813 research outputs found
Discharge kinetics and emission characteristics of a large-area-cold cathode flash X-ray tube: parametric study and numerical modelling.
A pulsed X-ray tube is described which consists of a large-area (80-400 cm2) cold carbon felt cathode and a tantalum foil anode arranged in transmission geometry. It is driven by a Marx generator with an output voltage between 60 and 140 kV. The dose and the dose rate of the X-ray flash together with the diode current are studied as a function of anode-cathode distance, the cathode area and the charging voltage. The tube characteristics are numerically well described by a simple model which considers cathode plasma migration and a space-charge limited current in the remaining vacuum gap
Feasibility of a laboratory X-ray laser pumped by ultrashort UV laser pulses.
In order to allow widespread application of soft X-ray lasers there is a strong effort worldwide to use as small as possible pump lasers for plasma production. Short pulse lasers (τ ≈ 1 ps), particularly in the UV, have attracted much interest, since extremely high intensities (up to 1018 W/cm2) can be achieved with a relatively high repetition rate. In this article we discuss their merit for soft X-ray laser pumping and possible solutions to the specific problems, for instance pulse front distortion, nonlinear absorption in window materials, plasma formation by short laser pulses and the relatively low total pump energy
Quantifying Golgi structure using EM : combining volume-SEM and stereology for higher throughput
John Lucocq was supported by a Programme grant from the Wellcome Trust (Number 045404). Sophie Ferguson was a recipient of a 600th anniversary studentship from the University of St Andrews.Investigating organelles such as the Golgi complex depends increasingly on high-throughput quantitative morphological analyses from multiple experimental or genetic conditions. Light microscopy (LM) has been an effective tool for screening but fails to reveal fine details of Golgi structures such as vesicles, tubules and cisternae. Electron microscopy (EM) has sufficient resolution but traditional transmission EM (TEM) methods are slow and inefficient. Newer volume scanning EM (volume-SEM) methods now have the potential to speed up 3D analysis by automated sectioning and imaging. However, they produce large arrays of sections and/or images, which require labour-intensive 3D reconstruction for quantitation on limited cell numbers. Here, we show that the information storage, digital waste and workload involved in using volume-SEM can be reduced substantially using sampling-based stereology. Using the Golgi as an example, we describe how Golgi populations can be sensed quantitatively using single random slices and how accurate quantitative structural data on Golgi organelles of individual cells can be obtained using only 5–10 sections/images taken from a volume-SEM series (thereby sensing population parameters and cell–cell variability). The approach will be useful in techniques such as correlative LM and EM (CLEM) where small samples of cells are treated and where there may be variable responses. For Golgi study, we outline a series of stereological estimators that are suited to these analyses and suggest workflows, which have the potential to enhance the speed and relevance of data acquisition in volume-SEM.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Accelerating the timeline for climate action in California
The climate emergency increasingly threatens our communities, ecosystems,
food production, health, and economy. It disproportionately impacts lower
income communities, communities of color, and the elderly. Assessments since
the 2018 IPCC 1.5 Celsius report show that current national and sub-national
commitments and actions are insufficient. Fortunately, a suite of solutions
exists now to mitigate the climate crisis if we initiate and sustain actions
today. California, which has a strong set of current targets in place and is
home to clean energy and high technology innovation, has fallen behind in its
climate ambition compared to a number of major governments. California, a
catalyst for climate action globally, can and should ramp up its leadership by
aligning its climate goals with the most recent science, coordinating actions
to make 2030 a point of significant accomplishment. This entails dramatically
accelerating its carbon neutrality and net-negative emissions goal from 2045 to
2030, including advancing clean energy and clean transportation standards, and
accelerating nature-based solutions on natural and working lands. It also means
changing its current greenhouse gas reduction goals both in the percentage and
the timing: cutting emissions by 80 percent (instead of 40 percent) below 1990
levels much closer to 2030 than 2050. These actions will enable California to
save lives, benefit underserved and frontline communities, and save trillions
of dollars. This rededication takes heed of the latest science, accelerating
equitable, job-creating climate policies. While there are significant
challenges to achieving these goals, California can establish policy now that
will unleash innovation and channel market forces, as has happened with solar,
and catalyze positive upward-scaling tipping points for accelerated global
climate action.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
CLEMSite, a software for automated phenotypic screens using light microscopy and FIB-SEM
This work was supported by EMBL funds and by by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – Project number 240245660 – SFB 1129 (project Z2).In recent years, Focused Ion Beam Scanning Electron Microscopy (FIB-SEM) has emerged as a flexible method that enables semi-automated volume ultrastructural imaging. We present a toolset for adherent cells that enables tracking and finding cells, previously identified in light microscopy (LM), in the FIB-SEM, along with the automatic acquisition of high-resolution volume datasets. We detect the underlying grid pattern in both modalities (LM and EM), to identify common reference points. A combination of computer vision techniques enables complete automation of the workflow. This includes setting the coincidence point of both ion and electron beams, automated evaluation of the image quality and constantly tracking the sample position with the microscope’s field of view reducing or even eliminating operator supervision. We show the ability to target the regions of interest in EM within 5 µm accuracy while iterating between different targets and implementing unattended data acquisition. Our results demonstrate that executing volume acquisition in multiple locations autonomously is possible in EM.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Functional behaviour of TiO2films doped with noble metals
To evaluate the effects of different concentrations of noble metal in a TiO2 matrix, different films
of both Ag:TiO2 and Au:TiO2 systems were prepared. Mechanical and tribological
characterization was carried out to evaluate the coatings response as a function of the noble metals
composition and (micro)structure of the films. The overall set of results indicates that the
amorphous films reveal better results than the crystalline ones. For the amorphous samples, the reduced Young’s modulus and the adhesion critical loads followed similar tendencies in both sets
of films. Wear rates were similar for all samples except for the one with the highest silver content.
To improve brittleness of TiO2 films, the results seem to indicate that a slight metal doping is
preferred, and Au showed to be a better choice than Ag. In fact, the sample with the lowest Au
content revealed a better mechanical behaviour than the pure TiO2 film.This research was sponsored by FEDER funds through the COMPETE program (Programa
Operacional Factores de Competitividade) and by FCT (Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia),
under the projects PEST-C/FIS/UI607/2013 and PEst-C/EME/UI0285/2013. The authors also
acknowledge the financial support by the project Nano4color – Design and develop a new
generation of color PVD coatings for decorative applications (FP7 EC R4SME Project No.
315286)
White matter integrity in mice requires continuous myelin synthesis at the inner tongue
Myelin, the electrically insulating sheath on axons, undergoes dynamic changes over time. However, it is composed of proteins with long lifetimes. This raises the question how such a stable structure is renewed. Here, we study the integrity of myelinated tracts after experi- mentally preventing the formation of new myelin in the CNS of adult mice, using an inducible Mbp null allele. Oligodendrocytes survive recombination, continue to express myelin genes, but they fail to maintain compacted myelin sheaths. Using 3D electron microscopy and mass spectrometry imaging we visualize myelin-like membranes failing to incorporate adaxonally, most prominently at juxta-paranodes. Myelinoid body formation indicates degradation of existing myelin at the abaxonal side and the inner tongue of the sheath. Thinning of compact myelin and shortening of internodes result in the loss of about 50% of myelin and axonal pathology within 20 weeks post recombination. In summary, our data suggest that functional axon-myelin units require the continuous incorporation of new myelin membranes
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