10,820 research outputs found
Status Report on the Low-Energy Demonstration Accelerator (LEDA)
The 75-keV injector and 6.7-MeV RFQ that comprise the first portion of the
cw, 100-mA proton linac for the accelerator production of tritium (APT) project
have been built and operated. The LEDA RFQ has been extensively tested for
pulsed and cw output-beam currents <=100 mA. Up to 2.2 MW of cw rf power from
the 350-MHz rf system is coupled into the RFQ, including 670 kW for the cw
proton beam. The emittance for a 93-mA pulsed RFQ output beam, as determined
from quadrupole-magnet-scan measurements, is ex x ey = 0.25 x 0.31 (pi mm
mrad)2 [rms normalized]. A follow-on experiment, to intentionally introduce and
measure beam halo on the RFQ output beam, is now being installed.Comment: Paper TUD14 for the XX International Linac Conference (LINAC2000), 3
pages, 10 figure
Reconstruction of Cluster Masses using Particle Based Lensing I: Application to Weak Lensing
We present Particle-Based Lensing (PBL), a new technique for gravitational
lensing mass reconstructions of galaxy clusters. Traditionally, most methods
have employed either a finite inversion or gridding to turn observational
lensed galaxy ellipticities into an estimate of the surface mass density of a
galaxy cluster. We approach the problem from a different perspective, motivated
by the success of multi-scale analysis in smoothed particle hydrodynamics. In
PBL, we treat each of the lensed galaxies as a particle and then reconstruct
the potential by smoothing over a local kernel with variable smoothing scale.
In this way, we can tune a reconstruction to produce constant signal-noise
throughout, and maximally exploit regions of high information density.
PBL is designed to include all lensing observables, including multiple image
positions and fluxes from strong lensing, as well as weak lensing signals
including shear and flexion. In this paper, however, we describe a shear-only
reconstruction, and apply the method to several test cases, including simulated
lensing clusters, as well as the well-studied ``Bullet Cluster'' (1E0657-56).
In the former cases, we show that PBL is better able to identify cusps and
substructures than are grid-based reconstructions, and in the latter case, we
show that PBL is able to identify substructure in the Bullet Cluster without
even exploiting strong lensing measurements. We also make our codes publicly
available.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; Codes available at
http://www.physics.drexel.edu/~deb/PBL.htm ; 12 pages,9 figures, section 3
shortene
The Independence of Signaling Pathways Mediating Increased Expression of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor Type 1 in HepG2 Cells Exposed to Free Fatty Acids or Triglycerides
We have shown that both free fatty acids (FFA)
and triglycerides (TG) increase expression of
plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1)
in vivo and in vitro. To determine signaling
mechanisms responsible, HepG2 cells were
exposed to FFA, emulsified TG, or the combination.
The combination of FFA and TG
increased PAI-1 to a greater extent than either
agent alone (fold induction: 0.45mM FFA
1.7±0.2, 1000mg/dl TG 1.9±0.1, both 2.3±0.2,
n=10, p<0.05 for comparison of combination
with either alone). Cells transfected with PAI-1
5' flanking region containing the 4G or 5G
polymorphism displayed similar activity in
response to FFA, but modestly greater activity
with the 4G polymorphism in response to TG
(fold induction: 5G-1.28±0.14 and 4G-
1.46±0.13, n=6, p<0.05 for comparison).
Deletion analyses demonstrated that FFA and
TG induce PAI-1 expression through distinct
regions of the promoter. Inhibition of protein
kinase C inhibited the response to FFA but not
TG. Accordingly, increased FFA and TG contribute
to increased PAI- I through independent
mechanisms
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