1,311 research outputs found
Arterial spin labelling magnetic resonance imaging of the brain: techniques and development
This thesis centres on the development of arterial spin labelling (ASL) MRI, a non-invasive technique to image cerebral perfusion. In the first chapter I explain the principles of cerebral blood flow (CBF) quantification using ASL beginning with the original implementation through to the most recent advances. I proceed to describe the established theory behind the key additional MRI contrast mechanisms and techniques that underpin the novel experiments described in this thesis (T2 and T1 relaxation, diffusion imaging and half-Fourier acquisition and reconstruction).
In Chapter 2 I describe work undertaken to sample the transverse relaxation of the ASL perfusion-weighted and control images acquired with and without vascular crusher gradients at a range of post-labelling delay times and tagging durations, to estimate the intra-vascular, intra-cellular and extra-cellular distribution of labelled water in the rat cortex. The results provide evidence for rapid exchange of labelled water into the intra-cellular space relative to the transit-time through the vascular bed, and provide a more solid foundation for CBF quantification using ASL techniques.
In Chapter 3 the performance of image de-noising techniques for reducing errors in ASL CBF and arterial transit time estimates is investigated. I show that noise reduction methods can suppress random and systematic errors, improving both the precision and accuracy of CBF measurements and the precision of transit time maps.
In Chapter 4 I present the first in-vivo demonstration of Hadamard-encoded continuous ASL (H-CASL); an efficient method of imaging small volumes of labelled blood water in the brain at multiple post labelling delay times. I present evidence that H-CASL is viable for in-vivo application and can improve the precision of δa estimation in 2/3 of the imaging time required for standard multi post labelling delay continuous ASL
The Rise and Fall of Water Net (Hydrodictyon reticulatum) in New Zealand
During the late 1980s to early 1990s a range of aquatic habitats in the central North Island of New Zealand were invaded by the filamentous green alga, water net Hydrodictyon reticulatum (Linn. Lagerheim). The alga caused significant economic and recreational impacts at major sites of infestation, but it was also associated with enhanced invertebrate numbers and was the likely cause of an improvement in the trout fishery. The causes of prolific growth of water net and the range of control options pursued are reviewed. The possible causes of its sudden decline in 1995 are considered, including physical factors, increase in grazer pressure, disease, and loss of genetic vigour
Solid acid catalysts in heterogeneous n-alkanes hydroisomerisation for increasing octane number of gasoline
As the current global environmental concerns have prompted regulations to reduce the level of aromatic compounds, particularly benzene and its derivatives in gasoline, ydroisomerisation of n-alkanes is becoming a major alternative for enhancing octane number. Series of solid acid catalysts comprising of Freidel crafts, zirconias, MoO3-based (MOB), chlorinated Al2O3, heteropoly acids and bifunctional zeolite based catalysts have been tested in this respect. This paper reviewed important studies conducted on these catalysts with the aim of identifying areas requiring further investigation(s). Freidel craft catalysts are currently abandoned due to corrosion and disposal problems. MOB and heteropoly acids have good resistance to nitrogen and sulphur in a reaction stream but have poor thermal stability, difficult to regenerate and with mechanism their action only partly resolved. Bifunctional zeolites on the other hand are increasingly becoming promising catalysts due to resulting high acidity, activity and easy regeneration properties. Both solid and gaseous acid modifiers could similarly modify their textural characteristics. The activities of all catalysts could under uncontrolled conditions lead to side reactions such as cracking, aromatisation and dehydrogenation.
Keywords; Solid acids, n-alkanes, hydroisomerisation catalysts,
gasoline, octane number
Pérdidas económicas en un brote de tripanosomiasis bovina causada por Trypanosoma vivax.
