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  • 1
    ISSN: 1089-7623
    Source: AIP Digital Archive
    Topics: Physics , Electrical Engineering, Measurement and Control Technology
    Notes: The MAX laboratory at Lund University, Sweden, today operates an accelerator system consisting of a 100 MeV racetrack microtron and a 550 MeV storage ring (MAX I). At the moment (July 1994) a new storage ring MAX II is near completion and will start first injections within 2 months. This work gives an overview of the MAX II project including the first beamlines and a description of the accelerator system. MAX II is a 1.5 GeV third generation light source optimized for the VUV and soft-x-ray region. It consists of a ten cell double bend achromat lattice forming the 90 m circumference ring. Injection is done at 500 MeV from the existing storage ring MAX I, and ramping up to full energy will take place in MAX II. The straight sections have a length of 3.2 m and eight sections are free to house insertion devices. At start up the ring will be equipped with one 7.5 T superconducting wiggler and one 1.8 T multipole wiggler. Two more undulators are ordered and under construction. To be able to achieve the project a few shortcuts have been made in the design of the storage ring: (1) Nonzero dispersion is allowed in the straight sections, (2) chromaticity correction is built into the quadrupole magnets, and (3) the length of the straight sections is limited to 3.2 m. The project is progressing on time. Extraction of an electron beam from the MAX I storage ring has been achieved and has successfully been transported into the MAX II building. The MAX II ring is under assembly with most of the sections already mounted. First injection is planned to take place in August 1994. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Algorithmica 23 (1999), S. 246-260 
    ISSN: 1432-0541
    Keywords: Key words. Suffix trees, Substring searching.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Computer Science , Mathematics
    Notes: Abstract. We discuss an intrinsic generalization of the suffix tree, designed to index a string of length n which has a natural partitioning into m multicharacter substrings or words . This word suffix tree represents only the m suffixes that start at word boundaries. These boundaries are determined by delimiters , whose definition depends on the application. Since traditional suffix tree construction algorithms rely heavily on the fact that all suffixes are inserted, construction of a word suffix tree is nontrivial, in particular when only O(m) construction space is allowed. We solve this problem, presenting an algorithm with O(n) expected running time. In general, construction cost is Ω(n) due to the need of scanning the entire input. In applications that require strict node ordering, an additional cost of sorting O(m') characters arises, where m' is the number of distinct words. In either case, this is a significant improvement over previously known solutions. Furthermore, when the alphabet is small, we may assume that the n characters in the input string occupy o(n) machine words. We illustrate that this can allow a word suffix tree to be built in sublinear time.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Copenhagen : International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
    Applied crystallography online 31 (1998), S. 823-825 
    ISSN: 1600-5767
    Source: Crystallography Journals Online : IUCR Backfile Archive 1948-2001
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: An electrochemical cell has been constructed for in situ neutron diffraction studies of lithium-insertion/extraction processes in electrode materials for Li-ion batteries. Its key components are a Pyrex tube, gold plated on its inside, which functions as a current collector, and a central lithium rod, which serves as the negative electrode. The device is demonstrated here for a neutron diffraction study of lithium extraction from LiMn2O4: a mechanical Celgard© separator soaked in the electrolyte surrounds the lithium electrode. The LiMn2O4 powder, mixed with electrolyte, occupies the space between separator and current collector.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Key words Corticosteroids; systemic effects ; plasma cortisol suppression ; white blood cell count ; healthy volunteers
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The systemic effects of single and multiple doses of inhaled fluticasone propionate (FP) and budesonide were examined in 24 healthy male volunteers (age range 18–29 years). The study was of an open, placebo-controlled, randomized, three-way crossover design. On each study day, multiple blood samples were taken over a 20 h period after drug administration (after a single dose and after the last of seven doses) and area under the curve (AUC0–20) for plasma cortisol and white blood cell (WBC) counts was calculated. Results: The present study shows that multiple dosing with FP 1.0 mg b.i.d. for 3.5 days (seven doses) resulted in a marked cortisol suppression from placebo which, at 55%, was more than double that seen with a single dose (25% suppression). Multiple dosing with budesonide 0.8 mg b.i.d. resulted in a 34% suppression in plasma cortisol compared with a suppression of 26% with a single dose. The increase in systemic activity of FP after multiple dosing is confirmed by both the number of subjects with 0800 hours plasma cortisol values below normal limits and by the changes in WBC and differential counts. Conclusion: The results of the present study confirm previous findings with regard to the more marked systemic effect of FP following multiple dosing as compared with a single dose. This increase in systemic effect from single dosing to multiple dosing is significantly greater for FP than for budesonide.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Corticosteroids ; systemic effects ; plasma cortisol suppression ; white blood cell count ; healthy volunteers
