poses another fundamental problem, since an appropriate static order parameter
cannot be easily found. More recent work, however, has revisited the original
arguments of Anderson and Mott, which stressed that the key diference between
the metal end the insulator lies in the dynamics of the electron. This physical
picture has suggested that the "typical" (geometrically averaged) escape rate
from a given lattice site should be regarded as the proper dynamical order
parameter for the MIT, one that can naturally describe both the Anderson and
the Mott mechanism for localization. This article provides an overview of the
recent results obtained from the corresponding Typical-Medium Theory, which
provided new insight into the the two-fluid character of the Mott-Anderson
transition.Comment: to be published in "Fifty Years of Anderson localization", edited by
E. Abrahams (World Scientific, Singapore, 2010); 29 pages, 22 figures
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