Durante un brote de trypanosoamisis bovina, causado por Trypanosoma vivax y ocurrido en una explotación lechera ubicada en el municipio de Puerto Tejada, departamento del Cauca, en Colombia, se efectuaron observaciones con el fín de estimar las pérdidas económicas resultantes del episodio. Para el efecto se recolectó información sobre población ganadera, nacimientos, muertes, abortos, producción de leche, venta de animales, y, gastos en productos y servicios veterinarios. El análisis de tales datos, antes, durante y después del brote, reveló que mientras se controló la infección, por dos semanas, el propietario perdió {dollar}203.565.50. Las pérdidas estuvieron representadas principalmente por muertes y descarte forzoso de animales adultos, también generaron pérdidas económicas la reducción en la producción de leche, los abortos, los nacimientos de animales débiles y el incremento en gastos por drogas y servicios veterinarios. Se estimó, que de no haberse detenido el brote, las pérdidas se hubieran duplicado. Se concluyó que, bajo condiciones epidémicas, las pérdidas por T. vivax pueden ser cuantiosas. Se sugiere realizar estimaciones económicas similares bajo condiciones endémicasGanado de leche-Ganadería lech
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Design of multi-megawatt actively cooled beam dumps for the Neutral-Beam Engineering Test Facility
The Neutral Beam Engineering Test Facility will test Neutral Beam Sources up to 170 keV, 65 Amps, with 30 second beam-on times. For this application actively cooled beam dumps for both the neutral and ionized particles will be required. The dumps will be able to dissipate a wide range of power density profiles by utilizing a standard modular panel design which is incorporated into a moveable support structure. The thermal hydraulic design of the panels permit the dissipation of 2 kW/cm/sup 2/ anywhere on the panel surface. The water requirements of the dumps are optimized by restricting the flow to panel sections where the heat flux falls short of the design value. The mechanical design of the beam-dump structures is described along with tests performed on a prototype panel. The prototype tests were performed on two different panel designs, one manufactured by Mc Donnell Douglas (MDAC) the other by United Technologies (UT). The dissipation capabilities of the panels were tested at the critical regions to verify their use in the beam dump assemblies
Abelian D-terms and the superpartner spectrum of anomaly-mediated supersymmetry breaking
We address the tachyonic slepton problem of anomaly mediated supersymmetry
breaking using abelian D-terms. We demonstrate that the most general extra U(1)
symmetry that does not disrupt gauge coupling unification has a large set of
possible charges that solves the problem. It is shown that previous studies in
this direction that added both an extra hypercharge D-term and another D-term
induced by B-L symmetry (or similar) can be mapped into a single D-term of the
general ancillary U(1)_a. The U(1)_a formalism enables identifying the sign of
squark mass corrections which leads to an upper bound of the entire
superpartner spectrum given knowledge of just one superpartner mass.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, [v2] reference added, [v3] Eq. (9) corrected,
results unaffected, [v4] version to be published in Phys. Rev. D, expanded
parameter space for figures to match tex
The CD28-Transmembrane Domain Mediates Chimeric Antigen Receptor Heterodimerization With CD28.
Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CD19-CAR)-engineered T cells are approved therapeutics for malignancies. The impact of the hinge domain (HD) and the transmembrane domain (TMD) between the extracellular antigen-targeting CARs and the intracellular signaling modalities of CARs has not been systemically studied. In this study, a series of 19-CARs differing only by their HD (CD8, CD28, or IgG <sub>4</sub> ) and TMD (CD8 or CD28) was generated. CARs containing a CD28-TMD, but not a CD8-TMD, formed heterodimers with the endogenous CD28 in human T cells, as shown by co-immunoprecipitation and CAR-dependent proliferation of anti-CD28 stimulation. This dimerization was dependent on polar amino acids in the CD28-TMD and was more efficient with CARs containing CD28 or CD8 HD than IgG <sub>4</sub> -HD. The CD28-CAR heterodimers did not respond to CD80 and CD86 stimulation but had a significantly reduced CD28 cell-surface expression. These data unveiled a fundamental difference between CD28-TMD and CD8-TMD and indicated that CD28-TMD can modulate CAR T-cell activities by engaging endogenous partners
Classical Logical versus Quantum Conceptual Thought: Examples in Economics, Decision theory and Concept Theory
Inspired by a quantum mechanical formalism to model concepts and their
disjunctions and conjunctions, we put forward in this paper a specific
hypothesis. Namely that within human thought two superposed layers can be
distinguished: (i) a layer given form by an underlying classical deterministic
process, incorporating essentially logical thought and its indeterministic
version modeled by classical probability theory; (ii) a layer given form under
influence of the totality of the surrounding conceptual landscape, where the
different concepts figure as individual entities rather than (logical)
combinations of others, with measurable quantities such as 'typicality',
'membership', 'representativeness', 'similarity', 'applicability', 'preference'
or 'utility' carrying the influences. We call the process in this second layer
'quantum conceptual thought', which is indeterministic in essence, and contains
holistic aspects, but is equally well, although very differently, organized
than logical thought. A substantial part of the 'quantum conceptual thought
process' can be modeled by quantum mechanical probabilistic and mathematical
structures. We consider examples of three specific domains of research where
the effects of the presence of quantum conceptual thought and its deviations
from classical logical thought have been noticed and studied, i.e. economics,
decision theory, and concept theories and which provide experimental evidence
for our hypothesis.Comment: 14 page
Virtually abelian K\"ahler and projective groups
We characterise the virtually abelian groups which are fundamental groups of
compact K\"ahler manifolds and of smooth projective varieties. We show that a
virtually abelian group is K\"ahler if and only if it is projective. In
particular, this allows to describe the K\"ahler condition for such groups in
terms of integral symplectic representations
Quantum dots in magnetic fields: thermal response of broken symmetry phases
We investigate the thermal properties of circular semiconductor quantum dots
in high magnetic fields using finite temperature Hartree-Fock techniques. We
demonstrate that for a given magnetic field strength quantum dots undergo
various shape phase transitions as a function of temperature, and we outline
possible observable consequences.Comment: In Press, Phys. Rev. B (2001
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