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The systemic effects of single and multiple doses of inhaled fluticasone propionate (FP) and budesonide were examined in 24 healthy male volunteers (age range 18–29 years). The study was of an open, placebo-controlled, randomized, three-way crossover design. On each study day, multiple blood samples were taken over a 20 h period after drug administration (after a single dose and after the last of seven doses) and area under the curve (AUC0–20) for plasma cortisol and white blood cell (WBC) counts was calculated. Results: The present study shows that multiple dosing with FP 1.0 mg b.i.d. for 3.5 days (seven doses) resulted in a marked cortisol suppression from placebo which, at 55%, was more than double that seen with a single dose (25% suppression). Multiple dosing with budesonide 0.8 mg b.i.d. resulted in a 34% suppression in plasma cortisol compared with a suppression of 26% with a single dose. The increase in systemic activity of FP after multiple dosing is confirmed by both the number of subjects with 0800 hours plasma cortisol values below normal limits and by the changes in WBC and differential counts. Conclusion: The results of the present study confirm previous findings with regard to the more marked systemic effect of FP following multiple dosing as compared with a single dose. This increase in systemic effect from single dosing to multiple dosing is significantly greater for FP than for budesonide.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Key words Pregnanolone ; Pharmacokinetics ; Premenstrual syndrome
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objective: Pregnanolone is a 3α-hydroxylated-5β-reduced metabolite of the female sex steroid hormone progesterone. The compound is currently being evaluated for anaesthetic purposes. Previous studies have indicated a differential physiological response across the menstrual cycle and a different response in patients with premenstrual syndrome (PMS). This study was undertaken to determine whether hormonal changes during the menstrual cycle influence pregnanolone pharmacokinetics and to compare PMS diagnosis-related differences in pregnanolone pharmacokinetics. Methods: Seven patients with premenstrual syndrome and seven female controls were given three increasing doses of pregnanolone in the follicular and luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. Results: Mean pregnanolone elimination half-life varied between 28.4 min and 31.8 min and clearance between 59.6 ml · min−1 · kg−1 and 64.0 ml · min−1 · kg−1, depending on diagnostic group and cycle phase. No significant differences in pregnanolone pharmacokinetic properties were found between PMS patients and controls in either phase of the menstrual cycle. Furthermore, no differences in pharmacokinetic variables were detected between cycle phases. Conclusion: Pregnanolone pharmacokinetics do not differ between follicular and luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, nor between PMS patients and control subjects.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-1017
    Keywords: Key wordsAcholeplasma laidlawii ; Phase equilibria ; Intact membranes ; Total lipid extracts ; Hydration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Acholeplasma laidlawii strain A-EF22 was grown in a medium supplemented with 75 µm α-deuterated palmitic acid (16:0-d 2) and 75 µm α-deuterated oleic acid (18:1c-d 2), or with 150 µm 18:1c-d 2. The fatty acids were incorporated into the membrane lipids and 2H NMR spectra were recorded from intact membranes, total lipid extracts, and the combined glucolipid and neutral lipid fractions of a total lipid extract. The lipids in intact membranes form a bilayer structure up to at least 70 °C. The same result was obtained with membranes digested with pronase, which removes a large fraction of the membrane proteins. A reversed hexagonal liquid crystalline (HII) phase was formed below 70 °C by the total lipid extracts hydrated with 20 and 30% (w/w) water; in the presence of 40% (w/w) water only one of the extracts formed an HII phase below 70 °C. The HII phase was formed at higher temperatures with an increasing water content. However, only a lamellar liquid crystalline (L α ) phase was formed up to 70 °C by the total lipid extracts when the water concentrations were 50% (w/w) or higher. The temperature (T LH) for the L α to HII phase transition in the combined glucolipid and neutral lipid fractions was only 2–3 °C lower than for the total lipids, and the phospholipids thus have a very modest influence on the T LH value. Physiologically relevant concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions did not affect the phase equilibria of total lipid extracts significantly. It is concluded from comparison with published data that the membrane lipids of the cell wall-less bacterium A. laidlawii have a smaller tendency to form reversed nonlamellar phases than the membrane lipids of three bacterial species surrounded by a cell wall.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: Key words Fluticasone propionatei ; HPA-axis; bud esonide ; asthma ; children ; corticosteroids ; systemic effects ; plasma cortisol suppression
