1,948 research outputs found
Immunohistochemical characterization of the 'intimal proliferation' phenomenon in Sneddon's syndrome and essential thrombocythaemia
Cellular changes were immunocytochemically characterized in skin vessels of five patients with idiopathic generalized racemose livedo (Sneddon's syndrome), and one patient with localized racemose livedo associated with essential thrombocythaemia. Antibodies against alpha-smooth muscle-actin, tropomyosin, desmin, vimentin, factor VIII-related antigen, human endothelial cells (CD31), human macrophages (CD68), and HLA-DR positive cells (CR3/43) were used. Conventional light microscopy showed, in all cases, intimal thickening of ascending arteries and arterioles as a result of an accumulation of cells and extracellular hyalinized material. None of the specimens showed infiltration with polymorphonuclear leucocytes or macrophages. The cells in the region of the intimal hyperplasia showed intense positive immunostaining for alpha-smooth muscle actin and tropomyosin. Staining for the intermediate filament desmin was localized to the resident smooth muscle cells of the media, whereas staining for vimentin was found in all types of cells in both the intima and media. Positive immunostaining for factor VIII-related antigen and CD31 was strictly confined to the endothelial cells lining the narrowed lumina of the vessels. No positive staining with either antibody was observed in totally occluded vessels. Cells in the subintimal space did not show reactivity for CD68 in any of the specimens, but two cases showed solitary cells with positive staining for HLA-DR in this region. There were no differences in staining pattern between Sneddon's syndrome and essential thrombocythaemia with any of the antibodies. Our results support the assumption that the 'intimal proliferation' in both diseases is caused by colonization of the subendothelial space with contractile cells of possible smooth muscle origin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS
Charge density of a positively charged vector boson may be negative
The charge density of vector particles, for example W, may change sign. The
effect manifests itself even for a free propagation; when the energy of the
W-boson is higher than sqrt{2}m and the standing-wave is considered the charge
density oscillates in space. The charge density of W also changes sign in close
vicinity of a Coulomb center. The dependence of this effect on the g-factor for
an arbitrary vector boson, for example rho-meson, is discussed. An origin of
this surprising effect is traced to the electric quadrupole moment and
spin-orbit interaction of vector particles. Their contributions to the current
have a polarization nature. The charge density of this current, rho = -\nabla
\cdot P, where P is an effective polarization vector that depends on the
quadrupole moment and spin-orbit interaction, oscillates in space, producing
zero contribution to the total charge.Comment: 4 pages, revte
A comparative DFT study of electronic properties of 2H-, 4H- and 6H-SiC(0001) and SiC(000-1) clean surfaces: Significance of the surface Stark effect
Electric field, uniform within the slab, emerging due to Fermi level pinning
at its both sides is analyzed using DFT simulations of the SiC surface slabs of
different thickness. It is shown that for thicker slab the field is nonuniform
and this fact is related to the surface state charge. Using the electron
density and potential profiles it is proved that for high precision simulations
it is necessary to take into account enough number of the Si-C layers. We show
that using 12 diatomic layers leads to satisfactory results. It is also
demonstrated that the change of the opposite side slab termination, both by
different type of atoms or by their location, can be used to adjust electric
field within the slab, creating a tool for simulation of surface properties,
depending on the doping in the bulk of semiconductor. Using these simulations
it was found that, depending on the electric field, the energy of the surface
states changes in a different way than energy of the bulk states. This
criterion can be used to distinguish Shockley and Tamm surface states. The
electronic properties, i.e. energy and type of surface states of the three
clean surfaces: 2H-, 4H-, 6H-SiC(0001), and SiC() are analyzed and
compared using field dependent DFT simulations.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 4 table
Plasmon-assisted electron-electron collisions at metallic surfaces
We present a theoretical treatment for the ejection of a secondary electron
from a clean metallic surface induced by the impact of a fast primary electron.
Assuming a direct scattering between the incident, primary electron and the
electron in a metal, we calculate the electron-pair energy distributions at the
surfaces of Al and Be. Different models for the screening of the
electron-electron interaction are examined and the footprints of the surface
and the bulk plasmon modes are determined and analyzed. The formulated
theoretical approach is compared with the available experimental data on the
electron-pair emission from Al.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figure
Laser frequency stabilization to a single ion
A fundamental limit to the stability of a single-ion optical frequency
standard is set by quantum noise in the measurement of the internal state of
the ion. We discuss how the interrogation sequence and the processing of the
atomic resonance signal can be optimized in order to obtain the highest
possible stability under realistic experimental conditions. A servo algorithm
is presented that stabilizes a laser frequency to the single-ion signal and
that eliminates errors due to laser frequency drift. Numerical simulations of
the servo characteristics are compared to experimental data from a frequency
comparison of two single-ion standards based on a transition at 688 THz in
171Yb+. Experimentally, an instability sigma_y(100 s)=9*10^{-16} is obtained in
the frequency difference between both standards.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
Effect of edge decoration on the energy spectrum of semi-infinite lattices
Analytical studies of the effect of edge decoration on the energy spectrum of
semi-infinite one-dimensional (1D) lattice chain with Peierls phase transition
and zigzag edged graphene (ZEG) are presented by means of transfer matrix
method, in the frame of which the sufficient and necessary conditions for the
existence of the edge states are determined. For 1D lattice chain, the
zero-energy edge state exists when Peierls phase transition happens regardless
whether the decoration exists or not, while the non-zero-energy edge states can
be induced and manipulated through adjusting the edge decoration. On the other
hand, the semi-infinite ZEG model with nearest-neighbor interaction can be
mapped into the 1D lattice chain case. The non-zero-energy edge states can be
induced by the decoration as well, and we can obtain the condition of the
decoration on the edge for the existence of the novel edge states.Comment: 6 pages,4 figure
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