127,431 results on '"Fu, Z."'
Search Results
2. Limits on the Low-Energy Electron Antineutrino Flux from the Brightest GRB of All Time
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Araki, T., Chauhan, S., Chiba, K., Eda, T., Eizuka, M., Funahashi, Y., Furuto, A., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Goto, S., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Ichimura, K., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Marthe, A., Matsumoto, Y., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Morita, D., Nakajima, R., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Nakane, J., Ono, T., Ozaki, H., Saito, K., Sakai, T., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Tachibana, K., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Watanabe, K., Kurosawa, S., Urano, Y., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Fu, Z., Ghosh, S., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Delloro, S., Odonnell, T., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Weerman, K. M., Grant, C., Penek, Ö., Song, H., Li, A., Axani, S. N., Garcia, M., and Sarfraz, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The electron antinuetrino flux limits are presented for the brightest gamma-ray burst (GRB) of all time, GRB221009A, over a range of 1.8-200 MeV using the Kamioka Liquid Scintillator Anti Neutrino Detector (KamLAND). Using a variety of time windows to search for electron antineutrinos coincident with the GRB, we set an upper limit on the flux under the assumption of various neutrino source spectra. No excess was observed in any time windows ranging from seconds to days around the event trigger time. The limits are compared to the results presented by IceCube., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
3. Combined Pre-supernova Alert System with KamLAND and Super-Kamiokande
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Abe, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Goto, S, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Morita, D, Nakahata, T, Nakajima, R, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Nakane, J, Ozaki, H, Saito, K, Sakai, T, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Shoji, R, Suzuki, A, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Watanabe, K, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Dell’Oro, S, O’Donnell, T, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Weerman, KM, Grant, C, Song, H, Li, A, Axani, SN, Garcia, M, Collaboration, The KamLAND, Abe, K, Bronner, C, Hayato, Y, Hiraide, K, Hosokawa, K, Ieki, K, Ikeda, M, Kameda, J, Kanemura, Y, Kaneshima, R, Kashiwagi, Y, Kataoka, Y, Miki, S, Mine, S, Miura, M, Moriyama, S, Nakahata, M, Nakano, Y, Nakayama, S, Noguchi, Y, Sato, K, Sekiya, H, Shiba, H, Shimizu, K, Shiozawa, M, Sonoda, Y, Suzuki, Y, Takeda, A, Takemoto, Y, Tanaka, H, Yano, T, and Han, S
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Preceding a core-collapse supernova (CCSN), various processes produce an increasing amount of neutrinos of all flavors characterized by mounting energies from the interior of massive stars. Among them, the electron antineutrinos are potentially detectable by terrestrial neutrino experiments such as KamLAND and Super-Kamiokande (SK) via inverse beta decay interactions. Once these pre-supernova (pre-SN) neutrinos are observed, an early warning of the upcoming CCSN can be provided. In light of this, KamLAND and SK, both located in the Kamioka mine in Japan, have been monitoring pre-SN neutrinos since 2015 and 2021, respectively. Recently, we performed a joint study between KamLAND and SK on pre-SN neutrino detection. A pre-SN alert system combining the KamLAND detector and the SK detector was developed and put into operation, which can provide a supernova alert to the astrophysics community. Fully leveraging the complementary properties of these two detectors, the combined alert is expected to resolve a pre-SN neutrino signal from a 15 M ⊙ star within 510 pc of the Earth at a significance level corresponding to a false alarm rate of no more than 1 per century. For a Betelgeuse-like model with optimistic parameters, it can provide early warnings up to 12 hr in advance.
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- 2024
4. Spatially clustered type I interferon responses at injury borderzones
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Ninh, VK, Calcagno, DM, Yu, JD, Zhang, B, Taghdiri, N, Sehgal, R, Mesfin, JM, Chen, CJ, Kalhor, K, Toomu, A, Duran, JM, Adler, E, Hu, J, Zhang, K, Christman, KL, Fu, Z, Bintu, B, and King, KR
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Mice ,Interferon Type I ,Interferon Regulatory Factor-3 ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocytes ,Cardiac ,Humans ,Male ,Immunity ,Innate ,Female ,Fibroblasts ,Macrophages ,Receptors ,CCR2 ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Endothelial Cells ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Sterile inflammation after myocardial infarction is classically credited to myeloid cells interacting with dead cell debris in the infarct zone1,2. Here we show that cardiomyocytes are the dominant initiators of a previously undescribed type I interferon response in the infarct borderzone. Using spatial transcriptomics analysis in mice and humans, we find that myocardial infarction induces colonies of interferon-induced cells (IFNICs) expressing interferon-stimulated genes decorating the borderzone, where cardiomyocytes experience mechanical stress, nuclear rupture and escape of chromosomal DNA. Cardiomyocyte-selective deletion of Irf3 abrogated IFNIC colonies, whereas mice lacking Irf3 in fibroblasts, macrophages, neutrophils or endothelial cells, Ccr2-deficient mice or plasmacytoid-dendritic-cell-depleted mice did not. Interferons blunted the protective matricellular programs and contractile function of borderzone fibroblasts, and increased vulnerability to pathological remodelling. In mice that died after myocardial infarction, IFNIC colonies were immediately adjacent to sites of ventricular rupture, while mice lacking IFNICs were protected from rupture and exhibited improved survival3. Together, these results reveal a pathological borderzone niche characterized by a cardiomyocyte-initiated innate immune response. We suggest that selective inhibition of IRF3 activation in non-immune cells could limit ischaemic cardiomyopathy while avoiding broad immunosuppression.