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Objective: To compare the systemic potency of inhaled fluticasone propionate delivered via Diskhaler® (FP-DH), and inhaled budesonide delivered via Turbuhaler® (BUD-TBH) over the clinically recommended dose range using plasma cortisol suppression as a marker for systemic activity. Methods: The systemic potency was examined in a dose-response study in 81 healthy male volunteers. The study was of an open, randomized, parallel-group (four groups) design, where two treatments were given in crossover fashion within each group. FP-DH and BUD-TBH were given b.i.d. for 7 days (14 doses): 100 and 100 μg (group 1); 200 and 200 μg (group 2); 500 and 400 μg (group 3); 1000 and 800 μg (group 4). There was a washout period of 7 days within each treatment group. All doses were administered at 08:00 and 20:00 hours. Multiple plasma cortisol samples were taken every 2 h over 24-h periods prior to randomization (baseline) and during steady state (i.e., the last two dosing intervals). Cortisol suppression was determined by comparing average plasma concentrations of cortisol before and during treatment. Dose-response curves for cortisol suppression were analyzed using multivariate non-linear regression (Hill modeling). Results: Multiple dosing for 7 days with FP-DH and BUD-TBH resulted in dose-dependent cortisol suppression by both drugs, most pronounced at the two highest dose levels. FP-DH-induced suppression was 41% at 500 μg and 86% at 1000 μg b.i.d., while that induced by BUD-TBH was 19% at 400 μg and 47% at 800 μg b.i.d. Statistically significant differences were found when comparing the two steroids at these two dose levels. Doses producing 50% of maximum suppression (ED50) were estimated at 833 μg b.i.d. for BUD-TBH and 479 μg b.i.d. for FP-DH. This gave an estimated relative cortisol suppression over the dose range of 1.74:1 (FP-DH:BUD-TBH). ED50 values, estimated from cortisol concentrations at 08:00 hours (12 h after the last dose), were 1212 μg b.i.d. for BUD-TBH and 527 μg b.i.d. for FP-DH giving a relative cortisol suppression of 2.30:1 (FP-DH:BUD-TBH). Fourteen subjects on the highest FP-DH dose and 3 at the next highest dose had morning plasma cortisol levels below the lower reference limit. No subject taking budesonide, however, had morning plasma cortisol levels below the reference limit. Analysis of the time for return to pretreatment baseline levels showed that cortisol suppression, 12–24 h after the last dose, was statistically significant compared with the baseline for the highest dose of FP-DH but not for any of the BUD-TBH doses. Conclusions: The results of the present study show that FP-DH suppresses plasma cortisol more than BUD-TBH on a equivalent basis with regard to both magnitude and duration.
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A one year field study of four stations in the Gulf of Bothnia during 1991 showed that the biomass was ca. two times, and primary productivity ca. four times, lower in the north (Bothnian Bay) than in the south (Bothnian Sea) during the summer. Nutrient addition experiments indicated phosphorus limitation of phytoplankton in the Bothanian Bay and the coastal areas in the northern Bothnian Sea, but nitrogen limitation in the open Bothanian Sea. A positive correlation between the phosphate concentration and the production/biomass ratio of phytoplankton was demonstrated, which partly explained the differences in the specific growth rate of the phytoplankton during the summer. Differences in photosynthetic active radiation between the stations also showed a covariation with the primary productivity. The relative importance of nutrient or light limitation for photosynthetic carbon fixation could not, however, the conclusively determined from this study. Marked differences in phytoplankton species composition from north to south were also observed. The number of dominating species was higher in the Bothnian Sea than in the Bothnian Bay. The distribution of some species could be explained as due to nutrient availability (e.g. Nodularia spumigena, Aphanizomenon sp.), while salinity probably limits the distribution of some limnic as well as marine species. The potentially toxic phytoplankton N. spumigena, Dinophysis acuminata and Chrysochromulina spp. were common in the Bothnian Sea but not in the Bothnian Bay. The pico- and nanoplankton biomass during late summer was higher than previously reported due to a revised carbon/volume ratio.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-2056
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract During the late winter and spring of 1994, the influence of sea ice on phytoplankton succession in the water was studied at a coastal station in the northern Baltic Sea. Ice cores were taken together with water samples from the underlying water and analysed for algal composition, chlorophyll a and nutrients. Sediment traps were placed under the ice and near the bottom, and the sedimented material was analysed for algal composition. The highest concentration of ice algae (4.1 mmol C m−2) was found shortly before ice break-up in the middle of April, coincidental with the onset of an under-ice phytoplankton bloom. The ice algae were dominated by the diatoms Chaetoceros wighamii Brightwell, Melosira arctica (Ehrenberg) Dickie and Nitzschia frigida Grunow. Under the ice the diatom Achnanthes taeniata Grunow and the dinoflagellate Peridiniella catenata (Levander) Balech were dominant. Calculations of sinking rates and residence times of the dominant ice algal species in the photic water column indicated that only one ice algal species (Chaetoceros wighamii) had a seeding effect on the water column: this diatom dominated the spring phytoplankton bloom in the water together with Achnanthes taeniata and Peridiniella catenata.
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