3,095 research outputs found
Resonant Spin-Flavor Conversion of Supernova Neutrinos and Deformation of the Electron Antineutrino Spectrum
The neutrino spin-flavor conversion of \bar\nu_e and \nu_\mu which is induced
by the interaction of the Majorana neutrino magnetic moment and magnetic fields
in the collapse-driven supernova is investigated in detail. We calculate the
conversion probability by using the latest precollapse models of Woosley and
Weaver (1995), and also those of Nomono and Hashimoto (1988), changing the
stellar mass and metallicity in order to estimate the effect of the
astrophysical uncertainties. Contour maps of the conversion probability are
given for all the models as a function of neutrino mass squared difference and
the neutrino magnetic moment times magnetic fields. It is shown that in the
solar metallicity models some observational effects are expected with \Delta
m^2 = 10^{-5}--10^{-1} [eV^2] and \mu_\nu >~ 10^{-12} (10^9 G / B_0) [\mu_B],
where B_0 is the strength of the magnetic fields at the surface of the iron
core. We also find that although the dependence on the stellar models or
stellar mass is not so large, the metallicity of precollapse stars has
considerable effects on this conversion. Such effects may be seen in a
supernova in the Large or Small Magellanic Clouds, and should be taken into
account when one considers an upper bound on \mu_\nu from the SN1987A data.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX, using revtex. To appear in Phys. Rev. D. 16 figures
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Evaluation of range of motion restriction within the hip joint
In Total Hip Arthroplasty, determining the impingement free range of motion requirement is a complex task. This is because in the native hip, motion is restricted by both impingement as well as soft tissue restraint. The aim of this study is to determine a range of motion benchmark which can identify motions which are at risk from impingement and those which are constrained due to soft tissue. Two experimental methodologies were used to determine motions which were limited by impingement and those motions which were limited by both impingement and soft tissue restraint. By comparing these two experimental results, motions which were limited by impingement were able to be separated from those motions which were limited by soft tissue restraint. The results show motions in extension as well as flexion combined with adduction are limited by soft tissue restraint. Motions in flexion, flexion combined with abduction and adduction are at risk from osseous impingement. Consequently, these motions represent where the maximum likely damage will occur in femoroacetabular impingement or at most risk of prosthetic impingement in Total Hip Arthroplasty
Components of Antineutrino Emission in Nuclear Reactor
New scattering experiments aimed for sensitive searches of
the magnetic moment and projects to explore small mixing angle
oscillations at reactors call for a better understanding of the reactor
antineutrino spectrum. Here we consider six components, which contribute to the
total spectrum generated in nuclear reactor. They are: beta
decay of the fission fragments of U, Pu, U and
Pu, decay of beta-emitters produced as a result of neutron capture in
U and also due to neutron capture in accumulated fission fragments
which perturbs the spectrum. For antineutrino energies less than 3.5 MeV we
tabulate evolution of spectra corresponding to each of the four
fissile isotopes vs fuel irradiation time and their decay after the irradiation
is stopped and also estimate relevant uncertainties. Small corrections to the
ILL spectra are considered.Comment: LaTex 8 pages, 2 ps figure
Estradiol and testosterone levels in patients undergoing partial hepatectomy - A possible signal for hepatic regeneration?
In five adult male patients undergoing a 40-60% partial hepatectomy, serum sex hormone levels before and after hepatic resection were determined. Blood was drawn immediately prior to each surgical procedure and at specified time points postoperatively. Compared to hormone levels found prior to surgery, following major hepatic resection, estradiol levels increase at 24 and 48 hr, while testosterone levels decline, being significantly reduced at 96 and 144 hr. These data demonstrate that adult males who undergo a 40-60% partial hepatectomy experience alterations in their sex hormone levels similar to those observed in male rats following a 70% hepatectomy. These changes in sex hormone levels have been associated in animals with an alteration of the sex hormone receptor status of the liver that is thought to participate in the initiation of the regenerative response. These studies suggest, but do not prove, that in man, as in the case of the rat, sex hormones may participate in the initiation of or at least modulate in part the regenerative response that occurs following a major hepatic resection. © 1989 Plenum Publishing Corporation
Complete chloroplast genome sequence of Holoparasite Cistanche Deserticola (Orobanchaceae) reveals gene loss and horizontal gene transfer from Its host Haloxylon Ammodendron (Chenopodiaceae)
The central function of chloroplasts is to carry out photosynthesis, and its gene content and structure are highly conserved across land plants. Parasitic plants, which have reduced photosynthetic ability, suffer gene losses from the chloroplast (cp) genome accompanied by the relaxation of selective constraints. Compared with the rapid rise in the number of cp genome sequences of photosynthetic organisms, there are limited data sets from parasitic plants. The authors report the complete sequence of the cp genome of Cistanche deserticola, a holoparasitic desert species belonging to the family Orobanchaceae