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- 2024
5. Search for Majorana Neutrinos with the Complete KamLAND-Zen Dataset
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Abe, S., Araki, T., Chiba, K., Eda, T., Eizuka, M., Funahashi, Y., Furuto, A., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Goto, S., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Marthe, A., Matsumoto, Y., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Morita, D., Nakajima, R., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Nakane, J., Ono, T., Ozaki, H., Saito, K., Sakai, T., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Tachibana, K., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Watanabe, K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Fu, Z., Ghosh, S., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Dell'Oro, S., O'Donnell, T., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Weerman, K. M., Grant, C., Penek, O., Song, H., Li, A., Axani, S. N., Garcia, M., and Sarfraz, M.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present a search for neutrinoless double-beta ($0\nu\beta\beta$) decay of $^{136}$Xe using the full KamLAND-Zen 800 dataset with 745 kg of enriched xenon, corresponding to an exposure of $2.097$ ton yr of $^{136}$Xe. This updated search benefits from a more than twofold increase in exposure, recovery of photo-sensor gain, and reduced background from muon-induced spallation of xenon. Combining with the search in the previous KamLAND-Zen phase, we obtain a lower limit for the $0\nu\beta\beta$ decay half-life of $T_{1/2}^{0\nu} > 3.8 \times 10^{26}$ yr at 90% C.L., a factor of 1.7 improvement over the previous limit. The corresponding upper limits on the effective Majorana neutrino mass are in the range 28-122 meV using phenomenological nuclear matrix element calculations., Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2203.02139
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- 2024
6. Figure 1 from: Luo J, Zhang M, Liu X, Chen H, Li T, Ma X, Huang K, Fu Z (2023) Primula xilingensis (Primulaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 234: 135-143. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.234.108411
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Luo, Junjia, primary, Zhang, Mingke, additional, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Chen, Hui, additional, Li, Tingyu, additional, Ma, Xudong, additional, Huang, Ke, additional, and Fu, Zhixi, additional
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- 2023
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7. Figure 2 from: Luo J, Zhang M, Liu X, Chen H, Li T, Ma X, Huang K, Fu Z (2023) Primula xilingensis (Primulaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 234: 135-143. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.234.108411
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Luo, Junjia, primary, Zhang, Mingke, additional, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Chen, Hui, additional, Li, Tingyu, additional, Ma, Xudong, additional, Huang, Ke, additional, and Fu, Zhixi, additional
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- 2023
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8. Map 1 from: Luo J, Zhang M, Liu X, Chen H, Li T, Ma X, Huang K, Fu Z (2023) Primula xilingensis (Primulaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 234: 135-143. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.234.108411
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Luo, Junjia, primary, Zhang, Mingke, additional, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Chen, Hui, additional, Li, Tingyu, additional, Ma, Xudong, additional, Huang, Ke, additional, and Fu, Zhixi, additional
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- 2023
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9. Figure 3 from: Luo J, Zhang M, Liu X, Chen H, Li T, Ma X, Huang K, Fu Z (2023) Primula xilingensis (Primulaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 234: 135-143. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.234.108411
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Luo, Junjia, primary, Zhang, Mingke, additional, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Chen, Hui, additional, Li, Tingyu, additional, Ma, Xudong, additional, Huang, Ke, additional, and Fu, Zhixi, additional
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- 2023
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10. Search for charged excited states of dark matter with KamLAND-Zen
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Abe, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Goto, S, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Morita, D, Nakahata, T, Nakajima, R, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Nakane, J, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Shoji, R, Suzuki, A, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Watanabe, K, Obara, S, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Ichikawa, A, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Dell'Oro, S, O'Donnell, T, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Weerman, KM, Grant, C, Li, A, and Song, H
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Dark matter ,Organic liquid scintillator ,Xenon ,Mathematical Physics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Mathematical sciences ,Physical sciences - Abstract
Particle dark matter could belong to a multiplet that includes an electrically charged state. WIMP dark matter (χ0) accompanied by a negatively charged excited state (χ−) with a small mass difference (e.g. < 20 MeV) can form a bound-state with a nucleus such as xenon. This bound-state formation is rare and the released energy is O(1−10) MeV depending on the nucleus, making large liquid scintillator detectors suitable for detection. We searched for bound-state formation events with xenon in two experimental phases of the KamLAND-Zen experiment, a xenon-doped liquid scintillator detector. No statistically significant events were observed. For a benchmark parameter set of WIMP mass mχ0=1 TeV and mass difference Δm=17 MeV, we set the most stringent upper limits on the recombination cross section times velocity 〈σv〉 and the decay-width of χ− to 9.2×10−30 cm3/s and 8.7×10−14 GeV, respectively at 90% confidence level.
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- 2024
11. Generative Models for Simulation of KamLAND-Zen
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Fu, Z., Grant, C., Krawiec, D. M., Li, A., and Winslow, L.
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Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The next generation of searches for neutrinoless double beta decay (0{\nu}\b{eta}\b{eta}) are poised to answer deep questions on the nature of neutrinos and the source of the Universe's matter-antimatter asymmetry. They will be looking for event rates of less than one event per ton of instrumented isotope per year. To claim discovery, accurate and efficient simulations of detector events that mimic 0{\nu}\b{eta}\b{eta} is critical. Traditional Monte Carlo (MC) simulations can be supplemented by machine-learning-based generative models. In this work, we describe the performance of generative models designed for monolithic liquid scintillator detectors like KamLAND to produce highly accurate simulation data without a predefined physics model. We demonstrate its ability to recover low-level features and perform interpolation. In the future, the results of these generative models can be used to improve event classification and background rejection by providing high-quality abundant generated data., Comment: Submitted to EPJC
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- 2023
12. Search for Charged Excited States of Dark Matter with KamLAND-Zen
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collaboration, KamLAND-Zen, Abe, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Goto, S., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Morita, D., Nakahata, T., Nakajima, R., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Nakane, J., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Shoji, R., Suzuki, A., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Watanabe, K., Obara, S., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Ichikawa, A. K., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Fu, Z., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Dell'Oro, S., O'Donnell, T., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Weerman, K. M., Grant, C., Li, A., and Song, H.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Particle dark matter could belong to a multiplet that includes an electrically charged state. WIMP dark matter ($\chi^{0}$) accompanied by a negatively charged excited state ($\chi^{-}$) with a small mass difference (e.g. $<$ 20 MeV) can form a bound-state with a nucleus such as xenon. This bound-state formation is rare and the released energy is $\mathcal{O}(1-10$) MeV depending on the nucleus, making large liquid scintillator detectors suitable for detection. We searched for bound-state formation events with xenon in two experimental phases of the KamLAND-Zen experiment, a xenon-doped liquid scintillator detector. No statistically significant events were observed. For a benchmark parameter set of WIMP mass $m_{\chi^{0}} = 1$ TeV and mass difference $\Delta m = 17$ MeV, we set the most stringent upper limits on the recombination cross section times velocity $\langle\sigma v\rangle$ and the decay-width of $\chi^{-}$ to $9.2 \times 10^{-30}$ ${\rm cm^3/s}$ and $8.7 \times 10^{-14}$ GeV, respectively at 90% confidence level.
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- 2023
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13. Identifying canonical and replicable multi‐scale intrinsic connectivity networks in 100k+ resting‐state fMRI datasets
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Iraji, A, Fu, Z, Faghiri, A, Duda, M, Chen, J, Rachakonda, S, DeRamus, T, Kochunov, P, Adhikari, BM, Belger, A, Ford, JM, Mathalon, DH, Pearlson, GD, Potkin, SG, Preda, A, Turner, JA, van Erp, TGM, Bustillo, JR, Yang, K, Ishizuka, K, Faria, A, Sawa, A, Hutchison, K, Osuch, EA, Theberge, J, Abbott, C, Mueller, BA, Zhi, D, Zhuo, C, Liu, S, Xu, Y, Salman, M, Liu, J, Du, Y, Sui, J, Adali, T, and Calhoun, VD
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Psychology ,Bioengineering ,Clinical Research ,Neurological ,Humans ,Brain Mapping ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Nerve Net ,Brain ,functional connectivity ,functional templates ,independent component analysis ,intrinsic connectivity networks ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Despite the known benefits of data-driven approaches, the lack of approaches for identifying functional neuroimaging patterns that capture both individual variations and inter-subject correspondence limits the clinical utility of rsfMRI and its application to single-subject analyses. Here, using rsfMRI data from over 100k individuals across private and public datasets, we identify replicable multi-spatial-scale canonical intrinsic connectivity network (ICN) templates via the use of multi-model-order independent component analysis (ICA). We also study the feasibility of estimating subject-specific ICNs via spatially constrained ICA. The results show that the subject-level ICN estimations vary as a function of the ICN itself, the data length, and the spatial resolution. In general, large-scale ICNs require less data to achieve specific levels of (within- and between-subject) spatial similarity with their templates. Importantly, increasing data length can reduce an ICN's subject-level specificity, suggesting longer scans may not always be desirable. We also find a positive linear relationship between data length and spatial smoothness (possibly due to averaging over intrinsic dynamics), suggesting studies examining optimized data length should consider spatial smoothness. Finally, consistency in spatial similarity between ICNs estimated using the full data and subsets across different data lengths suggests lower within-subject spatial similarity in shorter data is not wholly defined by lower reliability in ICN estimates, but may be an indication of meaningful brain dynamics which average out as data length increases.
