143 research outputs found
Radiocarbon Evidence for Contrasting Soil Carbon Dynamics in a Andisol and Non-Andisol Pasture Soil Comparison
Symposium Pape
High-resolution continuous-flow analysis setup for water isotopic measurement from ice cores using laser spectroscopy
Here we present an experimental setup for water stable isotope (δ<sup>18</sup>O and δD) continuous-flow measurements and provide metrics
defining the performance of the setup during a major ice core measurement
campaign (Roosevelt Island Climate Evolution; RICE). We also use the
metrics to compare alternate systems. Our setup is the first continuous-flow
laser spectroscopy system that is using off-axis integrated cavity output
spectroscopy (OA-ICOS; analyzer manufactured by Los Gatos Research, LGR) in
combination with an evaporation unit to continuously analyze water samples
from an ice core.
<br><br>
A Water Vapor Isotope Standard Source (WVISS) calibration unit,
manufactured by LGR, was modified to (1) enable measurements on several
water standards, (2) increase the temporal resolution by reducing the
response time and (3) reduce the influence from memory effects. While
this setup was designed for the continuous-flow analysis (CFA) of ice cores,
it can also continuously analyze other liquid or vapor sources.
<br><br>
The custom setups provide a shorter response time (~ 54 and
18 s for 2013 and 2014 setup, respectively) compared to the original WVISS
unit (~ 62 s), which is an improvement in measurement
resolution. Another improvement compared to the original WVISS is that the
custom setups have a reduced memory effect.
<br><br>
Stability tests comparing the custom and WVISS setups were performed and
Allan deviations (σ<sub>Allan</sub>) were calculated to determine
precision at different averaging times. For the custom 2013 setup the
precision after integration times of 10<sup>3</sup> s is
0.060 and 0.070 ‰ for δ<sup>18</sup>O and δD, respectively. The corresponding σ<sub>Allan</sub> values for the custom 2014 setup are 0.030, 0.060 and 0.043 ‰ for δ<sup>18</sup>O, δD and δ<sup>17</sup>O, respectively. For the WVISS
setup the precision is 0.035,
0.070 and 0.042 ‰ after 10<sup>3</sup> s
for δ<sup>18</sup>O, δD and δ<sup>17</sup>O, respectively. Both
the custom setups and WVISS setup are influenced by instrumental drift with
δ<sup>18</sup>O being more drift sensitive than δD. The σ<sub>Allan</sub> values for δ<sup>18</sup>O are 0.30 and
0.18 ‰ for the custom 2013 and WVISS setup, respectively,
after averaging times of 10<sup>4</sup> s (2.78 h). Using response time
tests and stability tests, we show that the custom setups are more responsive
(shorter response time), whereas the University of
Copenhagen (UC) setup is more stable. More broadly,
comparisons of different setups address the challenge of integrating
vaporizer/spectrometer isotope measurement systems into a CFA campaign with
many other analytical instruments
Calculating uncertainty for the RICE ice core continuous flow analysis water isotope record
We describe a systematic approach to the calibration and uncertainty
estimation of a high-resolution continuous flow analysis (CFA) water isotope
(δ2H, δ18O) record from the Roosevelt Island
Climate Evolution (RICE) Antarctic ice core. Our method establishes robust
uncertainty estimates for CFA δ2H and δ18O
measurements, comparable to those reported for discrete sample
δ2H and δ18O analysis. Data were calibrated
using a time-weighted two-point linear calibration with two standards
measured both before and after continuously melting 3 or 4 m of ice core.
The error at each data point was calculated as the quadrature sum of three
factors: Allan variance error, scatter over our averaging interval (error of
the variance) and calibration error (error of the mean). Final mean total
uncertainty for the entire record is δ2H = 0.74 ‰ and δ18O = 0.21 ‰.
Uncertainties vary through the data set and were exacerbated by a range of
factors, which typically could not be isolated due to the requirements of the
multi-instrument CFA campaign. These factors likely occurred in combination
and included ice quality, ice breaks, upstream equipment failure,
contamination with drill fluid and leaks or valve degradation. We demonstrate
that our methodology for documenting uncertainty was effective across periods
of uneven system performance and delivered a significant achievement in the
precision of high-resolution CFA water isotope measurements.</p
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Evidence for bimodal fission in the heaviest elements
We have measured the mass and kinetic-energy partitioning in the spontaneous fission of five heavy nuclides: /sup 258/Fm, /sup 259/Md, /sup 260/Md /sup 258/No, and /sup 260/(104). Each was produced by heavy-ion reactions with either /sup 248/Cm, /sup 249/Bk, or /sup 254/Es targets. Energies of correlated fragments from the isotopes with millisecond half lives, /sup 258/No and /sup 260/(104), were measured on-line by a special rotating-wheel instrument, while the others were determined off-line after mass separation. All fissioned with mass distributions that were symmetric. Total-kinetic-energy distributions peaked near either 200 or 235 MeV. Surprisingly, because only a single Gaussian energy distribution had been observed previously in actinide fission, these energy distributions were skewed upward or downward from the peak in each case, except for /sup 260/(104), indicating a composite of two energy distributions. We were able to fit accurately two Gaussian curves to the gross energy distributions from the four remaining nuclides. From the multiple TKE distributions and the shapes of the mass distributions, we conclude that there is a low-energy fission component with liquid-drop characteristics which is admixed with a much higher-energy component due to closed fragment shells. We now have further evidence for this conclusion from measurements of the neutron multiplicity in the spontaneous fission of /sup 260/Md. 25 refs., 9 figs
Toxic risk of stereotactic body radiotherapy and concurrent helical tomotherapy followed by erlotinib for non-small-cell lung cancer treatment - case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) applied by helical tomotherapy (HT) is feasible for lung cancer in clinical. Using SBRT concurrently with erlotinib for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is not reported previously.</p> <p>Case Presentation</p> <p>A 77-year-old man with stage III NSCLC, received erlotinib 150 mg/day, combined with image-guided SBRT via HT. A total tumor dose of 54 Gy/9 fractions was delivered to the tumor bed. The tumor responded dramatically and the combined regimen was well tolerated. After concurrent erlotinib-SBRT, erlotinib was continued as maintenance therapy. The patient developed dyspnea three months after the combined therapy and radiation pneumonitis with interstitial lung disease was suspected.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Combination SBRT, HT, and erlotinib therapy provided effective anti-tumor results. Nonetheless, the potential risks of enhanced adverse effects between radiation and erlotinib should be monitored closely, especially when SBRT is part of the regimen.</p
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