745 research outputs found
The globals of pseudovarieties of ordered semigroups containing and an application to a problem proposed by Pin
Some operators that preserve the locality of a pseudovariety of semigroups
It is shown that if V is a local monoidal pseudovariety of semigroups, then
K(m)V, D(m)V and LI(m)V are local. Other operators of the form Z(m)(_) are
considered. In the process, results about the interplay between operators
Z(m)(_) and (_)*D_k are obtained.Comment: To appear in International Journal of Algebra and Computatio
Locais de venda de medicamentos não sujeitos a receita médica: caracterização da população utente e do nível de satisfação com o atendimento
A possibilidade de venda de medicamentos não sujeitos a receita médica fora das farmácias provocou uma enorme revolução no sector. Esta medida visou, entre outros aspectos, a redução dos preços destes medicamentos e a melhoria da acessibilidade do consumidor a estes produtos, pelo aumento do número de postos de venda. No entanto, com a excepção do efeito sobre o preço dos medicamentos que esta medida teve, pouco se conhece sobre a qualidade dos serviços prestados nos locais
de venda e a percepção sobre essa qualidade. Objectivo do estudo: caracterizar a população-utente de locais de venda de MNSRM e determinar o seu grau de satisfação com a organização e o atendimento prestado no local
Development of a Novel Nanotextured Titanium Implant. An Experimental Study in Rats.
This animal study evaluated the osseointegration level of a new nanotextured titanium surface produced by anodization. Ti-cp micro-implants (1.5 mm diameter by 2.5 mm in length) divided into two groups: titanium nanotextured surface treatment (Test Group) and acid etched surface treatment (Control Group). Surface characterization included morphology analysis using scanning electron microscopy and wettability by measuring contact angle. Sixteen Wistar rats were submitted to two micro implants surgical placement procedures. In each rat, one type of micro implant placed in each tibia. The animals sacrificed after two (T1) and six weeks (T2) post-implantation. After the euthanasia, tibias processed for histomorphometric analysis, which allowed the evaluation of bone to implant contact (BIC) and the bone area fraction occupancy between the threads (BAFO). Our surface analysis data showed that the Control Group exhibited an irregular and non-homogenous topography while the Test Group showed a nanotextured surface. The Test Group showed higher wettability (contact angle = 5.1 ± 0.7°) than the Control Group (contact angle = 75.5 ± 4.6°). Concerning the histomorphometric analysis results for T1, Control and Test groups showed BIC percentages of 41.3 ± 15.2% and 63.1 ± 8.7% (p < 0.05), respectively, and for BAFO, 28.7 ± 13.7% and 54.8 ± 7.5%, respectively (p < 0.05). For T2, the histomorphometric analysis for Control and Test groups showed BIC percentages of 51.2 ± 11.4% and 64.8 ± 7.4% (p < 0.05), respectively and for BAFO, 36.4 ± 10.3% and 57.9 ± 9.3% (p < 0.05), respectively. The findings of the current study confirmed that the novel nanotextured surface exhibited superior wettability, improved peri-implant bone formation, and expedited osseointegration
A Monte Carlo study of the fluctuations in Xe electroluminescence yield: pure Xe vs Xe doped with CH4 or CF4 and planar vs cylindrical geometries
Monte Carlo simulation is used to investigate the fluctuations in the Xe
proportional electroluminescence (EL) yield H (also known as secondary
scintillation) produced by sub-ionization primary electrons drifting in the gas
under appropriate electric fields, comparing pure Xe gas with Xe doped with CH4
or CF4. The work is modeled on gas detectors of the gas
proportional-scintillation type, where amplification is achieved through the
production of EL under a charge-multiplication free regime. The addition of the
molecular gases to Xe reduces electron diffusion, a desirable effect in large
size detectors where primary electrons drift across a long absorption/drift
region. However, the presence of the molecules reduces H and increases its
fluctuations. In the case of CF4, the effects are very strong due to
significant electron attachment in the EL field range, ruling out CF4 as an
acceptable additive. The addition of CH4 affects H and its fluctuations to a
much lower extent, and CH4 concentrations lower than ~1% may be an appropriate
choice. In addition, Monte Carlo calculations in pure Xe under cylindrical
geometry in a regime below charge multiplication have shown that fluctuations
in the EL yield H are an order of magnitude higher than for planar geometry.