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- 2023
14. Stopping power of high-density alpha-particle clusters in warm dense deuterium-tritium fuels
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Fu, Z. P., Zhang, Z. W., Lin, K., Wu, D., and Zhang, J.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The state of burning plasma had been achieved in inertial confinement fusion (ICF), which was regarded as a great milestone for high-gain laser fusion energy. In the burning plasma, alpha particles incident on the cryogenic (warm dense) fuels cannot be simply regarded as single particles, and the new physics brought about by the density effects of alpha particles should be considered. In this work, the collective interaction between them has been considered, namely the effect of the superposition of wake waves. The stopping power of alpha-particle clusters, i.e. the rate of energy loss per unit distance traveled has been calculated using both analytical and simulation approaches. In theory, we obtain the stopping power of alpha clusters in cryogenic (warm dense) fuel by the dielectric function method, which illustrates the importance of the effective interaction between particles. Simulation results using the LAPINS code show that the collective stopping power of the alpha cluster is indeed increased via coherent superposition of excitation fields (the excitation of high-amplitude wake waves). However, the comparison between simulation and theoretical results also illustrates a coherent-decoherent transition of the stopping power of the cluster. The initial conditions with various sizes and densities of the alpha clusters have been considered to verify the condition of decoherence transition. Our work provides a theoretical description of the transport properties of high-density alpha particles in warm dense cryogenic fuel and might give some theoretical guidance for the design of actual fusion processes., Comment: Junior undergraduate students Z. P. Fu, Z. W. Zhang and K. Lin contributed equally to this work
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- 2023
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15. Crescentic Glomerulonephritis and Portal Hypertension with Chronic Q Fever: A Case Report and Comprehensive Literature Review
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Yao Y, Zhao H, Lu H, Liu X, Liu H, Fu Z, Li C, Zhou F, Hou W, and Shi S
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coxiella burnetii ,acute kidney injury ,non-cirrhotic portal hypertension ,biopsies ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Yuxuan Yao,1– 3 Hong Zhao,4 Hua Lu,5 Xiaoli Liu,6 Hui Liu,7 Zhanli Fu,8 Chunyue Li,1 Fude Zhou,1– 3 Wanyin Hou,1– 3 Sufang Shi1– 3 1Department of Nephrology, Peking University First Hospital, Peking University Institute of Nephrology, Beijing, People’s Republic of China; 2Key Laboratory of Renal Disease, Ministry of Health of China, Key Laboratory of Chronic Kidney Disease Prevention and Treatment (Peking University), Ministry of Education, Beijing, People’s Republic of China; 3Research Units of Diagnosis and Treatment of Immune-Mediated Kidney Diseases, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, People’s Republic of China; 4Department of Infectious Disease, Center for Liver Disease, Peking University First Hospital, Beijing, People’s Republic of China; 5Department of Nephrology, Xingtai People’s Hospital, Xingtai, Hebei, People’s Republic of China; 6Department of Pathology, Xingtai People’s Hospital, Xingtai, Hebei, People’s Republic of China; 7Department of Pathology, Beijing Youan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, People’s Republic of China; 8Department of Nuclear Medicine, Peking University First Hospital, Beijing, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Wanyin Hou; Hong Zhao, Peking University First Hospital, Xicheng District, Beijing, People’s Republic of China, Tel +86 10-83575685, Email helenwanyin@bjmu.edu.cn; zhaohong_pufh@bjmu.edu.cnAbstract: Q fever, an infectious zoonotic disease caused by Coxiella burnetii, remains prevalent in China. Systemic infections can result in renal or hepatic complications; however, it is rare for both the kidneys and liver to be simultaneously affected. We present a case of a patient who exhibited fever, rapid deterioration in renal function, thrombocytopenia, and severe ascites. Renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis, while liver biopsy demonstrated non-cirrhotic portal hypertension. Metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) identified the presence of Coxiella burnetii in both venous blood and liver tissue samples. Notably, the patient’s renal insufficiency and ascites showed a positive response to treatment for chronic Q fever. These findings provide valuable insights into the limited understanding of kidney and liver diseases associated with Q fever. Advanced diagnostic technologies, including mNGS and positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), have been employed to identify Coxiella burnetii infection.Keywords: Coxiella burnetii, acute kidney injury, non-cirrhotic portal hypertension, biopsies
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- 2024
16. Curcumin-Loaded Nanocomposite Hydrogel Dressings for Promoting Infected Wound Healing and Tissue Regeneration
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Fu Z, Zou J, Zhong J, Zhan J, Zhang L, Xie X, Li W, and He R
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nanocomposite hydrogel dressings ,infected wound repair,antibacterial properties ,drug delivery ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Zhengzheng Fu,1,* Jingwen Zou,1,* Jing Zhong,1 Jipang Zhan,1 Lian Zhang,1 Xiaoru Xie,1 Lai Zhang,1,2 Wenqiang Li,3 Renliang He1 1Department of Dermatologic Surgery and Dermatologic Oncology, Dermatology Hospital of Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510000, People’s Republic of China; 2Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510006, People’s Republic of China; 3Engineering Technology Research Center for Sports Assistive Devices of Guangdong, Guangzhou Sport University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510500, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Wenqiang Li; Renliang He, Department of Dermatologic Surgery and Dermatologic Oncology, Dermatology Hospital of Southern Medical University, Guangdong Provincial Dermatology Hospital, 2 Lujing Road, Yuexiu District, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510000, People’s Republic of China, Email liwq@gzsport.edu.cn; zshrl2006@smu.edu.cnBackground: The skin regulates body processes. When damaged, it is prone to breeding bacteria, causing inflammation and impeding wound healing. There is an urgent need for new dressings that can combat bacteria to aid in infectious wound repair.Methods: In this study, a curcumin-loaded nanocomposite hydrogel dressing (GelMA/AHA-Gel@Cur) with antibacterial properties and strong toughness was synthesized, designed to combine the modified gelatin-based hydrogel (GelMA/AHA) with curcumin-coated gelatin (Gel@Cur) nanoparticles to promote the healing of bacterial infection wounds. Under UV irradiation, methylacrylylated gelatin (GelMA) and aldehyaluronic acid (AHA) formed a composite network hydrogel through radical polymerization and Schiff base reaction. Meanwhile, the residual aldehyde group on the molecular chain of AHA securely locked Gel@Cur nanoparticles in the hydrogel network through Schiff base reaction.Results: The addition of Gel@Cur nanoparticles not only enhanced the hydrogel’s mechanical strength but also facilitated a sustained, gradual release of curcumin, endowing the composite hydrogel with robust antimicrobial capabilities. In an animal model of infected wounds, the composite hydrogel significantly improved wound closure, healing, and vascularization compared to the control group. Hemocompatibility tests confirmed the hydrogel’s safety, with a hemolysis ratio of just 0.45%. Histological evaluation following treatment with the composite hydrogel showed improved tissue architecture, increased collagen deposition, and regeneration of dermal gland structures.Conclusion: The GelMA/AHA-Gel@Cur composite hydrogel exhibits excellent mechanical properties, potent antimicrobial activity, and controlled drug release, along with superior cell and hemocompatibility. These characteristics make it a promising material for infected wound repair and a potential candidate for clinical skin regeneration applications. Keywords: Nanocomposite hydrogel dressings, infected wound repair, antibacterial properties, drug delivery
