Search results for "PICO"

showing 10 items of 343 documents

Spatial distribution of phytoplankton in the Gulf of Riga during spring and summer stages

1999

Distribution patterns of chlorophyll a, phytoplankton species and biomass were studied in the Gulf of Riga, one of the most eutrophicated areas of the Baltic Sea. Quasi-synoptic measurements were carried out during four seasonal stages (spring bloom 1995, early-summer stage 1994, cyanobacterial bloom 1994, and late summer stage 1993). For each stage, common factor analysis was used to simplify the highly correlated patterns of nutrients, salinity, temperature and the depth of mixed layer. Obtained latent variables were used to explain spatial distribution of phytoplankton. Generally, the distribution of phytoplankton variables followed closely the patterns of nutrient rich fresh water. Duri…

Biomass (ecology)Chlorophyll aAquatic ScienceBiologySpring bloomOceanographyAphanizomenonbiology.organism_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundOceanographychemistryPhytoplanktonPicoplanktonBloomEutrophicationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Marine Systems
researchProduct

Polarization Modulation Instability in All-Normal Dispersion Microstructured Optical Fibers with Quasi-Continuous 1064 nm Pump

2019

Polarization modulation instability (PMI) is a form of modulation instability that can exist in weakly birefringent optical fibers [1]. Sidebands can be generated by this effect when a polarization mode of the birefringent fiber is excited with an intense optical pump. The polarization state of the sidebands is orthogonal to the polarization of the pump signal. PMI has been observed in microstructured optical fibers (MOFs). PMI was reported in a large-air-filling fraction MOF that was pumped in the normal dispersion regime with visible light [2]. The coherent degradation of femtosecond supercontinuum light generated in all-normal dispersion (ANDi) MOFs due to PMI was recently investigated […

BirefringenceOptical fiberMaterials sciencebusiness.industryComputer Science::Information RetrievalPhysics::OpticsComputer Science::Computation and Language (Computational Linguistics and Natural Language and Speech Processing)Polarization (waves)Supercontinuumlaw.inventionOptical pumpinglawPicosecondExcited stateFemtosecondOptoelectronicsbusiness2019 Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe & European Quantum Electronics Conference (CLEO/Europe-EQEC)
researchProduct

Glenoid bone loss in anterior shoulder dislocation: a multicentric study to assess the most reliable imaging method

2022

Purpose: The aim of this multicentric study was to assess which imaging method has the best inter-reader agreement for glenoid bone loss quantification in anterior shoulder instability. A further aim was to calculate the inter-method agreement comparing bilateral CT with unilateral CT and MR arthrography (MRA) with CT measurements. Finally, calculations were carried out to find the least time-consuming method. Method: A retrospective evaluation was performed by 9 readers (or pairs of readers) on a consecutive series of 110 patients with MRA and bilateral shoulder CT. Each reader was asked to calculate the glenoid bone loss of all patients using the following methods: best fit circle area on…

Bone lossBone loAnterior shoulder instability; Bone loss; CT; Glenoid bony defect; MRI; Measurement technique; PICORadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingAnterior shoulder instabilityPICOGeneral MedicineMeasurement techniqueAnterior shoulder instability; Bone loss; CT; Glenoid bony defect; MRI; Measurement technique; PICO.Glenoid bony defectAnterior shoulder instability; Bone loss; CT; Glenoid bony defect; Measurement technique; MRI; PICOCTMRI
researchProduct

Comparison of growth potentials of epicormic shoots of nectarine trees grown on size-controlling and vigorous rootstocks

2006

SummaryThe vegetative performance of four nectarine tree scion/rootstock combinations, with varying growth capacities, were analysed in the Spring after the canopy:root ratio was dramatically reduced by severe pruning in the dormant season. We anticipated that severe pruning and reduction of the shoot:root ratio would mitigate known root water supply limitations related to the various rootstocks and determine if other factors associated with the rootstocks would control the rates of epicormic shoot growth. The trees used in this field experiment were 3 years-old, with ‘May Fire’ nectarine grafted onto four different rootstocks: ‘Nemaguard’ (a vigorous seed-propagated control, P. persica P. …

CanopyHorticultureEpicormic shootDormant seasonField experimentBotanyShootGeneticsHorticultureBiologyRootstockPruningHybridThe Journal of Horticultural Science and Biotechnology
researchProduct

Author response: Globally defining the effects of mutations in a picornavirus capsid

2021

CapsidPicornavirusBiologybiology.organism_classificationVirology
researchProduct

Analysis of TCR Vbeta repertoire and cytokine gene expression in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy

2001

Although the etiopathogenesis of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC) is still unclear, it is widely accepted that a complex interplay between viral infections and immune mechanisms is the basis of disease genesis. Previously, we showed that heart-infiltrating T cells of patients suffering from acute, fulminant Coxsackie virus B3+-IDC shared a preferential usage of three variable gene segments of the T cell receptor beta chain-(TCR-Vbeta) encoding families Vbeta3, 7 and 13.1. This indicated the possible presence of a superantigen-driven immune response. Here, we further investigated the IDC immunological scenario by analysing different phenotypes of heart-infiltrating cells: TCR repertoi…

