269 research outputs found

    Lightning Performance on Transmission Line Tower

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    When a steep front lightning stroke current strikes the top of a transmission line tower, the tower top potential is influenced by the surge impedance of the tower, and there is a chance of a very high potential rise on the tower top during the round trip surge travel time along the tower. If such a voltage causes an inverse flashover of the string insulator of the phase conductor, a steep front surge voltage which has an extremely high crest does penetrate along the phase conductor. However, the lightning performance of a transmission line on the tower has not been investigated clearly for this steep front surge current, because the tower surge impedance and the performance of the string insulator in a very short time region has not been investigated satisfactorily. Recently, the author investigated the surge response of a transmission line tower and some equivalent circuits for the surge response of the tower have been obtained. The author estimated the lightning performance on transmission line towers by means of the tower equivalent circuit for a surge current together with an assumption in estimating the flashover characteristics of the string insulator

    Measurement System of Biomechanical Properties for Portable Use

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    It is difficult to evaluate a biomechanical properties quantitatively. The authors developed the measurement system of biomechanical properties formerly but it is on a large scale because of the use of personal computer. In this study, the portable measurement system of biomechanical impedance/mobility is developed. To establish a rapid measurement, a random vibration is adopted in input signal. The system consists of the measuring probe, amplifier, and a note-typed personal computer. The measurement probe is developed newly, and has an overall length of 9 ㎝ (without a handle) and a total weight of about 500 g. The measurement program is also developed and is available to any computer which is worked under MS DOS compatible in Windows 95/98 operating system. The biomechanical spectra of thigh, temple and forehead are obtained and they show three typical spectrum patterns

    Time Delay Devices for Low-Speed Electronic Surge Analyser

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    In this paper, the authors introduce three kinds of time delay devices, which they have planned and developed extending over about the last ten years, to be applied to the low-speed surge analysers to analyse the surge performances on the transmission and distribution systems, which are composed of the time delay device and the low-speed electronic analog computer and can do away with the unavoidable defects of the conventional surge analysers. In addition, the authors simply illustrate the working principles of their surge analyser with examples of the single-conductor systems

    X-Ray Topographic Observation of Strain Generated by Thin Film (TiN) on Silicon Surface

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    The strain in Si substrate induced by locally ion-plated thin film of TiN was observed by X-ray topograph (Lang technique). Circular TiN film was deposited on one side of the Si surface. In all topographs the highest blackness attributed to kinematical diffraction effect occurred at the film edge. Rosette pattern with four-lobes was observed around the film. Blackness as a whole increased with the film thickness. Strain was observed in the depth direction of substrate by limited projection method. When the slit width was narrowed, the kinematical images disappeared, and white images appeared at the film edge. All the contrast disappeared when the TiN film was completely removed in boiling HNO(3). The strain induced by the film deposition was proved to be elastic

    Synthesis, transport and fate of G-protein coupled 7-transmembrane receptors

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    科学研究費補助金研究成果報告書研究種目: 一般研究(C)研究期間: 1994~1995課題番号: 06808079研究代表者: 山田 久夫(滋賀医科大学・医学部・助教授

    Histocytochemical Analysis for New Vasoactive Substances in CNS

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    科学研究費補助金研究成果報告書研究種目: 一般研究(C)研究期間: 1989~1990課題番号: 01570030研究代表者: 山田 久夫(滋賀医科大学・医学部・助教授

    Phenotype Analysis and Quantification of Proliferating Cells in the Cortical Gray Matter of the Adult Rat