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- 2024
17. The Impact of Fu’s Subcutaneous Needling on Lower Limb Muscle Stiffness in Knee Osteoarthritis Patients: Study Protocol for a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
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Li H, Yang CC, Bai T, Sun J, Fu Z, Mi J, and Chou LW
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fu's subcutaneous needling ,electroacupuncture ,muscle stiffness ,knee osteoarthritis ,shear wave elastography. ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Hu Li,1,2,* Cong Cong Yang,3,* Tianyu Bai,1 Jian Sun,4,5 Zhonghua Fu,4,6 Jia Mi,3 Li-Wei Chou7– 9 1Department of Acupuncture-Moxibustion and Tuina, Shandong Provincial Third Hospital, Shandong University, Jinan, 250031, People’s Republic of China; 2School of Acupuncture and Tuina, Shandong University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Jinan, 250355, People’s Republic of China; 3Department of Ultrasound, Shandong Provincial Third Hospital, Shandong University, Jinan, 250031, People’s Republic of China; 4Clinical Medical College of Acupuncture & Moxibustion and Rehabilitation, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, 510405, People’s Republic of China; 5Second Clinical Medical College, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, 510006, People’s Republic of China; 6Institute of Fu’s Subcutaneous Needling, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing, 100029, People’s Republic of China; 7Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, China Medical University Hospital, China Medical University, Taichung, 404332, Taiwan; 8Department of Physical Therapy and Graduate Institute of Rehabilitation Science, China Medical University, Taichung, 406040, Taiwan; 9Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Asia University Hospital, Asia University, Taichung, 413505, Taiwan*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Li-Wei Chou, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, China Medical University Hospital, China Medical University, No. 2 Yuh-Der Road, Taichung, 404332, Taiwan, Email chouliwe@gmail.comBackground: Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of disability worldwide, with clinicians often observing increased muscle stiffness associated with joint pain and dysfunction. This study examines the impact of Fu’s Subcutaneous Needling (FSN), a non-pharmacological technique, on muscle stiffness in the lower limbs of individuals with knee OA.Materials and Methods: This study protocol is a pilot, single-center, randomized controlled trial. Sixty knee OA patients will be allocated equally for FSN or electroacupuncture (EA) treatments. Interventions will be applied thrice weekly for the first two weeks and twice weekly for the subsequent two weeks for a total of ten sessions. Assessments will be conducted at baseline, post-initial session, after four weeks of intervention, and at the end of a four-week follow-up. The primary outcome will be the muscle stiffness in the lower extremities, as measured by shear wave elastography (SWE). Secondary outcomes include response rate, a reduction in the mean pain intensity on the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) by at least two points and on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) function subscale by six points at week four compared with baseline. Weekly monitoring of the NRS and WOMAC scores will determine the rapidity of pain alleviation and functional improvement, along with 12-item short-form (SF-12) score changes from baseline to week four.Results: This is the first standardized protocol examining the effects of FSN on lower limb muscle stiffness in patients with knee OA by SWE. We hypothesize that FSN could outperform EA in alleviating lower limb stiffness associated with knee OA. Findings will contribute to the body of knowledge regarding the efficacy of acupuncture-derived interventions in managing muscle stiffness and may guide future research directions.Study Registration: The trial has been registered on the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (Registered number: ChiCTR2300073615). Registered 17 July 2023.Keywords: Fu’s subcutaneous needling, electroacupuncture, muscle stiffness, knee osteoarthritis, shear wave elastography
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- 2024
18. Figure 4 from: Fu Z, Liu X, Zhen A, Zhu X, Konowalik K, Ma Y, Li P (2022) Chrysanthemum dabieshanense, a new name for Chrysanthemum vestitum var. latifolium (Asteraceae, Anthemideae). PhytoKeys 202: 45-52. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.202.80554
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Fu, Zhixi, primary, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Zhen, Aiguo, additional, Zhu, Xinxin, additional, Konowalik, Kamil, additional, Ma, Yueping, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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19. Figure 1 from: Fu Z, Liu X, Zhen A, Zhu X, Konowalik K, Ma Y, Li P (2022) Chrysanthemum dabieshanense, a new name for Chrysanthemum vestitum var. latifolium (Asteraceae, Anthemideae). PhytoKeys 202: 45-52. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.202.80554
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Fu, Zhixi, primary, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Zhen, Aiguo, additional, Zhu, Xinxin, additional, Konowalik, Kamil, additional, Ma, Yueping, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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20. Figure 3 from: Fu Z, Liu X, Zhen A, Zhu X, Konowalik K, Ma Y, Li P (2022) Chrysanthemum dabieshanense, a new name for Chrysanthemum vestitum var. latifolium (Asteraceae, Anthemideae). PhytoKeys 202: 45-52. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.202.80554
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Fu, Zhixi, primary, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Zhen, Aiguo, additional, Zhu, Xinxin, additional, Konowalik, Kamil, additional, Ma, Yueping, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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21. Figure 2 from: Fu Z, Liu X, Zhen A, Zhu X, Konowalik K, Ma Y, Li P (2022) Chrysanthemum dabieshanense, a new name for Chrysanthemum vestitum var. latifolium (Asteraceae, Anthemideae). PhytoKeys 202: 45-52. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.202.80554
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Fu, Zhixi, primary, Liu, Xiaofeng, additional, Zhen, Aiguo, additional, Zhu, Xinxin, additional, Konowalik, Kamil, additional, Ma, Yueping, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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22. Figure 5 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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23. Figure 2 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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24. Figure 4 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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25. Figure 3 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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26. Supplementary material 1 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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27. Figure 1 from: Jin X-J, Huang Y, Wei Y-K, Ma Q, Liu L-X, Fu Z-X, Wu G-F, Zhang Y-H, Li P (2022) Elsholtzia zhongyangii (Lamiaceae), a new species from Sichuan, China. PhytoKeys 193: 77-88. https://doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.193.80327
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Jin, Xin-Jie, primary, Huang, Yue, additional, Wei, Yu-Kun, additional, Ma, Qing, additional, Liu, Lu-Xian, additional, Fu, Zhi-Xi, additional, Wu, Gui-Fang, additional, Zhang, Yong-Hua, additional, and Li, Pan, additional
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- 2022
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28. The Relationship Between Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and Osteoporosis Based on Different Ethnic Groups: a Two-Sample Mendelian Randomization Analysis
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Shi, Y. K., Yuan, K. H., Fu, Z. M., Hu, R. R., and Wang, H.
