1,558 research outputs found
Experimental constraints on the -ray strength function in Zr using partial cross sections of the Y(p,)Zr reaction
Partial cross sections of the Y(p,)Zr reaction have
been measured to investigate the -ray strength function in the
neutron-magic nucleus Zr. For five proton energies between
MeV and MeV, partial cross sections for the population of seven
discrete states in Zr have been determined by means of in-beam
-ray spectroscopy. Since these -ray transitions are dominantly
of character, the present measurement allows an access to the low-lying
dipole strength in Zr. A -ray strength function based on the
experimental data could be extracted, which is used to describe the total and
partial cross sections of this reaction by Hauser-Feshbach calculations
successfully. Significant differences with respect to previously measured
strength functions from photoabsorption data point towards deviations from the
Brink-Axel hypothesis relating the photo-excitation and de-excitation strength
functions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Lifetime measurement of excited low-spin states via the ) reaction
In this article a method for lifetime measurements in the sub-picosecond
regime via the Doppler-shift attenuation method (DSAM) following the inelastic
proton scattering reaction is presented. In a pioneering experiment we
extracted the lifetimes of 30 excited low-spin states of Ru, taking
advantage of the coincident detection of scattered protons and de-exciting
-rays as well as the large number of particle and -ray
detectors provided by the SONIC@HORUS setup at the University of Cologne. The
large amount of new experimental data shows that this technique is suited for
the measurement of lifetimes of excited low-spin states, especially for
isotopes with a low isotopic abundance, where ) or - in
case of investigating dipole excitations - ()
experiments are not feasible due to the lack of sufficient isotopically
enriched target material
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NF-κB p50 facilitates neutrophil accumulation during LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation
BACKGROUND: Transcription factors have distinct functions in regulating immune responses. During Escherichia coli pneumonia, deficiency of NF-κB p50 increases gene expression and neutrophil recruitment, suggesting that p50 normally limits these innate immune responses. p50-deficient mice were used to determine how p50 regulates responses to a simpler, non-viable bacterial stimulus in the lungs, E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). RESULTS: In contrast to previous results with living E. coli, neutrophil accumulation elicited by E. coli LPS in the lungs was decreased by p50 deficiency, to approximately 30% of wild type levels. Heat-killed E. coli induced neutrophil accumulation which was not decreased by p50 deficiency, demonstrating that bacterial growth and metabolism were not responsible for the different responses to bacteria and LPS. p50 deficiency increased the LPS-induced expression of κB-regulated genes essential to neutrophil recruitment, including KC, MIP-2, ICAM-1, and TNF-α suggesting that p50 normally limited this gene expression and that decreased neutrophil recruitment did not result from insufficient expression of these genes. Neutrophils were responsive to the chemokine KC in the peripheral blood of p50-deficient mice with or without LPS-induced pulmonary inflammation. Interleukin-6 (IL-6), previously demonstrated to decrease LPS-induced neutrophil recruitment in the lungs, was increased by p50 deficiency, but LPS-induced neutrophil recruitment was decreased by p50 deficiency even in IL-6 deficient mice. CONCLUSION: p50 makes essential contributions to neutrophil accumulation elicited by LPS in the lungs. This p50-dependent pathway for neutrophil accumulation can be overcome by bacterial products other than LPS and does not require IL-6
Investigation of octupole collectivity near the shape-transitional point
Enhanced octupole collectivity is expected in the neutron-deficient Ge, Se
and Kr isotopes with neutron number and has indeed been observed
for Ge. Shape coexistence and configuration mixing are, however, a
notorious challenge for theoretical models trying to reliably predict octupole
collectivity in this mass region, which is known to feature rapid shape changes
with changing nucleon number and spin of the system. To further investigate the
microscopic configurations causing the prolate-oblate-triaxial shape transition
at and their influence on octupole collectivity, the rare
isotopes Se and Kr were studied via inelastic proton
scattering in inverse kinematics. While significantly enhanced octupole
strength of Weisskopf units (W.u.) was observed for Se, only
strengths of W.u. were observed for Kr. In combination with
existing data, the new data clearly question a simple origin of enhanced
octupole strengths around . The present work establishes two regions of
distinct octupole strengths with a sudden strength increase around the
shape transitional point
Mixed-symmetry octupole and hexadecapole excitations in N=52 isotones
In addition to the well-established quadrupole mixed-symmetry states, octupole and hexadecapole excitations with mixed-symmetry character have been recently proposed for the N = 52 isotones 92Zr and 94Mo. We performed two inelastic proton-scattering experiments to study this kind of excitations in the heaviest stable N = 52 isotone 96Ru. From the combined experimental data of both experiments absolute transition strengths were extracted
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