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    In intact adult mammalian brains, there are two neurogenic regions: the subependymal zone and the subgranular layer of the hippocampus. Even outside these regions, small numbers of proliferating precursors do exist. Many studies suggest that the majority of these are oligodendrocyte precursors that express NG2, a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, and most of the residual proliferating cells seem to be endothelial cells. However, it is still unclear whether NG2-immunonegative proliferating precursors are present, because previous studies have neglected their possible existence. In this study, we systematically analyzed the phenotypes of the proliferating cells in the intact adult rat cortical gray matter. We improved our techniques and carefully characterized the proliferating cells, because there were several problems with identifying and quantifying the proliferating cells: the detection of NG2-expressing cells was dependent on the fixation condition; there were residual proliferating leukocytes in the blood vessels; and two anti-NG2 antibodies gave rise to different staining patterns. Moreover, we used two methods, BrdU and Ki67 immunostaining, to quantify the proliferating cells. Our results strongly suggest that in the intact adult cerebral cortical gray matter, there were only two types of proliferating cells: the majority were NG2-expressing cells, including pericytes, and the rest were endothelial cells

    Analytic Evaluation of the Decay Rate for Accelerated Proton

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    We evaluate the decay rate of the uniformly accelerated proton. We obtain an analytic expression for inverse beta decay process caused by the acceleration. We evaluate the decay rate both from the inertial frame and from the accelerated frame where we should consider thermal radiation by Unruh effect. We explicitly check that the decay rates obtained in both frame coincide with each other.Comment: 11 page

    Differential expression of nuclear lamin subtypes in the neural cells of the adult rat cerebral cortex

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    Lamins are type V intermediate filament proteins that are located beneath the inner nuclear membrane. In mammalian somatic cells, LMNB1 and LMNB2 encode somatic lamins B1 and B2, respectively, and the LMNA gene is alternatively spliced to generate somatic lamins A and C. Mutations in lamin genes have been linked to many human hereditary diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders. Knowledge about lamins in the nervous system has been accumulated recently, but a precise analysis of lamin subtypes in glial cells has not yet been reported. In this study we investigated the composition of lamin subtypes in neurons, astrocytes, oligodendrocyte-lineage cells, and microglia in the adult rat cerebral cortex using an immunohistochemical staining method. Lamin A was not observed in neurons and glial cells. Lamin C was observed in astrocytes, mature oligodendrocytes and neurons, but not observed in oligodendrocyte progenitor cells. Microglia also did not stain positive for lamin C which differed from macrophages, with lamin C positive. Lamin B1 and B2 were observed in all glial cells and neurons. Lamin B1 was intensely positive in oligodendrocyte progenitor cells compared with other glial cells and neurons. Lamin B2 was weakly positive in all glial cells compared to neurons. Our current study might provide useful information to reveal how the onset mechanisms of human neurodegenerative diseases are associated with mutations in genes for nuclear lamin proteins

    Intensity-modulated radiation therapy dose verification using fluence and portal imaging device

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    Patient-specific quality assurance for intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) dose verification is essential. The aim of this study is to provide a new method based on the relative error distribution by comparing the fluence map from the treatment planning system (TPS) and the incident fluence deconvolved from the electronic portal imaging device (EPID) images. This method is validated for 10 head and neck IMRT cases. The fluence map of each beam was exported from the TPS and EPID images of the treatment beams were acquired. Measured EPID images were deconvolved to the incident fluence with proper corrections. The relative error distribution between the TPS fluence map and the incident fluence from the EPID was created. This was also created for a 2D diode array detector. The absolute point dose was measured with an ionization chamber, and the dose distribution was measured by a radiochromic film. In three cases, MLC leaf positions were intentionally changed to create the dose error as much as 5% against the planned dose and our fluence-based method was tested using gamma index. Absolute errors between the predicted dose of 2D diode detector and of our method and measure­ments were 1.26% ± 0.65% and 0.78% ± 0.81% respectively. The gamma passing rate (3% global / 3 mm) of the TPS was higher than that of the 2D diode detector (p< 0.02), and lower than that of the EPID (p < 0.04). The gamma passing rate (2% global / 2 mm) of the TPS was higher than that of the 2D diode detector, while the gamma passing rate of the TPS was lower than that of EPID (p < 0.02). For three modified plans, the predicted dose errors against the measured dose were 1.10%, 2.14%, and -0.87%. The predicted dose distributions from the EPID were well matched to the measurements. Our fluence-based method provides very accurate dosimetry for IMRT patients. The method is simple and can be adapted to any clinic for complex cases
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