2,666 research outputs found
Calibration of a shock wave position sensor using artificial neural networks
This report discusses the calibration of a shock wave position sensor. The position sensor works by using artificial neural networks to map cropped CCD frames of the shadows of the shock wave into the value of the shock wave position. This project was done as a tutorial demonstration of method and feasibility. It used a laboratory shadowgraph, nozzle, and commercial neural network package. The results were quite good, indicating that artificial neural networks can be used efficiently to automate the semi-quantitative applications of flow visualization
Growth pattern of tumours in mice induced by murine Moloney sarcoma-virus and sarcoma-virus-transformed cells.
Transplantation of a Moloney sarcoma-virus (MSV-M)-transformed producer cell line (Sac(+)) induced progressively or regressively growing tumours in mice. Progressive growth always occurred after transplantation of an MSV-M non-producer transformant (Sac(-)), whereas the MSV-M released from the producer cells (Sac virus) always induced tumours which regressed. In contrast to the non-producer, the producer transformant Sac(+) as well as Sac virus induced a strong immune response, detected in vitro by cell- and antibody-mediated cytotoxicity assays, and in vivo by transplantation immunity. Implantation of Sac(-) cells led to solid, under-vascularized tumours, consisting histologically of uniform densely packed tumour cells. Sac-virus-induced tumours, however, were very well vascularized and arose by proliferation of different connective-tissue cells. After transplantation of Sac(+) cells, tumours were found to consist of typical tumour cells morphologically similar to Sac(-) cells intermingled with proliferated connective-tissue cells. Cultivation of tumour fragments from Sac(+) and Sac(-) tumours was followed by outgrowth of transformed tumour cells with the properties of the originally implanted cells. Tumour explant cultures from Sac-virus-induced tumours did not lead to growth of stably transformed cells. Co-culture of mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF) with Sac(+) cells resulted in overgrowth of the transformed cells. Infection of MEF with Sac virus led to transiently transformed cells. It is concluded that Sac(+) cell tumours will resist the strong immune defence mechanisms they induce and grow progressively, if the inoculated cells are able to build up a solid, poorly vascularized nodule in the tissue. This always happens after implantation of 10(6) cells, but only occasionally when fewer cells are inoculated. Sac-virus-induced tumours will always regress owing to the strong immune response. The regression is furthered by the fact that MSV-M infection rarely if ever leads to a stable transformation
Imprints of massive inverse seesaw model neutrinos in lepton flavor violating Higgs boson decays
In this paper we consider a Higgs boson with mass and other properties
compatible with those of the recently discovered Higgs particle at the LHC, and
explore the possibility of new Higgs leptonic decays, beyond the standard
model, with the singular feature of being lepton flavor violating (LFV). We
study these LFV Higgs decays, , within the context of the
inverse seesaw model (ISS) and consider the most generic case where three
additional pairs of massive right-handed singlet neutrinos are added to the
standard model particle content. We require in addition that the input
parameters of this ISS model are compatible with the present neutrino data and
other constraints, like perturbativity of the neutrino Yukawa couplings. We
present a full one-loop computation of the BR() rates for
the three possible channels, , and analyze in full detail the predictions as functions of the
various relevant ISS parameters. We study in parallel the correlated one-loop
predictions for the radiative decays, , within this same
ISS context, and require full compatibility of our predictions with the present
experimental bounds for the three radiative decays, , , and . After exploring the ISS parameter
space we conclude on the maximum allowed LFV Higgs decay rates within the ISS.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, 1 appendix: v4 matches the manuscript
published in PR
Exotic events from heavy ISS neutrinos at the LHC
In this letter we study new relevant phenomenological consequences of the
right-handed heavy neutrinos with masses at the TeV energy scale,
working within the context of the Inverse Seesaw Model that includes three
pairs of quasi-degenerate pseudo-Dirac heavy neutrinos. We propose a new exotic
signal of these heavy neutrinos at the CERN Large Hadron Collider containing a
muon, a tau lepton, and two jets in the final state, which is based on the
interesting fact that this model can incorporate large Lepton Flavor Violation
for specific choices of the relevant parameters, particularly, the neutrino
Yukawa couplings. We will show here that an observable number of
exotic events, without missing energy, can be produced at this ongoing run of
the LHC.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. This version v3 matches the manuscript published
in Physics Letters
The Impact of Line Misidentification on Cosmological Constraints from Euclid and other Spectroscopic Galaxy Surveys
We perform forecasts for how baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) scale and
redshift-space distortion (RSD) measurements from future spectroscopic emission
line galaxy (ELG) surveys such as Euclid are degraded in the presence of
spectral line misidentification. Using analytic calculations verified with mock
galaxy catalogs from log-normal simulations we find that constraints are
degraded in two ways, even when the interloper power spectrum is modeled
correctly in the likelihood. Firstly, there is a loss of signal-to-noise ratio
for the power spectrum of the target galaxies, which propagates to all
cosmological constraints and increases with contamination fraction, .
Secondly, degeneracies can open up between and cosmological parameters.
In our calculations this typically increases BAO scale uncertainties at the
10-20% level when marginalizing over parameters determining the broadband power
spectrum shape. External constraints on , or parameters determining the
shape of the power spectrum, for example from cosmic microwave background (CMB)
measurements, can remove this effect. There is a near-perfect degeneracy
between and the power spectrum amplitude for low values, where
is not well determined from the contaminated sample alone. This has the
potential to strongly degrade RSD constraints. The degeneracy can be broken
with an external constraint on , for example from cross-correlation with a
separate galaxy sample containing the misidentified line, or deeper
sub-surveys.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, updated to match version accepted by ApJ (extra
paragraph added at the end of Section 4.3, minor text edits
Lepton flavor violation in low-scale seesaw models: SUSY and non-SUSY contributions
Taking the supersymmetric inverse seesaw mechanism as the explanation for
neutrino oscillation data, we investigate charged lepton flavor violation in
radiative and 3-body lepton decays as well as in neutrinoless
conversion in muonic atoms. In contrast to former studies, we take into account
all possible contributions: supersymmetric as well as non-supersymmetric. We
take CMSSM-like boundary conditions for the soft supersymmetry breaking
parameters. We find several regions where cancellations between various
contributions exist, reducing the lepton flavor violating rates by an order of
magnitude compared to the case where only the dominant contribution is taken
into account. This is in particular important for the correct interpretation of
existing data as well as for estimating the reach of near future experiments
where the sensitivity will be improved by one to two orders of magnitude.
Moreover, we demonstrate that ratios like BR()/BR() can be used to determine whether the supersymmetric contributions
dominate over the and contributions or vice versa.Comment: 75 pages, 7 figures. v3: references and comments added. Matches
published versio
University of Dayton\u27s Endowment Growth Earns Ninth Spot Among U.S. Catholic Universities
News release announces Thomas E. Burkhardt\u27s comments on the University of Dayton\u27s endowment growth
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