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- 2024
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29. Development and Validation of an Inflammation-Combined Prognostic Index (ICPI)-Based Nomogram for Predicting Overall Survival in Gastric Cancer
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Li X, Zhang J, and Fu Z
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gastric cancer ,icpi ,psm ,nomogram ,os ,Pathology ,RB1-214 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Xiang Li,1,2 Jun Zhang,3 Zhongxue Fu1 1Department of General Surgery, The Third Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of General Surgery, Chongqing University FuLing Hospital, Chongqing, People’s Republic of China; 3Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Zhongxue Fu, Department of General Surgery, The Third Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, No. 1 Shuanghu Branch Road, Huixing Street, Yubei District, Chongqing, People’s Republic of China, Email fzx19990521@126.comPurpose: This study aims to investigate the correlation between a novel integrated inflammatory marker: The inflammation-combined prognostic index (ICPI), combining NLR, PLR, and MLR, with the clinicopathological characteristics and overall survival (OS) of gastric cancer (GC).Patients and Methods: Data from 876 patients with GC were retrospectively analyzed from January 1, 2017, to April 30, 2023. PSM was employed to mitigate confounding factors between groups. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were utilized to determine the optimal cutoff value. Univariate, LASSO, and multivariate regression analyses were executed. Subsequently, a nomogram for predicting OS was developed and validated.Results: The cohort with a poor prognosis exhibited significantly elevated levels of neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR), monocyte-to-lymphocyte ratio (MLR), and ICPI (P< 0.001). Similarly, higher levels of NLR, PLR, MLR, and ICPI were associated with a poorer prognosis (P< 0.001). Following regression analysis, ICPI, T-stage, lymph node ratio (LNR), and primary site were identified as independent risk factors affecting OS. A nomogram was constructed based on these factors to predict 1-, 3-, and 5-year OS, yielding C-indexes of 0.8 and 0.743 for the training and validation sets, respectively. The calibration curves demonstrated close alignment between predicted and actual results, indicating high predictive accuracy. Moreover, the decision curve underscored the practical utility of the model.Conclusion: The new inflammatory parameter ICPI integrates NLR, PLR and MLR. The ICPI-based nomogram and web calculator accurately predict OS in patients with GC.Keywords: gastric cancer, ICPI, PSM, nomogram, OS
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- 2024
30. Spatial Dynamic Subspaces Encode Sex-Specific Schizophrenia Disruptions in Transient Network Overlap and its Links to Genetic Risk
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Iraji, A, Chen, J, Lewis, N, Faghiri, A, Fu, Z, Agcaoglu, O, Kochunov, P, Adhikari, BM, Mathalon, DH, Pearlson, GD, Macciardi, F, Preda, A, van Erp, TGM, Bustillo, JR, Díaz-Caneja, CM, Andrés-Camazón, P, Dhamala, M, Adali, T, and Calhoun, VD
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Biological Psychology ,Physical Sciences ,Psychology ,Schizophrenia ,Human Genome ,Mental Illness ,Genetics ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Polygenic Risk Score ,Sex Differences ,Single Nucleotide Polymorphism ,Spatial Dynamics ,Spatially Dynamic Covariance ,Time-Resolved Referenced-Informed Network Estimation Techniques - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent advances in resting-state fMRI allow us to study spatial dynamics, the phenomenon of brain networks spatially evolving over time. However, most dynamic studies still use subject-specific, spatially-static nodes. As recent studies have demonstrated, incorporating time-resolved spatial properties is crucial for precise functional connectivity estimation and gaining unique insights into brain function. Nevertheless, estimating time-resolved networks poses challenges due to the low signal-to-noise ratio, limited information in short time segments, and uncertain identification of corresponding networks within and between subjects. METHODS: We adapt a reference-informed network estimation technique to capture time-resolved spatial networks and their dynamic spatial integration and segregation. We focus on time-resolved spatial functional network connectivity (spFNC), an estimate of network spatial coupling, to study sex-specific alterations in schizophrenia and their links to multi-factorial genomic data. RESULTS: Our findings are consistent with the dysconnectivity and neurodevelopment hypotheses and align with the cerebello-thalamo-cortical, triple-network, and frontoparietal dysconnectivity models, helping to unify them. The potential unification offers a new understanding of the underlying mechanisms. Notably, the posterior default mode/salience spFNC exhibits sex-specific schizophrenia alteration during the state with the highest global network integration and correlates with genetic risk for schizophrenia. This dysfunction is also reflected in high-dimensional (voxel-level) space in regions with weak functional connectivity to corresponding networks. CONCLUSIONS: Our method can effectively capture spatially dynamic networks, detect nuanced SZ effects, and reveal the intricate relationship of dynamic information to genomic data. The results also underscore the potential of dynamic spatial dependence and weak connectivity in the clinical landscape.
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- 2023
31. Measurement of cosmic-ray muon spallation products in a xenon-loaded liquid scintillator with KamLAND
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Collaboration, KamLAND-Zen, Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Fu, Z., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Dell'Oro, S., O'Donnell, T., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Weerman, K., Grant, C., Li, A., and Song, H.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Cosmic-ray muons produce various radioisotopes when passing through material. These spallation products can be backgrounds for rare event searches such as in solar neutrino, double-beta decay, and dark matter search experiments. The KamLAND-Zen experiment searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay in 745kg of xenon dissolved in liquid scintillator. The experiment includes dead-time-free electronics with a high efficiency for detecting muon-induced neutrons. The production yields of different radioisotopes are measured with a combination of delayed coincidence techniques, newly developed muon reconstruction and xenon spallation identification methods. The observed xenon spallation products are consistent with results from the FLUKA and Geant4 simulation codes.
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- 2023
32. Measurement of cosmic-ray muon spallation products in a xenon-loaded liquid scintillator with KamLAND
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, AK, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Dell'Oro, S, O'Donnell, T, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Weerman, KM, Grant, C, Li, A, and Song, H
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Synchrotrons and Accelerators ,Physical Sciences ,Nuclear and plasma physics - Abstract
Cosmic-ray muons produce various radioisotopes when passing through material. These spallation products can be backgrounds for rare event searches such as in solar neutrino, double-β decay, and dark matter search experiments. The KamLAND-Zen experiment searches for neutrinoless double-β decay in 745 kg of xenon dissolved in liquid scintillator. The experiment includes dead-time-free electronics with a high efficiency for detecting muon-induced neutrons. The production yields of different radioisotopes are measured with a combination of delayed coincidence techniques, newly developed muon reconstruction, and xenon spallation identification methods. The observed xenon spallation products are consistent with results from the fluka and geant4 simulation codes.
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- 2023
33. First measurement of the strange axial coupling constant using neutral-current quasielastic interactions of atmospheric neutrinos at KamLAND
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, AK, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Grant, C, Li, A, Song, H, Dell’Oro, S, and O’Donnell, T
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Synchrotrons and Accelerators ,Physical Sciences ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Quantum Physics ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Mathematical physics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics - Abstract
We report a measurement of the strange axial coupling constant gAs using atmospheric neutrino data at KamLAND. This constant is a component of the axial form factor of the neutral-current quasielastic (NCQE) interaction. The value of gAs significantly changes the ratio of proton and neutron NCQE cross sections. KamLAND is suitable for measuring NCQE interactions as it can detect nucleon recoils with low-energy thresholds and measure neutron multiplicity with high efficiency. KamLAND data, including the information on neutron multiplicity associated with the NCQE interactions, makes it possible to measure gAs with a suppressed dependence on the axial mass MA, which has not yet been determined. For a comprehensive prediction of the neutron emission associated with neutrino interactions, we establish a simulation of particle emission via nuclear deexcitation of C12, a process not considered in existing neutrino Monte Carlo event generators. Energy spectrum fitting for each neutron multiplicity gives gAs=-0.14-0.26+0.25, which is the most stringent limit obtained using NCQE interactions without MA constraints. The two-body current contribution considered in this analysis relies on a theoretically effective model and electron scattering experiments and requires future verification by direct measurements and future model improvement.
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- 2023
34. First measurement of the strange axial coupling constant using neutral-current quasielastic interactions of atmospheric neutrinos at KamLAND
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KamLAND Collaboration, Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Fu, Z., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Li, A., Song, H., Dell'Oro, S., and O'Donnell, T.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We report a measurement of the strange axial coupling constant $g_A^s$ using atmospheric neutrino data at KamLAND. This constant is a component of the axial form factor of the neutral-current quasielastic (NCQE) interaction. The value of $g_A^s$ significantly changes the ratio of proton and neutron NCQE cross sections. KamLAND is suitable for measuring NCQE interactions as it can detect nucleon recoils with low-energy thresholds and measure neutron multiplicity with high efficiency. KamLAND data, including the information on neutron multiplicity associated with the NCQE interactions, makes it possible to measure $g_A^s$ with a suppressed dependence on the axial mass $M_A$, which has not yet been determined. For a comprehensive prediction of the neutron emission associated with neutrino interactions, we establish a simulation of particle emission via nuclear deexcitation of $^{12}$C, a process not considered in existing neutrino Monte Carlo event generators. Energy spectrum fitting for each neutron multiplicity gives $g_A^s =-0.14^{+0.25}_{-0.26}$, which is the most stringent limit obtained using NCQE interactions without $M_A$ constraints. The two-body current contribution considered in this analysis relies on a theoretically effective model and electron scattering experiments and requires future verification by direct measurements and future model improvement.
