1,998 research outputs found
The Trigger System of the ARGO-YBJ detector
The ARGO-YBJ experiment has been designed to detect air shower events over a
large size scale and with an energy threshold of a few hundreds GeV. The
building blocks of the ARGO-YBJ detector are single-gap Resistive Plate
Counters (RPCs). The trigger logic selects the events on the basis of their hit
multiplicity. Inclusive triggers as well as dedicated triggers for specific
physics channels or calibration purposes have been developed. This paper
describes the architecture and the main features of the trigger system.Comment: 4 pages, to be published in the Proceedings of the 28th International
Cosmic Ray Conference (Tsukuba, Japan 2003
Lipschitz Regularity for a Priori Bounded Minimizers of Integral Functionals with Nonstandard Growth
Neuroinflammation and Cerebrovascular Disease in Old Age: A Translational Medicine Perspective
The incidence of cerebrovascular disease is highest in the elderly population. However, the pathophysiological mechanisms of brain response to cerebral ischemia in old age are currently poorly understood. Ischemic changes in the commonly used young animal stroke models do not reflect the molecular changes associated with the aged brain. Neuroinflammation and oxidative stress are important pathogenic processes occurring during the acute phase of cerebral ischemia. Free radical generation is also implicated in the aging process, and the combination of these effects in elderly stroke patients could explain the higher risk of morbidity and mortality. A better understanding of stroke pathophysiology in the elderly patient would assist in the development of new therapeutic strategies for this vulnerable age group. With the increasing use of reperfusion therapies, inflammatory pathways and oxidative stress remain attractive therapeutic targets for the development of adjuvant neuroprotective agents. This paper will discuss these molecular aspects of acute stroke and senescence from a bench-to-bedside research perspective
Which space? Whose space? An experience in involving students and teachers in space design
To date, learning spaces in higher education have been designed with little engagement on the part of their most important users: students and teachers. In this paper, we present the results of research carried out in a UK university. The research aimed to understand how students and teachers conceptualise learning spaces when they are given the opportunity to do so in a workshop environment. Over a number of workshops, participants were encouraged to critique a space prototype and to re-design it according to their own views and vision of learning spaces to optimise pedagogical encounters. The findings suggest that the active involvement of students and teachers in space design endows participants with the power of reflection on the pedagogical process, which can be harnessed for the actual creation and innovation of learning spaces
Unusual Kondo physics in a Co impurity atom embedded in noble-metal chains
We analyze the conduction bands of the one dimensional noble-metal chains
that contain a Co magnetic impurity by means of ab initio calculations. We
compare the results obtained for Cu and Ag pure chains, as well as O doped Cu,
Ag and Au chains with those previously found for Au pure chains. We find
similar results in the case of Cu and Au hosts, whereas for Ag chains a
different behavior is obtained. Differences and similarities among the
different systems are analyzed by comparing the electronic structure of the
three noble-metal hosts. The d-orbitals of Cu chains at the Fermi level have
the same symmetry as in the case of Au chains. These orbitals hybridize with
the corresponding ones of the Co impurity, giving rise to the possibility of
exhibiting a two-channel Kondo physics.Comment: Accepted in IEEE Trans. Magn. - April 201
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) from autopsy study: T-cells, B-cells and mastocytes detection as morphological evidence of immunologically mediated pathogenesis.
Background: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by severe vascular remodelling, resulting in increased pulmonary vascular resistance with cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. However, the diagnosis of PAH is often inaccurate. Many cases of PAH are incorrectly diagnosed or missed, and they are often associated with death. The aim of this study was to verify the morphological and histological criteria of fatal cases of PAH and evaluate the lymphocytic populations associated to lesions with reactive neo-angiogenesis. Methods: Pulmonary lung sections from 10 cases of sudden unexpected death (SUD) in the absence of previously diagnosed diseases and in an apparent state of well-being, with final histological post autopsy diagnosis of PAH were collected. The pathological findings were compared using ten controls from non-pathological lung from deaths from other causes. The autopsies included 4 males (40%) and 6 females (60%) with an average age of 52.1 ± 10.1 years. Sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) were revised for a morphological diagnosis. Subsequently, serial sections were performed and stained with immunohistochemistry for anti-CD20 (B-lymphocytes), anti-CD3 (T-lymphocytes), anti-CD4 (T-helper lumphocytes), anti-CD8 (T-cytotoxic lymphocytes) and anti-CD117/C-Kit (mast cells/MCs) to detect inflammatory infiltrate and different ratios of cell-type. Statistical analysis was conducted using a paired t-test looking at 100 cells in 3 different tissue samples representative of vascular lesion and 3 different random normal lung parenchyma fields without lesion (from 10 normal control lungs), to identify specific lymphocyte subpopulations in inflammatory infiltrates. Results: There was a significant percentage increase of CD20 (p < 0.001), CD8 (p = 0.002), CD4 (p < 0.001), and CD117/C-Kit positive (C-Kit+; p < 0.001) cells mainly detected around wall vessels; while increased MCs positivity and C-Kit+ were observed especially in alveolar septa. In addition, reactive angiomatosis was observed. Conclusions: The inflammatory infiltrate should be included for a correct diagnosis of PAH besides the vascular remodelling. The inflammatory infiltrate seems to be implicated as a main factor in the pathogenesis. This finding is important to rule out secondary pulmonary hypertension, to identify SUDs of unknown causes and to add new elements to the literature that can explain the immunologically related pathogenesis of PAH
Chiral Rings of Deconstructive [SU(n_c)]^N Quivers
Dimensional deconstruction of 5D SQCD with general n_c, n_f and k_CS gives
rise to 4D N=1 gauge theories with large quivers of SU(n_c) gauge factors. We
construct the chiral rings of such [SU(n_c)]^N theories, off-shell and
on-shell. Our results are broadly similar to the chiral rings of single U(n_c)
theories with both adjoint and fundamental matter, but there are also some
noteworthy differences such as nonlocal meson-like operators where the quark
and antiquark fields belong to different nodes of the quiver. And because our
gauge groups are SU(n_c) rather than U(n_c), our chiral rings also contain a
whole zoo of baryonic and antibaryonic operators.Comment: 93 pages, LaTeX, PSTricks macros; 1 reference added in v
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