24 research outputs found
Plastome-wide rearrangements and gene losses in carnivorous Droseraceae
The plastid genomes of four related carnivorous plants (Drosera regia, Drosera erythrorhiza, Aldrovanda vesiculosa and Dionaea muscipula) were sequenced to examine changes potentially induced by the transition to carnivory. The plastid genomes of the Droseraceae show multiple rearrangements, gene losses and large expansions or contractions of the inverted repeat. All the ndh genes are lost or non-functional, as well as in some of the species, clpP1, ycf1, ycf2 and some tRNA genes. Uniquely amongst land plants, the trnK gene has no intron. Carnivory in the Droseraceae coincides with changes in plastid gene content similar to those induced by parasitism and mycoheterotrophy, suggesting parallel changes in chloroplast function due to the similar switch from autotrophy to (mixo-) heterotrophy. A molecular phylogeny of the taxa based on all shared plastid genes indicates that the ‘snap-traps’ of Aldrovanda and Dionaea have a common origin
Rotatorlike gantry optics
Rotating gantries are commonly used in ion-therapy facilities to assist and support optimizing the dose distribution delivered to the patient. They are installed at the end of the beamlines and rotated mechanically in the treatment room. In synchrotron-based facilities, the gantries must be able to transport slowly extracted beams with essentially different emittance patterns in the two transverse planes. Such beams will be referred to as the asymmetric beams. A special device called rotator has been proposed as a possible solution. The worldwide first beamline with the rotator has been recently commissioned. The original rotator concept uses an “external” rotator that is a part (a module) of the beamline the gantry is connected to. In this paper, a novel gantry ion-optical concept integrating the rotator optics into the gantry optics is introduced. The first-order gantry transfer matrix satisfies the so-called sigma-matching ion-optical constraints, and—at the same time—it possesses the format of a rotator transfer matrix. The rotator-matching and the sigma-matching principles are combined in the gantry transfer matrix, which means that the sigma-matching gantry acts simultaneously as a rotator without the need for an extra rotator device. In addition, scattering in the gantry nozzle is used to balance the asymmetric beam emittances in the two transverse planes without an additional scattering foil. In this way, the presented ion-optical concept combines all three known matching techniques—the sigma matching, the rotator matching, and the scattering-foil matching—within the gantry beam transport system. Such a beam transport system provides the best matching result and full angular independence of the beam parameters at the gantry isocenter. It also makes it possible to optimize the beam parameters not only at the gantry isocenter but also at the beam monitors located in the gantry nozzle without increasing the number of gantry quadrupoles. There are two possible versions of such gantry optics: the point-to-point and the parallel-to-point optics. They both are presented in this paper. Theoretical calculations are supported by beam transport simulations performed with the winagile code. Feasibility of the newly proposed ion-optical concept is demonstrated on the MedAustron proton gantry. However, it can be applied to any rotating gantry at any ion-therapy facility. The presented design is the first rotatorlike gantry ion-optical concept worldwide
Commissioning of a gantry beamline with rotator at a synchrotron-based ion therapy center
This paper provides an overview of the worldwide first commissioning of a gantry beamline with a rotator at the MedAustron synchrotron-based proton/ion cancer therapy facility in Wiener Neustadt, Austria. The gantry beamline consists of the high energy beam transfer (HEBT) line and the gantry beam transport system. It transports the beam from the synchrotron to the gantry-room isocenter. The HEBT transports the beam from the synchrotron to the gantry entrance, which is the coupling point between the HEBT and the gantry. The rotator is one of the HEBT modules, thus it is an integral part of the gantry beamline. The MedAustron rotator is the worldwide first rotator system used to match slowly extracted asymmetric beams from the synchrotron to the rotating gantry. In this paper, main attention is paid to ion-optical and beam-alignment aspects of the beamline commissioning. A novel orbit-correction and beam-alignment technique has been developed specifically for the beamline with the rotator. While the theoretical concept of the rotator has existed for almost two decades, the MedAustron rotator is the first hardware implementation of this concept all over the world. The presented overview of the beamline commissioning includes a description of the principal technical solutions and main results of the first beam-transport measurements. Since the measured beam size and beam position agree well with theoretical predictions, one can conclude that the proof-of-concept of the rotator-matching has been successfully accomplished