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- 2022
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35. Microglia in Ischemic Stroke: Pathogenesis Insights and Therapeutic Challenges
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Shui X, Chen J, Fu Z, Zhu H, Tao H, and Li Z
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microglia ,ischemic stroke ,phagocytosis ,polarization ,crosstalk ,anti-inflammatory ,therapeutic targets ,Pathology ,RB1-214 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Xinyao Shui,1,* Jingsong Chen,2– 4,* Ziyue Fu,1 Haoyue Zhu,1 Hualin Tao,2– 4 Zhaoyinqian Li2– 4 1Clinical Medical College, Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Laboratory Medicine, the Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, People’s Republic of China; 3Sichuan Province Engineering Technology Research Center of Molecular Diagnosis of Clinical Diseases, Luzhou, People’s Republic of China; 4Molecular Diagnosis of Clinical Diseases Key Laboratory of Luzhou, Luzhou, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Zhaoyinqian Li, Department of Laboratory Medicine, the Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, No. 25, Taiping Street, Jiangyang District, Luzhou, Sichuan, 646000, People’s Republic of China, Email lizhaoyinqian@swmu.edu.cnAbstract: Ischemic stroke is the most common type of stroke, which is the main cause of death and disability on a global scale. As the primary immune cells in the brain that are crucial for preserving homeostasis of the central nervous system microenvironment, microglia have been found to exhibit dual or even multiple effects at different stages of ischemic stroke. The anti-inflammatory polarization of microglia and release of neurotrophic factors may provide benefits by promoting neurological recovery at the lesion in the early phase after ischemic stroke. However, the pro-inflammatory polarization of microglia and secretion of inflammatory factors in the later phase of injury may exacerbate the ischemic lesion, suggesting the therapeutic potential of modulating the balance of microglial polarization to predispose them to anti-inflammatory transformation in ischemic stroke. Microglia-mediated signaling crosstalk with other cells may also be key to improving functional outcomes following ischemic stroke. Thus, this review provides an overview of microglial functions and responses under physiological and ischemic stroke conditions, including microglial activation, polarization, and interactions with other cells. We focus on approaches that promote anti-inflammatory polarization of microglia, inhibit microglial activation, and enhance beneficial cell-to-cell interactions. These targets may hold promise for the creation of innovative therapeutic strategies.Keywords: microglia, ischemic stroke, phagocytosis, polarization, crosstalk, anti-inflammatory, therapeutic targets
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- 2024
36. Effects of Social Support on Medication Adherence Among Patients with Schizophrenia: Serial Multiple Mediation Model
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Jiang N, Jin W, Fu Z, Cao H, Zheng H, Wang Q, Zhang Q, Ju K, and Wang J
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social support ,stigma ,depression ,medication adherence ,schizophrenia ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Nan Jiang,1,* Wei Jin,2,* Zhenghui Fu,3,* He Cao,1 Hong Zheng,3 Quqing Wang,1 Qiongting Zhang,3 Kang Ju,3 Jiwei Wang1 1Key Laboratory of Health Technology Assessment of Ministry of Health, School of Public Health, Fudan University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Patriotic Public Health and Health Promotion instruction, Shanghai Municipal Center for Health Promotion, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China; 3Shanghai Changning Mental Health Center (Affiliated to East China Normal University), Shanghai, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Jiwei Wang, Key Laboratory of Health Technology Assessment of Ministry of Health, School of Public Health, Fudan University, Shanghai, People’s Republic of China, Email jiweiwang@fudan.edu.cn Kang Ju, Shanghai Changning Mental Health Center (Affiliated to East China Normal University), Shanghai, People’s Republic of China, Email jukang2009@163.comPurpose: This study aims to explore the serial mediating effect of stigma and depression on the association between social support and medication adherence.Patients and Methods: A cross-sectional survey was undertaken in the Changning District of Shanghai using a five-part questionnaire from August to December 2023. A convenient sampling method was employed, and 35 patients with schizophrenia were invited from each of the 9 streets in Changning District to participate in the survey, resulting in a total of 305 valid questionnaires collected. The questionnaire measured social support, stigma, depression, medication adherence, and demographic characteristics. Data analysis involved descriptive statistics, independent samples t-tests, ANOVA, Pearson correlation analysis, and the bootstrap method.Results: There was a direct and significantly positive association between social support and medication adherence (β = 0.69, p < 0.001). Moreover, increased levels of stigma (β = - 0.45, p = 0.013) and depression (β = - 0.09, p = 0.017) were both associated with a decline in medication adherence. Bootstrapping analysis revealed that the association between social support and medication adherence operated indirectly through stigma (β = 0.11, 95% CI: 0.03, 0.18). Additionally, social support was indirectly associated with medication adherence through depression (β = 0.15, 95% CI: 0.04, 0.30). Further analysis indicated that social support had an indirect association with medication adherence through both stigma and depression (β = 0.04, 95% CI: 0.01, 0.07).Conclusion: Stigma and depression serially mediate the association between social support and medication adherence among patients with schizophrenia. This serial multiple mediation model underscores the importance of integrating social support interventions with psychological interventions aimed at reducing stigma and depression, thereby effectively enhancing medication adherence in patients with schizophrenia.Keywords: social support, stigma, depression, medication adherence, schizophrenia
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- 2024
37. The Efficacy & Molecular Mechanisms of a Terpenoid Compound Ganoderic Acid C1 on Corticosteroid-Resistant Neutrophilic Airway Inflammation: In vivo and in vitro Validation
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Wang ZZ, Li H, Maskey AR, Srivastava K, Liu C, Yang N, Xie T, Fu Z, Li J, Liu X, Sampson HA, and Li XM
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asthma ,mouse model ,neutrophilic inflammation ,ganoderma ,ganoderic acid ,Pathology ,RB1-214 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Zhen-Zhen Wang,1– 3,* Hang Li,4,* Anish R Maskey,2,* Kamal Srivastava,2,5,* Changda Liu,6,* Nan Yang,2,5 Taoyun Xie,7 Ziyi Fu,8 Junxiong Li,9 Xiaohong Liu,10 Hugh A Sampson,6 Xiu-Min Li2,11 1Academy of Chinese Medical Science, Henan University of Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou, Henan, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY, USA; 3Collaborative Innovation Center of Research and Development on the Whole Industry Chain of Yu-Yao, Zhengzhou, Henan, People’s Republic of China; 4Central Lab, Shenzhen Bao’an Chinese Medicine Hospital, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Shenzhen, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 5General Nutraceutical Technology, Elmsford, NY, USA; 6Department of Pediatrics, Division of Allergy and Immunology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA; 7The Affiliated TCM Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 8The First Clinical College, Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 9Guangdong