Cardiomyopathy DilatedInterleukin 2MyocarditisCD8 AntigensReceptors Antigen T-Cell alpha-betaT cellImmunologyCardiomyopathyGene Expressionchemical and pharmacologic phenomenaPicornaviridaeBiologyHLA-DQ alpha-ChainsImmunoenzyme TechniquesInterferon-gammaImmune systemAntigenHLA-DQ AntigensIdiopathic dilated cardiomyopathymedicineHLA-DQ beta-ChainsHumansImmunology and AllergyRNA MessengerAntigens ViralInterleukin-6Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionHistocompatibility TestingMyocardiumIDC cytokines immune mechanismsmedicine.diseaseEnterovirus B HumanMyocarditismedicine.anatomical_structureCD4 AntigensImmunologyLeukocytes MononuclearCytokinesInterleukin-2Interleukin-4CD8Interleukin-1medicine.drug
researchProduct

Pyridinedicarboxylates, the first mechanism-derived inhibitors for prolyl 4-hydroxylase, selectively suppress cellular hydroxyprolyl biosynthesis. De…

1987

Two pyridinedicarboxylates, predicted [Hanauske-Abel (1983) M.D.-Ph.D. Thesis, Philipps Universität Marburg] and later found to be potent reversible inhibitors of purified prolyl 4-hydroxylase [Majaama, Hanauske-Abel, Günzler & Kivirikko (1984) Eur. J. Biochem. 138, 239-245] were investigated with respect to their effect on hydroxyprolyl biosynthesis in the fibroblast/collagen and the macrophage/Clq systems, and the effect was compared with that of the iron chelator 2,2′-dipyridyl, the compound usually employed to inhibit cellular hydroxyprolyl formation. Only the enzyme-mechanism-derived pyridinedicarboxylates were highly selective inhibitors, and only they lacked overt cytotoxicity. M…

Cell typeCell SurvivalComplement Activating EnzymesGuinea PigsProcollagen-Proline DioxygenaseBiologyBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisComplement C1In vivomedicineAnimalsHumansSecretionPicolinic AcidsFibroblastCytotoxicityMolecular BiologyCells CulturedDose-Response Relationship DrugComplement C1qEndoplasmic reticulumCell BiologyFibroblastsHydroxyprolineMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrychemistryLipophilicityCollagenResearch ArticleBiochemical Journal
researchProduct

A size dependent discontinuous decay rate for the exciton emission in ZnO quantum dots

2014

The time resolved UV-fluorescence in ZnO quantum dots has been investigated using femtosecond laser spectroscopy. The measurements were performed as a function of particle size for particles between 3 and 7 nm in diameter, which are in the quantum confined regime. A red shift in the fluorescence maximum is seen while increasing the particle size, which correlates with the shift in band gap due to quantum confinement. The energy difference between the UV-fluorescence and the band gap does, however, increase for the smaller particles. For 3.7 nm particles the fluorescence energy is 100 meV smaller than the band gap energy, whereas it is only 20 meV smaller for the largest particles. This indi…

ChemistryQuantum dotBand gapExcitonPicosecondGeneral Physics and AstronomyTrappingParticle sizePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAtomic physicsFluorescenceQuantumPhys. Chem. Chem. Phys.
researchProduct

Rotation correlation time as a measure of microviscosity of excited state isomerization reactions of three cyanine dyes in n-alcohol solutions

1994

Abstract Rotation correlation times of three chemically similar cyanine dyes of different sizes in n -alcohol solutions have been recorded at several temperatures by using polarized picosecond spectroscopy. For all three dyes the linear temperature dependencies of τ or on η/ T were observed to be independent of solvent up to viscosities of about 60 cP. The rotational motion of the dyes proceeds at much slower rates than the excited state isomerization in viscous solutions of the same fluidity. Isomerization seems to depend on special solvent-induced changes of the force field of the reactant and clearly proceeds faster, especially for the two larger dyes, than predicted by Kramers' theory a…

ChemistryRotation around a fixed axisGeneral Physics and AstronomyThermodynamicsPhotochemistryMicroviscositySolventchemistry.chemical_compoundExcited statePicosecondPhysics::Chemical PhysicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCyanineSpectroscopyIsomerizationChemical Physics Letters
researchProduct

Photoinduced ultrafast dye-to-semiconductor electron injection from nonthermalized and thermalized donor states.

2001

Electron injection from the transition metal complex Ru(dcbpy)(2)(NCS)(2) (dcbpy = 4,4'-dicarboxy-2,2'-bipyridine) into a titanium dioxide nanocrystalline film occurs on the femto- and picosecond time scales. Here we show that the dominating part of the electron transfer proceeds extremely rapidly from the initially populated, vibronically nonthermalized, singlet excited state, prior to electronic and nuclear relaxation of the molecule. The results are especially relevant to the understanding and design of molecular-based photovoltaic devices and artificial photosynthetic assemblies.

Chemistrybusiness.industryGeneral ChemistryElectronic structurePhotochemistryBiochemistryCatalysisNanocrystalline materialElectron transferColloid and Surface ChemistrySemiconductorTransition metalPicosecondExcited stateSinglet stateAtomic physicsbusinessJournal of the American Chemical Society
researchProduct