68 research outputs found
Measurement of the KL meson lifetime with the KLOE detector
We present a measurement of the KL lifetime using the KLOE detector. From a
sample of 4 x 10^8 KS KL pairs following the reaction e+ e- -> phi -> KS KL we
select 15 x 10^6 KL -> p0 p0 p0 decays tagged by KS -> pi+ pi- events. From a
fit of the proper time distribution we find tau_L = (50.92 +- 0.17{stat} +-
0.25{syst})$ ns. This is the most precise measurement of the KL lifetime
performed to date.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
New Hybrid Properties of TiO2 Nanoparticles Surface Modified With Catecholate Type Ligands
Surface modification of nanocrystalline TiO2 particles (45 Ă
) with bidentate benzene derivatives (catechol, pyrogallol, and gallic acid) was found to alter optical properties of nanoparticles. The formation of the inner-sphere chargeâtransfer complexes results in a red shift of the semiconductor absorption compared to unmodified nanocrystallites. The binding structures were investigated by using FTIR spectroscopy. The investigated ligands have the optimal geometry for chelating surface Ti atoms, resulting in ring coordination complexes (catecholate type of binuclear bidentate bindingâbridging) thus restoring in six-coordinated octahedral geometry of surface Ti atoms. From the BenesiâHildebrand plot, the stability constants at pH 2 of the order 103 Mâ1 have been determined
Patient and caregiver involvement in the formulation of guideline questions: findings from the European Academy of Neurology guideline on palliative care of people with severe multiple sclerosis
Background and purpose: Patient and public involvement in clinical practice guideline development is recommended to increase guideline trustworthiness and relevance. The aim was to engage multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and caregivers in the definition of the key questions to be answered in the European Academy of Neurology guideline on palliative care of people with severe MS. Methods: A mixed methods approach was used: an international online survey launched by the national MS societies of eight countries, after pilot testing/debriefing on 20 MS patients and 18 caregivers, focus group meetings of Italian and German MS patients and caregivers. Results: Of 1199 participants, 951 (79%) completed the whole online survey and 934 from seven countries were analysed: 751 (80%) were MS patients (74% women, mean age 46.1) and 183 (20%) were caregivers (36% spouses/partners, 72% women, mean age 47.4). Participants agreed/strongly agreed on inclusion of the nine pre-specified topics (from 89% for âadvance care planningâ to 98% for âmultidisciplinary rehabilitationâ), and <5% replied âI prefer not to answerâ to any topic. There were 569 free comments: 182 (32%) on the pre-specified topics, 227 (40%) on additional topics (16 guideline-pertinent) and 160 (28%) on outcomes. Five focus group meetings (three of MS patients, two of caregivers, and overall 35 participants) corroborated the survey findings. In addition, they allowed an explanation of the guideline production process and the exploration of patient-important outcomes and of taxing issues. Conclusions: Multiple sclerosis patient and caregiver involvement was resource and time intensive, but rewarding. It was the key for the formulation of the 10 guideline questions and for the identification of patient-important outcomes
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