Province Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine, Foshan, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 10Department of Respiratory Medicine, The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine, Guangzhou, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 11Department of Otolaryngology, Westchester Medical Center New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY, USA*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Xiu-Min Li, Tel +1 914-594-4197, Email XiuMin_Li@NYMC.eduIntroduction: Neutrophil predominant airway inflammation is associated with severe and steroid-resistant asthma clusters. Previously, we reported efficacy of ASHMI, a three-herb TCM asthma formula in a steroid-resistant neutrophil-dominant murine asthma model and further identified Ganoderic Acid C1 (GAC1) as a key ASHMI active compound in vitro. The objective of this study is to investigate GAC1 effect on neutrophil-dominant, steroid-resistant asthma in a murine model.Methods: In this study, Balb/c mice were systematically sensitized with ragweed (RW) and alum and intranasally challenged with ragweed. Unsensitized/PBS challenged mice served as normal controls. Post sensitization, mice were given 4 weeks of oral treatment with GAC1 or acute dexamethasone (Dex) treatment at 48 hours prior to challenge. Pulmonary cytokines were measured by ELISA, and lung sections were processed for histology by H&E staining. Furthermore, GAC1 effect on MUC5AC expression and on reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in human lung epithelial cell line (NCI-H292) was determined by qRT-PCR and ROS assay kit, respectively. Computational analysis was applied to select potential targets of GAC1 in steroid-resistant neutrophil-dominant asthma. Molecular docking was performed to predict binding modes between GAC1 and Dex with TNF-α.Results: The result of the study showed that chronic GAC1 treatment, significantly reduced pulmonary inflammation (P < 0.01– 0.001 vs Sham) and airway neutrophilia (P < 0.01 vs Sham), inhibited TNF-α, IL-4 and IL-5 levels (P < 0.05– 0.001 vs Sham). Acute Dex treatment reduced eosinophilic inflammation and IL-4, IL-5 levels, but had no effect on neutrophilia and TNF-α production. GAC1 treated H292 cells showed decreased MUC5AC gene expression and production of ROS (P < 0.001 vs stimulated/untreated cells). Molecular docking results showed binding energy of complex GAC1-TNF was − 10.8 kcal/mol.Discussion: GAC1 may be a promising anti-asthma botanical drug for treatment of steroid-resistant asthma.Keywords: asthma, mouse model, neutrophilic inflammation, Ganoderma, ganoderic acid
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- 2024
38. Large non-reciprocal charge transport in Pt2MnGe up to room temperature
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Meng, K. K., Wang, K., Zhang, N. N., Fu, Z. G., Chen, J. K., Wu, Y., Xu, X. G., Miao, J., and Jiang, Y.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Non-reciprocal charge transport that is strongly associated with the structural or magnetic chirality of the quantum materials system is one of the most exotic properties of condensed matter physics. Here, using magnetic alloys film Pt2MnGe, we have realized the large non-reciprocal charge transport up to room temperature, which roots in the organic combination of chirality dependent carrier scattering and special magnetic configurations. In this framework, the conduction electrons are scattered asymmetrically by the emerging non-zero vector spin chirality under in-plane magnetic field, resulting in robust non-reciprocal response. More astonishingly, the vector spin chirality in Pt2MnGe film can be reversed by a spin-polarized current through spin Hall effect in a junction with Pt layer. Our work resolves the general limitation of non-reciprocal charge transport to cryogenic temperatures, and paves the way for extending its applications in the emerging field of chiral spintronics.
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- 2022
39. Search for the Majorana Nature of Neutrinos in the Inverted Mass Ordering Region with KamLAND-Zen
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hayashida, S, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Maemura, N, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Sambonsugi, H, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Ueshima, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, AK, Chernyak, D, Kozlov, A, Nakamura, KZ, Yoshida, S, Takemoto, Y, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Smolsky, J, Fu, Z, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Dell'Oro, S, O'Donnell, T, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Grant, C, Li, A, and Song, H
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,KamLAND-Zen Collaboration ,Mathematical Sciences ,Engineering ,General Physics ,Mathematical sciences ,Physical sciences - Abstract
The KamLAND-Zen experiment has provided stringent constraints on the neutrinoless double-beta (0νββ) decay half-life in ^{136}Xe using a xenon-loaded liquid scintillator. We report an improved search using an upgraded detector with almost double the amount of xenon and an ultralow radioactivity container, corresponding to an exposure of 970 kg yr of ^{136}Xe. These new data provide valuable insight into backgrounds, especially from cosmic muon spallation of xenon, and have required the use of novel background rejection techniques. We obtain a lower limit for the 0νββ decay half-life of T_{1/2}^{0ν}>2.3×10^{26} yr at 90% C.L., corresponding to upper limits on the effective Majorana neutrino mass of 36-156 meV using commonly adopted nuclear matrix element calculations.
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- 2023
40. Abundances of uranium and thorium elements in Earth estimated by geoneutrino spectroscopy
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Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Maemura, N., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Sambonsugi, H., Shimizu, I., Shirahata, Y., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Fu, Z., Smolsky, J., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Li, A., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Song, H., O'Donnell, T., and Dell'Oro, S.
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Physics - Geophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The decay of the primordial isotopes $^{238}\mathrm{U}$, $^{235}\mathrm{U}$, $^{232}\mathrm{Th}$, and $^{40}\mathrm{K}$ have contributed to the terrestrial heat budget throughout the Earth's history. Hence the individual abundance of those isotopes are key parameters in reconstructing contemporary Earth model. The geoneutrinos produced by the radioactive decays of uranium and thorium have been observed with the Kamioka Liquid-Scintillator Antineutrino Detector (KamLAND). Those measurements have been improved with more than 18-year observation time, and improvements in detector background levels mainly by an 8-year almost rector-free period now permit spectroscopy with geoneutrinos. Our results yield the first constraint on both uranium and thorium heat contributions. Herein the KamLAND result is consistent with geochemical estimations based on elemental abundances of chondritic meteorites and mantle peridotites. The High-Q model is disfavored at 99.76% C.L. and a fully radiogenic model is excluded at 5.2$\sigma$ assuming a homogeneous heat producing element distribution in the mantle., Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters on Aug 4th, 2022
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- 2022
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41. Realization of ultra-broadband IR up-conversion imaging
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Li, X. H., Bai, P., Huang, S. H., Bai, X. Q., Song, W. J., Lian, X. R., Hu, C., Shi, Z. W., Shen, W. Z., Zhang, Y. H., Fu, Z. L., Shao, D. X., Tan, Z. Y., Cao, J. C., Tan, C., and Xu, G. Y.
