14,318 research outputs found
Resonant Formation of Molecules in Deuterium: An Atomic Beam Measurement of Muon Catalyzed dt Fusion
Resonant formation of molecules in collisions of muonic tritium
() on D was investigated using a beam of atoms,
demonstrating a new direct approach in muon catalyzed fusion studies. Strong
epithermal resonances in formation were directly revealed for the
first time. From the time-of-flight analysis of fusion
events, a formation rate consistent with times the theoretical prediction was obtained. For the largest
peak at a resonance energy of eV, this corresponds to a rate
of s, more than an order of magnitude larger
than those at low energies.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Doping of a high calcium oxide metaphosphate glass with titanium dioxide
This study investigates the effect of doping a high calcium oxide containing metaphosphate glass series (CaO)(40)(Na2O)(10)(P2O5)(50) with TiO2 (1, 3, and 5 mol%). TiO2 incorporation increased the density and glass transition temperature while reduced the degradation rate (5 mol% in particular) by twofold compared with (CaO)30 system reported previously. This has been confirmed by ion release and the minimal pH changes. TiP2O7, NaCa(PO3)(3) and CaP2O6 phases were detected for all TiO2-containing ceramics. XPS showed that the surface is composed of Ca, h, and Ti. Ti was recognized mainly as TiO2, but its total amount was lower than theoretical values. P-31 magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR showed a downfield shift of the P-31 lineshape with increasing TiO2, interpreted as an effect of the titanium cation rather than an increase in the phosphate network connectivity. FTIR showed that incorporation of TiO2 increased the strength of the phosphate chains, and the O/P ratio while introducing more Q(1) units into the structure at the expense of the Q(2) units. There were no differences, however, in surface topography roughness and free energies between these glasses. These results suggested that TiO2 and CaO were acting synergistically in producing glasses with controllable bulk and structural propertie
Degradation of zinc containing phosphate-based glass as a material for orthopedic tissue engineering
Phosphate-based glasses have been examined in many studies as a potential biomaterial for bone repair because of its degradation properties, which can be controlled and allow the release of various elements to promote osteogenic tissue growth. However most of these experiments studied either tertiary or quaternary glass systems. This study investigated a qinternary system that included titanium dioxide for degradation rate control and zinc that is considered to have a role in bone formation. Zinc and titanium phosphate glass discs of different compositions were melt synthesized and samples of each composition was tested for different physical, chemical and biological characteristics via density measurement, X-ray diffraction, differential thermal analysis, mass loss, ion release, scanning electron microscopy, biocompatibility studies via live/dead assays at three time points (day 1, 4, and 7). The results showed that the glass was amorphous and that the all thermal variables decreased as zinc oxide amount raised, mass loss as well as ion release increased as zinc oxide increased, and the maximum rise was with ZnO15. The cellular studies showed that all the formulation showed similar cytocompatibility properties with MG63 except ZnO15, which displayed cytotoxic properties and this was confirmed also by the scanning electron microscope images. In conclusion, replacing calcium oxide with zinc oxide in proportion less than 10 % can have a positive effect on bone forming cells
The convergence of the ab-initio many-body expansion for the cohesive energy of solid mercury
A many-body expansion for mercury clusters of the form E = \sum_{i<j}\Delta
\epsilon_{ij} + \sum_{i<j<k}\Delta \epsilon_{ijk} + ... \quad, does not
converge smoothly with increasing cluster size towards the solid state. Even
for smaller cluster sizes (up to n=6), where van der Waals forces still
dominate, one observes bad convergence behaviour. For solid mercury the
convergence of the many-body expansion can dramatically be improved by an
incremental procedure within an embedded cluster approach. Here one adds the
coupled cluster many-body electron correlation contributions of the embedded
cluster to the bulk HF energy. In this way we obtain a cohesive energy (not
corrected for zero-point vibration) of 0.79 eV in perfect agreement with the
experimental value.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted PR
Measuring antibiotic availability and use in 20 low- and middle-income countries
Objective To assess antibiotic availability and use in health facilities in low- and middle-income countries, using the service provision assessment and service availability and readiness assessment surveys.
Methods We obtained data on antibiotic availability at 13 561 health facilities in 13 service provision assessment and 8 service availability and readiness assessment surveys. In 10 service provision assessment surveys, child consultations with health-care providers were observed, giving data on antibiotic use in 22 699 children. Antibiotics were classified as access, watch or reserve, according to the World Health Organization’s AWaRe categories. The percentage of health-care facilities across countries with specific antibiotics available and the proportion of children receiving antibiotics for key clinical syndromes were estimated.
Findings The surveys assessed the availability of 27 antibiotics (19 access, 7 watch, 1 unclassified). Co-trimoxazole and metronidazole were most widely available, being in stock at 89.5% (interquartile range, IQR: 11.6%) and 87.1% (IQR: 15.9%) of health facilities, respectively. In contrast, 17 other access and watch antibiotics were stocked, by fewer than a median of 50% of facilities. Of the 22 699 children observed, 60.1% (13 638) were prescribed antibiotics (mostly co-trimoxazole or amoxicillin). Children with respiratory conditions were most often prescribed antibiotics (76.1%; 8972/11 796) followed by undifferentiated fever (50.1%; 760/1518), diarrhoea (45.7%; 1293/2832) and malaria (30.3%; 352/1160).
Conclusion Routine health facility surveys provided a valuable data source on the availability and use of antibiotics in low- and middle-income countries. Many access antibiotics were unavailable in a majority of most health-care facilities
Muon Catalyzed Fusion in 3 K Solid Deuterium
Muon catalyzed fusion in deuterium has traditionally been studied in gaseous
and liquid targets. The TRIUMF solid-hydrogen-layer target system has been used
to study the fusion reaction rates in the solid phase of D_2 at a target
temperature of 3 K. Products of two distinct branches of the reaction were
observed; neutrons by a liquid organic scintillator, and protons by a silicon
detector located inside the target system. The effective molecular formation
rate from the upper hyperfine state of and the hyperfine transition
rate have been measured: , and .
The molecular formation rate is consistent with other recent measurements, but
not with the theory for isolated molecules. The discrepancy may be due to
incomplete thermalization, an effect which was investigated by Monte Carlo
calculations. Information on branching ratio parameters for the s and p wave
d+d nuclear interaction has been extracted.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, submitted to PRA Feb 20, 199
A room temperature 19-channel magnetic field mapping device for cardiac signals
We present a multichannel cardiac magnetic field imaging system built in
Fribourg from optical double-resonance Cs vapor magnetometers. It consists of
25 individual sensors designed to record magnetic field maps of the beating
human heart by simultaneous measurements on a grid of 19 points over the chest.
The system is operated as an array of second order gradiometers using
sophisticated digitally controlled feedback loops.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter
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