1,499 research outputs found
Phase Control of Nonlinear Breit-Wheeler Pair Creation
Electron-positron pair creation occurs throughout the universe in the
environments of extreme astrophysical objects, such as pulsar magnetospheres
and black hole accretion disks. The difficulty of emulating these environments
in the laboratory has motivated the use of ultrahigh-intensity laser pulses for
pair creation. Here we show that the phase offset between a laser pulse and its
second harmonic can be used to control the relative transverse motion of
electrons and positrons created in the nonlinear Breit-Wheeler process.
Analytic theory and particle-in-cell simulations of a head-on collision between
a two-color laser pulse and electron beam predict that with an appropriate
phase offset, the electrons will drift in one direction and the positrons in
the other. The resulting current may provide a collective signature of
nonlinear Breit-Wheeler, while the spatial separation resulting from the
relative motion may facilitate isolation of positrons for subsequent
applications or detection.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Tumor-Type Agnostic, Targeted Therapies: BRAF Inhibitors Join the Group
In the present review, we briefly discuss the breakthrough advances in precision medicine using a tumor-agnostic approach and focus on BRAF treatment modalities, the mechanisms of resistance and the diagnostic approach in cancers with BRAF mutations. Tumor-type agnostic drug therapies work across cancer types and present a significant novel shift in precision cancer medicine. They are the consequence of carefully designed clinical trials that showed the value of tumor biomarkers, not just in diagnosis but in therapy guidance. Six tumor-agnostic drugs (with seven indications) have been approved through October 2022 by FDA. The first tumor-agnostic treatment modality was pembrolizumab for MSI-H/dMMR solid tumors, approved in 2017. This was followed by approvals of larotrectinib and entrectinib for cancers with NTRK fusions without a known acquired resistance mutation. In 2020, pembrolizumab was approved for all TMB-high solid cancers, while a PD-L1 inhibitor dostarlimab-gxly was approved for dMMR solid cancers in 2021. A combination of BRAF/MEK inhibitors (dabrafenib/trametinib) was approved as a tumor-agnostic therapy in June 2022 for all histologic types of solid metastatic cancers harboring BRAFV600E mutations. In September 2022, RET inhibitor selpercatinib was approved for solid cancers with RET gene fusions. CONCLUSION: Precision cancer medicine has substantially improved cancer diagnostics and treatment. Tissue type-agnostic drug therapies present a novel shift in precision cancer medicine. This approach rapidly expands to provide treatments for patients with different cancers harboring the same molecular alteration
Analytic pulse technique for computational electromagnetics
Numerical modeling of electromagnetic waves is an important tool for
understanding the interaction of light and matter, and lies at the core of
computational electromagnetics. Traditional approaches to injecting and
evolving electromagnetic waves, however, can be prohibitively expensive and
complex for emerging problems of interest and can restrict the comparisons that
can be made between simulation and theory. As an alternative, we demonstrate
that electromagnetic waves can be incorporated analytically by decomposing the
physics equations into analytic and computational parts. In particle-in-cell
simulation of laser--plasma interaction, for example, treating the laser pulse
analytically enables direct examination of the validity of approximate
solutions to Maxwell's equations including Laguerre--Gaussian beams, allows
lower-dimensional simulations to capture 3-D--like focusing, and facilitates
the modeling of novel space--time structured laser pulses such as the flying
focus. The flexibility and new routes to computational savings introduced by
this analytic pulse technique are expected to enable new simulation directions
and significantly reduce computational cost in existing areas.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
Water-based and Biocompatible 2D Crystal Inks: from Ink Formulation to All- Inkjet Printed Heterostructures
Fully exploiting the properties of 2D crystals requires a mass production
method able to produce heterostructures of arbitrary complexity on any
substrate, including plastic. Solution processing of graphene allows simple and
low-cost techniques such as inkjet printing to be used for device fabrication.