For both geometries, though, the fluctuations have a negligible effect on the
energy resolution, and variations of the anode radius in cylindrical geometry
or grid parallelism in planar geometry may be a more significant cause of
concern.Comment: 24 pages,11 figures; 2 typos have been corrected on Fig.4 captio
A UV Sensitive Integrated Micromegas with Timepix Readout
This article presents a detector system consisting of three components, a
CMOS imaging array, a gaseous-detector structure with a Micromegas layout and a
UV-photon sensitive CsI reflective photocathode. All three elements have been
monolithically integrated using simple post-processing steps. The Micromegas
structure and the CMOS imaging chip are not impacted by the CsI deposition. The
detector operated reliably in He/isobutane mixtures and attained charge gains
with single photons up to a level of 6 \cdot 10^4. The Timepix CMOS array
permitted high resolution imaging of single UV-photons. The system has an MTF50
of 0.4 lp/pixel which corresponds to app. 7 lp/mm.Comment: 4 pages with 8 figures. Submitted to Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A
(Elsevier) for proceedings of VCI 2010
Efficient ion blocking in gaseous detectors and its application to gas-avalanche photomultipliers sensitive in the visible-light range
A novel concept for ion blocking in gas-avalanche detectors was developed,
comprising cascaded micro-hole electron multipliers with patterned electrodes
for ion defocusing. This leads to ion blocking at the 10^{-4} level, in DC
mode, in operation conditions adequate for TPCs and for gaseous
photomultipliers. The concept was validated in a cascaded visible-sensitive gas
avalanche photomultiplier operating at atmospheric pressure of Ar/CH_{4} (95/5)
with a bi-alkali photocathode. While in previous works high gain, in excess of
10^{5}, was reached only in a pulse-gated cascaded-GEM gaseous photomultiplier,
the present device yielded, for the first time, similar gain in DC mode. We
describe shortly the physical processes involved in the charge transport within
gaseous photomultipliers and the ion blocking method. We present results of ion
backflow fraction and of electron multiplication in cascaded
patterned-electrode gaseous photomultiplier with K-Cs-Sb, Na-K-Sb and Cs-Sb
visible-sensitive photocathodes, operated in DC mode.Comment: Proceeding paper to 10-th International Conference On Instrumentation
For Colliding Beam Physics, Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics, Novosibirsk,
Russia, February 28 - March 5, 2008, Submitted to NIMA, 5 pages, 7 figure
Development of high-gain gaseous photomultipliers for the visible spectral range
We summarize the development of visible-sensitive gaseous photomultipliers,
combining a semitransparent bi-alkali photocathode with a state-of-the-art
cascaded electron multiplier. The latter has high photoelectron collection
efficiency and a record ion blocking capability. We describe in details the
system and methods of photocathode production and characterization, their
coupling with the electron multiplier and the gaseous-photomultiplier operation
and characterization in a continuous mode. We present results on the properties
of laboratory-produced KCsSb, CsSb and NaKSb photocathodes and
report on their stability and QE in gas; KCsSb photocathodes yielded QE
values in Ar/CH(95/5) above 30% at wavelengths of 360-400 nm. The novel
gaseous photomultiplier yielded stable operation at gains of 10, in
continuous operation mode, in 700 Torr of this gas; its sensitivity to single
photons was demonstrated. Other properties are described. The successful
detection of visible light with this gas-photomultiplier pave ways towards
further development of large-area sealed imaging detectors, of flat geometry,
insensitive to magnetic fields, which might have significant impact on light
detection in numerous fields.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, for submission to JINS
MPGDs in Compton imaging with liquid-xenon
The interaction of radiation with liquid xenon, inducing both scintillation
and ionization signals, is of particular interest for Compton-sequences
reconstruction. We report on the development and recent results of a
liquid-xenon time-projection chamber, dedicated to a novel nuclear imaging
technique named "3 gamma imaging". In a first prototype, the scintillation is
detected by a vacuum photomultiplier tube and the charges are collected with a
MICROMEGAS structure; both are fully immersed in liquid xenon. In view of the
final large-area detector, and with the aim of minimizing dead-zones, we are
investigating a gaseous photomultiplier for recording the UV scintillation
photons. The prototype concept is presented as well as preliminary results in
liquid xenon. We also present soft x-rays test results of a gaseous
photomultiplier prototype made of a double Thick Gaseous Electron Multiplier
(THGEM) at normal temperature and pressure conditions.Comment: presented at MPGD09, CRETE, June 2009; to be published in JINST
Proceedings, PDF, 10 pages, 11 figure
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