Alterations of nocturnal activity in rats following subchronic oral administration of the neurotoxin 1-trichloromethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-β-carboline
1-Trichloromethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-β-carboline (TaClo) is neurotoxic when administered to the brain and alters motor behaviour following intraperitoneal administration. We have assessed the long-term effects of oral TaClo administration on nocturnal motor behaviour in rats. Two groups of rats received TaClo orally at a dose of either 0.2 or 0.4 mg/kg twice daily for 7 weeks. The control group was given saline. No change in locomotor activity was observed 4–9 days after the end of the 7-week administration of TaClo. In addition, the spontaneous motor activity was altered dose-dependently 9 months after oral TaClo administration, with an increase in the low-dose TaClo group and a decrease in the high-dose group. Oral administration of TaClo in rats may be useful in investigating the hypothesis that in Parkinson’s disease, an unknown pathogenic factor crossing the intestinal mucosa barrier can induce neurodegenerative processes eventually affecting the entire brain
Deep Decomposition Learning for Inverse Imaging Problems
Deep learning is emerging as a new paradigm for solving inverse imaging
problems. However, the deep learning methods often lack the assurance of
traditional physics-based methods due to the lack of physical information
considerations in neural network training and deploying. The appropriate
supervision and explicit calibration by the information of the physic model can
enhance the neural network learning and its practical performance. In this
paper, inspired by the geometry that data can be decomposed by two components
from the null-space of the forward operator and the range space of its
pseudo-inverse, we train neural networks to learn the two components and
therefore learn the decomposition, i.e. we explicitly reformulate the neural
network layers as learning range-nullspace decomposition functions with
reference to the layer inputs, instead of learning unreferenced functions. We
empirically show that the proposed framework demonstrates superior performance
over recent deep residual learning, unrolled learning and nullspace learning on
tasks including compressive sensing medical imaging and natural image
super-resolution. Our code is available at
https://github.com/edongdongchen/DDN.Comment: To appear in ECCV 202
Perspectives on the chemical etiology of breast cancer.
Multiple factors, known and unknown, contribute to human breast cancer. Hereditary, hormonal, and reproductive factors are associated with risk of breast cancer. Environmental agents, including chemical carcinogens, are modifiable risk factors to which over 70% of breast cancers have been attributed. Polymorphisms of drug-metabolizing enzymes may influence risk of breast cancer from environmental chemicals, dietary agents, and endogenous steroids. The environmental factors discussed in this review include pollutants, occupational exposures, tobacco smoke, alcohol, and diet. Aromatic amines are discussed as potential mammary carcinogens, with a focus on heterocyclic amine food pyrolysis products. These compounds are excreted into the urine after consumption of meals containing cooked meats and have recently been detected in the breast milk of lactating women
Variability in Basal Melting Beneath Pine Island Ice Shelf on Weekly to Monthly Timescales
Ocean-driven basal melting of Amundsen Sea ice shelves has triggered acceleration, thinning,
and grounding line retreat on many West Antarctic outlet glaciers. Here we present the first year-long
(2014) record of basal melt rate at sub-weekly resolution from a location on the outer Pine Island Ice Shelf.
Adjustment of the upper thermocline to local wind forced variability in the vertical Ekman velocity is the
dominant control on basal melting at weekly to monthly timescales. Atmosphere-ice-ocean surface heat
fluxes or changes in advection of modified Circumpolar Deep Water play no discernible role at these
timescales. We propose that during other years, a deepening of the thermocline in Pine Island Bay driven by
longer timescale processes may have suppressed the impact of local wind forcing on high-frequency
upper thermocline height variability and basal melting. This highlights the complex interplay between the
different processes and their timescales that set the basal melt rate beneath Pine Island Ice Shelf
Planck scale effects in neutrino physics
We study the phenomenology and cosmology of the Majoron (flavon) models of
three active and one inert neutrino paying special attention to the possible
(almost) conserved generalization of the Zeldovich-Konopinski-Mahmoud lepton
charge. Using Planck scale physics effects which provide the breaking of the
lepton charge, we show how in this picture one can incorporate the solutions to
some of the central issues in neutrino physics such as the solar and
atmospheric neutrino puzzles, dark matter and a 17 keV neutrino. These
gravitational effects induce tiny Majorana mass terms for neutrinos and
considerable masses for flavons. The cosmological demand for the sufficiently
fast decay of flavons implies a lower limit on the electron neutrino mass in
the range of 0.1-1 eV.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure (not included but available upon request), LaTex,
IC/92/196, SISSA-140/92/EP, LMU-09/9
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