282 research outputs found
Neutron Streaming Through Labyrinth from a Cyclotron Room
開始ページ、終了ページ: 冊子体のページ付
Synthesis and properties of radiopaque polymer hydrogels: polyion complexes of copolymers of acrylamide derivatives having triiodophenyl and carboxyl groups and p-styrene sulfonate and polyallylamine
In order to pursue a possibility of application of radiopaque polymer hydrogels to vascular embolization, studies were done on synthesis of iodine-containing copolyanions and properties of their hydrogels with polycation via formation of polyion complexes. Acrylamide derivatives having triiodophenyl and carboxyl groups were synthesized and copolymerized with sodium styrene sulfonate at various molar ratios of initiator to monomer and temperatures. Hydrogels were prepared by mixing aqueous solutions of the obtained radiopaque copolyanions and polyallylamine. Embolization was examined by injection of these hydrogels into vein of a removed porcine kidney as a preliminary test for transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) for hepatocellular carcinoma. It was found that the hydrogels prepared from the copolycation obtained under particular conditions give high X-ray contrasts of the vein and remained there, though copolycations with low molecular weights had a tendency to drain through the capillaries to the peripheral tissues. It is therefore concluded that the hydrogels examined in the present study are promising for vascular embolization
Nonmagnetic-Defect-Induced Magnetism in Graphene
It is shown that a strong impurity potential induces short-range
antiferromagnetic (ferrimagnetic) order around itself in a Hubbard model on a
half-filled honeycomb lattice. This implies that short-range magnetic order is
induced in monolayer graphene by a nonmagnetic defect such as a vacancy with
full hydrogen termination or a chemisorption defect.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figure
Room-temperature ferromagnetism in graphite driven by 2D networks of point defects
Ferromagnetism in carbon-based materials is appealing for both applications
and fundamental science purposes because carbon is a light and bio-compatible
material that contains only s and p electrons in contrast to traditional
ferromagnets based on 3d or 4f electrons. Here we demonstrate direct evidence
for ferromagnetic order locally at defect structures in highly oriented
pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) with magnetic force microscopy and in bulk
magnetization measurements at room temperature. Magnetic impurities have been
excluded as the origin of the magnetic signal after careful analysis supporting
an intrinsic magnetic behavior of carbon. The observed ferromagnetism has been
attributed to originate from unpaired electron spins localized at grain
boundaries of HOPG. Grain boundaries form two-dimensional arrays of point
defects, where their spacing depends on the mutual orientation of two grains.
Depending on the distance between these point defects, scanning tunneling
spectroscopy of grain boundaries showed two intense split localized states for
small distances between defects (< 4 nm) and one localized state at the Fermi
level for large distances between defects (> 4 nm).Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Molecules participating in insect immunity of Sarcophaga peregrina
Pricking the body wall of Sarcophaga
peregrina (flesh fly) larvae with a needle activated the immune system of this insect and induced various immune molecules, including antibacterial proteins, in the hemolymph. In this review, I summarize and discuss the functions of these immune molecules, with particular emphasis on the dual roles of some of these molecules in defense and development
BINGO: A code for the efficient computation of the scalar bi-spectrum
We present a new and accurate Fortran code, the BI-spectra and
Non-Gaussianity Operator (BINGO), for the efficient numerical computation of
the scalar bi-spectrum and the non-Gaussianity parameter f_{NL} in single field
inflationary models involving the canonical scalar field. The code can
calculate all the different contributions to the bi-spectrum and the parameter
f_{NL} for an arbitrary triangular configuration of the wavevectors. Focusing
firstly on the equilateral limit, we illustrate the accuracy of BINGO by
comparing the results from the code with the spectral dependence of the
bi-spectrum expected in power law inflation. Then, considering an arbitrary
triangular configuration, we contrast the numerical results with the analytical
expression available in the slow roll limit, for, say, the case of the
conventional quadratic potential. Considering a non-trivial scenario involving
deviations from slow roll, we compare the results from the code with the
analytical results that have recently been obtained in the case of the
Starobinsky model in the equilateral limit. As an immediate application, we
utilize BINGO to examine of the power of the non-Gaussianity parameter f_{NL}
to discriminate between various inflationary models that admit departures from
slow roll and lead to similar features in the scalar power spectrum. We close
with a summary and discussion on the implications of the results we obtain.Comment: v1: 5 pages, 5 figures; v2: 35 pages, 11 figures, title changed,
extensively revised; v3: 36 pages, 11 figures, to appear in JCAP. The BINGO
code is available online at
http://www.physics.iitm.ac.in/~sriram/bingo/bingo.htm
Spin-half paramagnetism in graphene induced by point defects
Using magnetization measurements, we show that point defects in graphene -
fluorine adatoms and irradiation defects (vacancies) - carry magnetic moments
with spin 1/2. Both types of defects lead to notable paramagnetism but no
magnetic ordering could be detected down to liquid helium temperatures. The
induced paramagnetism dominates graphene's low-temperature magnetic properties
despite the fact that maximum response we could achieve was limited to one
moment per approximately 1000 carbon atoms. This limitation is explained by
clustering of adatoms and, for the case of vacancies, by losing graphene's
structural stability.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Self-reported sex differences in high-functioning adults with autism: a meta-analysis
Background: Sex differences in autistic symptomatology are believed to contribute to the mis- and missed diagnosis of many girls and women with an autism spectrum condition (ASC). Whilst recent years have seen the emergence of clinical and empirical reports delineating the profile of young autistic girls, recognition of sex differences in symptomatology in adulthood is far more limited. Methods: We chose here to focus on symptomatology as reported using a screening instrument, the Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale-Revised (RAADS-R). In a meta-analysis, we pooled and analysed RAADS-R data from a number of experimental groups. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) searched for the presence of main effects of Sex and Diagnosis and for interactions between these factors in our sample of autistic and non-autistic adults. Results: In social relatedness and circumscribed interests, main effects of Diagnosis revealed that as expected, autistic adults reported significantly greater lifetime prevalence of symptoms in these domains; an effect of Sex, in circumscribed interests, also suggested that males generally reported more prevalent symptoms than females. An interaction of Sex and Diagnosis in language symptomatology revealed that a normative sex difference in language difficulties was attenuated in autism. An interaction of Sex and Diagnosis in the sensorimotor domain revealed the opposite picture: a lack of sex differences between typically-developing men and women and a greater prevalence of sensorimotor symptoms in autistic women than autistic men. Conclusions: We discuss the literature on childhood sex differences in relation to those which emerged in our adult sample. Where childhood sex differences fail to persist in adulthood, several interpretations exist, and we discuss, for example, an inherent sampling bias that may mean that only autistic women most similar to the male presentation are diagnosed. The finding that sensorimotor symptomatology is more highly reported by autistic women is a finding requiring objective confirmation, given its potential importance in diagnosis
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