60,509 research outputs found

    REDUCTION OF THE VIBRATION-ROTATION-LAM HAMILTONIAN

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    Author Institution: Department of Physics, Texas Tech UniversityThe vibration-rotation-LAM Hamiltonian requires two independent separation conditions to reduce the Coriolis interaction and the vibration-LAM kinetic energy interaction. In the limit of the LAM approaching a SAM, the effective vibration-rotation Hamiltonian and/or energy must reduce to the usual vibration-rotation Hamiltonian when no internal motion is a LAM. We show how to perform this reduction, especially as it relates to the T-and R-transformations and the normal coordinate transformation

    Measurement of the ratio of prompt χ c to J / ψ production in pp collisions at √s = 7 TeV

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    The prompt production of charmonium χ c and J / ψ states is studied in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of √s = 7 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider. The χ c and J / ψ mesons are identified through their decays χ c → J / ψ γ and J / ψ → μ + μ - using 36 pb - 1 of data collected by the LHCb detector in 2010. The ratio of the prompt production cross-sections for χ c and J / ψ, σ (χ c → J / ψ γ) / σ (J / ψ), is determined as a function of the J / ψ transverse momentum in the range 2 < p T J / ψ < 15 GeV / c. The results are in excellent agreement with next-to-leading order non-relativistic expectations and show a significant discrepancy compared with the colour singlet model prediction at leading order, especially in the low p T J / ψ region

    Clinical Utility of a Commercial LAM-ELISA Assay for TB Diagnosis in HIV-Infected Patients Using Urine and Sputum Samples

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    Background: The accurate diagnosis of TB in HIV-infected patients, particularly with advanced immunosuppression, is difficult. Recent studies indicate that a lipoarabinomannan (LAM) assay (Clearview-TB (R)-ELISA) may have some utility for the diagnosis of TB in HIV-infected patients; however, the precise subgroup that may benefit from this technology requires clarification. The utility of LAM in sputum samples has, hitherto, not been evaluated.Methods: LAM was measured in sputum and urine samples obtained from 500 consecutively recruited ambulant patients, with suspected TB, from 2 primary care clinics in South Africa. Culture positivity for M. tuberculosis was used as the reference standard for TB diagnosis.Results: Of 440 evaluable patients 120/387 (31%) were HIV-infected. Urine-LAM positivity was associated with HIV positivity (p = 0.007) and test sensitivity, although low, was significantly higher in HIV-infected compared to uninfected patients (21% versus 6%; p<0.001), and also in HIV-infected participants with a CD4 <200 versus <200 cells/mm(3) (37% versus 0%; p = 0.003). Urine-LAM remained highly specific in all 3 subgroups (95%-100%). 25% of smear-negative but culture-positive HIV-infected patients with a CD4 <200 cells/mm(3) were positive for urine-LAM. Sputum-LAM had good sensitivity (86%) but poor specificity (15%) likely due to test cross-reactivity with several mouth-residing organisms including actinomycetes and nocardia species.Conclusions: These preliminary data indicate that in a high burden primary care setting the diagnostic usefulness of urine-LAM is limited, as a rule-in test, to a specific patient subgroup i.e. smear-negative HIV-infected TB patients with a CD4 count <200 cells/mm(3), who would otherwise have required further investigation. However, even in this group sensitivity was modest. Future and adequately powered studies in a primary care setting should now specifically target patients with suspected TB who have advanced HIV infection

    Chapman Living Textbook: Hepatitis C

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    Prof. Lam discusses the prevalence, distribution, effects, and treatment of Hepatitis C

    Determine TB-LAM lateral flow urine antigen assay for HIV-associated tuberculosis: recommendations on the design and reporting of clinical studies.

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    Detection of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell wall antigen lipoarabinomannan (LAM) in urine permits diagnoses of tuberculosis (TB) to be made in HIV-infected patients with advanced immunodeficiency. This can be achieved at the point-of-care within just 30 minutes using the Determine TB-LAM, which is a commercially available, lateral-flow urine 'strip test' assay. The assay has been shown to have useful diagnostic accuracy in patients enrolling in antiretroviral treatment services or in HIV-infected patients requiring admission to hospital medical wards in sub-Saharan Africa. Such patients have high mortality risk and have most to gain from rapid diagnosis of TB and immediate initiation of treatment. However, few studies using this assay have yet been reported and many questions remain concerning the correct use of the assay, interpretation of results, the role of the assay as an add-on test within existing diagnostic algorithms and the types of further studies needed. In this paper we address a series of questions with the aim of informing the design, conduct and interpretation of future studies. Specifically, we clarify which clinical populations are most likely to derive benefit from use of this assay and how patients enrolled in such studies might best be characterised. We describe the importance of employing a rigorous microbiological diagnostic reference standard in studies of diagnostic accuracy and discuss issues surrounding the specificity of the assay in different geographical areas and potential cross-reactivity with non-tuberculous mycobacteria and other organisms. We highlight the importance of careful procedures for urine collection and storage and the critical issue of how to read and interpret the test strips. Finally, we consider how the assay could be used in combination with other assays and outline the types of studies that are required to build the evidence base concerning its use

    Letter from Carl T. Hayden to C. H. Gensler, Havasupai Reservation

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    Letter from Carl T. Hayden to C. H. Gensler, Havasupai Indian Reservation, regarding Hualapai and Cataract Canyons geography

    A possible mechanism of superconductivity in high-T-c cuprates

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    This paper derives a generic T-c formula by using the long-range phase coherence condition in quantum phase fluctuation of the order parameter. Taking the two-local-spin-mediated interaction (TLSMI) proposed by Liu and Chen [Phys. Rev. B 58 (1998) 8812] as a Cooper pair potential, and the T-c formula, this paper explains five basic experimental facts in high-T-c cuprates. The aim of this paper is to show that TLSMI is a possible pairing mechanism of superconductivity in high-T-c cuprates. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.Physics, AppliedSCI(E)EI0ARTICLE4276-28434

    Memorandum from A. E. Demaray to E. C. Finney

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    Four letters of correspondence about the purchase of Bright Angel Trail between A. E. Demaray, Acting Director of the Grand Canyon National Park; E. C. Finney, Department of the Interior First Assistant Secretary; Carl T. Hayden, Representative (AZ); and Stephen T. Mather, Director of the National Park Service

    Co-implantation of Mn+N into p-type GaN for high T-C ferromagnetism

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    N and Mn ions were co-implanted into p-type GaN and subsequently annealed at 700-900 °C. The ferromagnetic property was obtained after annealing at 800 °C. As compared with conventional Mn-implanted samples, Mn-N binary phases significantly decreased, resulting in the reduction of the N vacancies. From synchrotron radiation photoemission spectroscopy, the Ga-Mn magnetic phases, which contributed to the ferromagnetic property, were still observed after annealing at 900 °C. From these results, we propose the co-implantation of N and Mn atoms to achieve high TC ferromagnetism in GaN.close0

    EN.V.O.L : ENvironment Virtual Observatory at LAM

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    International audienceFrom the first space missions to the latest ground-based observations, from cosmological surveys to extrasolar planets studies, LAM has been involved in and leading many projects producing Terabytes of data. LAM and OAMP (Observatoire Astronomique de Marseille Provence) are setting up a VO-pole featuring astronomical Web Services, and will provide VO-compliant data access and tools for data mining applications. The LASCO, Galex, VVDS, COROT/EXODAT, COSMOS and Perot-Fabry databases will be accessible within a VO-compliant infrastructure based on the SITools software. More databases are still in study, implementation or testing phase
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