12 research outputs found

    A comprehensive overview of radioguided surgery using gamma detection probe technology

    Get PDF
    The concept of radioguided surgery, which was first developed some 60 years ago, involves the use of a radiation detection probe system for the intraoperative detection of radionuclides. The use of gamma detection probe technology in radioguided surgery has tremendously expanded and has evolved into what is now considered an established discipline within the practice of surgery, revolutionizing the surgical management of many malignancies, including breast cancer, melanoma, and colorectal cancer, as well as the surgical management of parathyroid disease. The impact of radioguided surgery on the surgical management of cancer patients includes providing vital and real-time information to the surgeon regarding the location and extent of disease, as well as regarding the assessment of surgical resection margins. Additionally, it has allowed the surgeon to minimize the surgical invasiveness of many diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, while still maintaining maximum benefit to the cancer patient. In the current review, we have attempted to comprehensively evaluate the history, technical aspects, and clinical applications of radioguided surgery using gamma detection probe technology

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z ~ 1: Pressure profile and YSZ – M relation

    Get PDF
    Three galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z ~ 1 and M500 ~ 1 – 2 × 1014 M⊙) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z ~ 1 down to M500 ~ 1014 M⊙

    Surface circulation in the AlborĂĄn Sea (western Mediterranean) inferred from remotely sensed data

    No full text
    In this study, for the first time at regional scale, the combined use of remote sensing data (altimetry and sea surface temperature records) provides a description of the persistent, recurrent and transient circulation regimes of the Alboran Sea circulation. The analysis of 936 altimeter-derived weekly absolute dynamic topography (ADT) and surface geostrophic current maps for 1993-2010 reveals the presence of a dominant annual signal and of two interannual modes of variability. The winter-spring phase is characterized by two stable gyral scale features; the well-known Western Anticyclonic Gyre within the western area and the Central Cyclonic Gyre, a new structure not identified in former studies, occupying the central and eastern parts of the Alboran Sea. A double anticyclonic gyre regime constitutes the stable circulation system of the summer-autumn period when the Eastern Anticyclonic Gyre is formed within the eastern Alboran basin. In this case, the Central Cyclonic Gyre is narrower and located closer to the Western Anticyclonic Gyre. They represent two stable states of the system, robust at the decadal time scale, whereas transient changes reflect perturbations on these stable states and are mainly observed at an interannual scale. The circulation variability and the gyral features development may be dynamically linked to the corresponding changes of the Gibraltar transport rates

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    No full text
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}

    NIKA2 observations of 3 low-mass galaxy clusters at z∌1z \sim 1: pressure profile and YSZY_{\rm SZ}-MM relation

    Get PDF
    International audienceThree galaxy clusters selected from the XXL X-ray survey at high redshift and low mass (z∌1z\sim1 and M500∌1−2×1014M_{500} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}) were observed with NIKA2 to image their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZ) signal. They all present an SZ morphology, together with the comparison with X-ray and optical data, that indicates dynamical activity related to merging events. Despite their disturbed intracluster medium, their high redshifts, and their low masses, the three clusters follow remarkably well the pressure profile and the SZ flux-mass relation expected from standard evolution. This suggests that the physics that drives cluster formation is already in place at z∌1z \sim 1 down to M500∌1014M_{500} \sim 10^{14} M⊙_{\odot}
    corecore