However, available inkjet printable formulations are still far from ideal as
they are either based on toxic solvents, have low concentration, or require
time-consuming and expensive formulation processing. In addition, none of those
formulations are suitable for thin-film heterostructure fabrication due to the
re-mixing of different 2D crystals, giving rise to uncontrolled interfaces,
which results in poor device performance and lack of reproducibility. In this
work we show a general formulation engineering approach to achieve highly
concentrated, and inkjet printable water-based 2D crystal formulations, which
also provides optimal film formation for multi-stack fabrication. We show
examples of all-inkjet printed heterostructures, such as large area arrays of
photosensors on plastic and paper and programmable logic memory devices, fully
exploiting the design flexibility of inkjet printing. Finally, dose-escalation
cytotoxicity assays in vitro also confirm the inks biocompatible character,
revealing the possibility of extending use of such 2D crystal formulations to
drug delivery and biomedical applications
Exact solutions for the electromagnetic fields of a flying focus
The intensity peak of a "flying focus" travels at a programmable velocity
over many Rayleigh ranges while maintaining a near-constant profile. Assessing
the extent to which these features can enhance laser-based applications
requires an accurate description of the electromagnetic fields. Here we present
exact analytical solutions to Maxwell's equations for the electromagnetic
fields of a constant-velocity flying focus, generalized for arbitrary
polarization and orbital angular momentum. The approach combines the complex
source-point method, which transforms multipole solutions into beam-like
solutions, with the Lorentz invariance of Maxwell's equations. Propagating the
fields backward in space reveals the space-time profile that an optical
assembly must produce to realize these fields in the laboratory. Comparisons
with simpler paraxial solutions provide conditions for their reliable use when
modeling a flying focus
Pros and Cons of 19 Sport-Related Concussion Educational Resources in Canada: Avenues for Better Care and Prevention
Objective: The goal of this research was to assess the effectiveness of available concussion educational resources in Canada, the means used to disseminate this knowledge and the impact of these educational resources on players' concussion prevention knowledge.Methods: We assessed concussion knowledge before and after exposure to one or more of 19 resources introduced through a national program aimed to increase awareness and knowledge of concussion. The effectiveness of the mode of delivery was measured by changes in concussion knowledge scores (CKS) between pre and pro scores.Measures: Concussion knowledge scores (CKS) were calculated for pre- and post- exposure to concussion educational resources and used as a measure of both, the effectiveness of each resource as well as the effectiveness of the delivery method. The effectiveness of each educational resource was also measured by the respondents' rating of each concussion educational resource.Results: Respondents in post-survey had higher CKS than those in pre-survey. Two out of the 19 newly developed concussion educational resources were effective in improving the resource users' CKS. Linear regression showed that using more resources further increased CKS. Four out of six modes of delivery enhanced respondents' concussion knowledge.Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that the newly developed Canadian concussion educational resources were effective at improving users' concussion knowledge. Our data demonstrates that using three or more resources further enhanced the users' concussion knowledge. Future research, however, is critical to assess whether concussion prevention knowledge is sufficient to reduce injuries and factors influencing it
System-size and centrality dependence of charged kaon and pion production in nucleus-nucleus collisions at 40A GeV and158A GeV beam energy
Measurements of charged pion and kaon production are presented in centrality
selected Pb+Pb collisions at 40A GeV and 158A GeV beam energy as well as in
semi-central C+C and Si+Si interactions at 40A GeV. Transverse mass spectra,
rapidity spectra and total yields are determined as a function of centrality.
The system-size and centrality dependence of relative strangeness production in
nucleus-nucleus collisions at 40A GeV and 158A GeV beam energy are derived from
the data presented here and published data for C+C and Si+Si collisions at 158A
GeV beam energy. At both energies a steep increase with centrality is observed
for small systems followed by a weak rise or even saturation for higher
centralities. This behavior is compared to calculations using transport models
(UrQMD and HSD), a percolation model and the core-corona approach.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables, typo table II correcte
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