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Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Ultra-broadband imaging devices with high performance are in great demand for a variety of technological applications, including imaging, remote sensing, and communications. An ultra-broadband up-converter is realized based on a p-GaAs homojunction interfacial workfunction internal photoemission (HIWIP) detector-light emitting diode (LED) device. The device demonstrates an ultra-broad response ranging from visible to terahertz (THz) with good reproducibility. The peak responsivity in the mid-infrared (MIR) region is 140 mA/W at 10.5 microns. The HIWIP-LED shows enormous potential for ultra-broadband up-conversion covering all infrared atmospheric windows, as well as the THz region, and the pixel-less imaging of the MIR spot from the CO2 laser is further demonstrated. In addition, the proposed up-converter also performs as a near-infrared and visible detector under zero bias by using a bi-functional LED. Thanks to its ultra-wide response, the HIWIP-LED up-converter has great promise for stable, high-performance ultra-broadband pixel-less imaging and multi-functional analysis systems., Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures
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- 2022
42. Search for supernova neutrinos and constraint on the galactic star formation rate with the KamLAND data
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Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Maemura, N., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Sambonsugi, H., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Winslow, L. A., Fu, Z., Smolsky, J., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Li, A., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Song, H., O'Donnell, T., and Dell'Oro, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present the results of a search for core-collapse supernova neutrinos, using long-term KamLAND data from 2002 March 9 to 2020 April 25. We focus on the electron antineutrinos emitted from supernovae in the energy range of 1.8--111 MeV. Supernovae will make a neutrino event cluster with the duration of $\sim$10 s in the KamLAND data. We find no neutrino clusters and give the upper limit on the supernova rate as to be 0.15 yr$^{-1}$ with a 90% confidence level. The detectable range, which corresponds to a >95% detection probability, is 40--59 kpc and 65--81 kpc for core-collapse supernovae and failed core-collapse supernovae, respectively. This paper proposes to convert the supernova rate obtained by the neutrino observation to the Galactic star formation rate. Assuming a modified Salpeter-type initial mass function, the upper limit on the Galactic star formation rate is <(17.5--22.7) $M_{\odot} \mathrm{yr}^{-1}$ with a 90% confidence level., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
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- 2022
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43. Search for the Majorana Nature of Neutrinos in the Inverted Mass Ordering Region with KamLAND-Zen
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Collaboration, KamLAND-Zen, Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hayashida, S., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Maemura, N., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Sambonsugi, H., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Ueshima, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Chernyak, D., Kozlov, A., Nakamura, K. Z., Yoshida, S., Takemoto, Y., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Smolsky, J., Fu, Z., Winslow, L. A., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Dell'Oro, S., O'Donnell, T., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Li, A., and Song, H.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The KamLAND-Zen experiment has provided stringent constraints on the neutrinoless double-beta ($0\nu\beta\beta$) decay half-life in $^{136}$Xe using a xenon-loaded liquid scintillator. We report an improved search using an upgraded detector with almost double the amount of xenon and an ultralow radioactivity container, corresponding to an exposure of 970 kg yr of $^{136}$Xe. These new data provide valuable insight into backgrounds, especially from cosmic muon spallation of xenon, and have required the use of novel background rejection techniques. We obtain a lower limit for the $0\nu\beta\beta$ decay half-life of $T_{1/2}^{0\nu} > 2.3 \times 10^{26}$ yr at 90% C.L., corresponding to upper limits on the effective Majorana neutrino mass of 36-156 meV using commonly adopted nuclear matrix element calculations., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. KamNet: An Integrated Spatiotemporal Deep Neural Network for Rare Event Search in KamLAND-Zen
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Li, A., Fu, Z., Winslow, L., Grant, C., Song, H., Ozaki, H., Shimizu, I., and Takeuchi, A.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Rare event searches allow us to search for new physics at energy scales inaccessible with other means by leveraging specialized large-mass detectors. Machine learning provides a new tool to maximize the information provided by these detectors. The information is sparse, which forces these algorithms to start from the lowest level data and exploit all symmetries in the detector to produce results. In this work we present KamNet which harnesses breakthroughs in geometric deep learning and spatiotemporal data analysis to maximize the physics reach of KamLAND-Zen, a kiloton scale spherical liquid scintillator detector searching for neutrinoless double beta decay ($0\nu\beta\beta$). Using a simplified background model for KamLAND we show that KamNet outperforms a conventional CNN on benchmarking MC simulations with an increasing level of robustness. Using simulated data, we then demonstrate KamNet's ability to increase KamLAND-Zen's sensitivity to $0\nu\beta\beta$ and $0\nu\beta\beta$ to excited states. A key component of this work is the addition of an attention mechanism to elucidate the underlying physics KamNet is using for the background rejection., Comment: 12 pages, dual submission with upcoming KamLAND-Zen 800 main result
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- 2022
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45. KamLAND’s search for correlated low-energy electron antineutrinos with astrophysical neutrinos from IceCube
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Kinoshita, T, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Maemura, N, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Sambonsugi, H, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, AK, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Smolsky, J, Lertprasertpong, J, Winslow, LA, Fu, Z, Ouellet, J, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Li, A, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Grant, C, Song, H, O’Donnell, T, and Dell’Oro, S
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Neutrinos ,Astrophysical neutrinos ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics - Abstract
We report the results of a search for MeV-scale astrophysical neutrinos in KamLAND presented as an excess in the number of coincident neutrino interactions associated with the publicly available high-energy neutrino datasets from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. We find no statistically significant excess in the number of observed low-energy electron antineutrinos in KamLAND, given a coincidence time window of ±500 s, ±1,000 s, ±3,600 s, and ±10,000 s around each of the IceCube neutrinos. We use this observation to present limits from 1.8 MeV to 100 MeV on the electron antineutrino fluence, assuming a mono-energetic flux. We then compare the results to several astrophysical measurements performed by IceCube and place a limit at the 90% confidence level on the electron antineutrino isotropic thermal luminosity from the TXS 0506+056 blazar.
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- 2022
46. KamLAND's search for correlated low-energy electron antineutrinos with astrophysical neutrinos from IceCube
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Abe, S., Asami, S., Eizuka, M., Futagi, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Kinoshita, T., Koga, M., Kurasawa, M., Maemura, N., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakahata, T., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Sambonsugi, H., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Kotera, K., Urano, Y., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Smolsky, J., Lertprasertpong, J., Winslow, L. A., Fu, Z., Ouellet, J., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Li, A., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Song, H., O'Donnell, T., and Dell'Oro, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the results of a search for MeV-scale astrophysical neutrinos in KamLAND presented as an excess in the number of coincident neutrino interactions associated with the publicly available high-energy neutrino datasets from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. We find no statistically significant excess in the number of observed low-energy electron antineutrinos in KamLAND, given a coincidence time window of $\pm$500s, $\pm$1,000s, $\pm$3,600s, and $\pm$10,000s around each of the IceCube neutrinos. We use this observation to present limits from 1.8 MeV to 100 MeV on the electron antineutrino fluence, assuming a mono-energetic flux. We then compare the results to several astrophysical measurements performed by IceCube and place a limit at the 90% confidence level on the electron antineutrino isotropic thermal luminosity from the TXS 0506+056 blazar., Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A search for correlated low-energy electron antineutrinos in KamLAND with gamma-ray bursts
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Abe, S., Asami, S., Gando, A., Gando, Y., Gima, T., Goto, A., Hachiya, T., Hata, K., Hosokawa, K., Ichimura, K., Ieki, S., Ikeda, H., Inoue, K., Ishidoshiro, K., Kamei, Y., Kawada, N., Kishimoto, Y., Kinoshita, T., Koga, M., Maemura, N., Mitsui, T., Miyake, H., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, R., Ozaki, H., Sakai, T., Sambonsugi, H., Shimizu, I., Shirai, J., Shiraishi, K., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, Y., Takeuchi, A., Tamae, K., Eizuka, M., Kurasawa, M., Nakahata, T., Futagi, S., Watanabe, H., Yoshida, Y., Obara, S., Ichikawa, A. K., Yoshida, S., Umehara, S., Fushimi, K., Berger, B. E., Fujikawa, B. K., Learned, J. G., Maricic, J., Axani, S. N., Smolsky, J., Laber-Smith, C., Winslow, L. A., Fu, Z., Ouellet, J., Efremenko, Y., Karwowski, H. J., Markoff, D. M., Tornow, W., Li, A., Detwiler, J. A., Enomoto, S., Decowski, M. P., Grant, C., Song, H., O'Donnell, T., and Dell'Oro, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present the results of a time-coincident event search for low-energy electron antineutrinos in the KamLAND detector with gamma-ray bursts from the Gamma-ray Coordinates Network and Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor. Using a variable coincidence time window of $\pm$500s plus the duration of each gamma-ray burst, no statistically significant excess above background is observed. We place the world's most stringent 90% confidence level upper limit on the electron antineutrino fluence below 17.5 MeV. Assuming a Fermi-Dirac neutrino energy spectrum from the gamma-ray burst source, we use the available redshift data to constrain the electron antineutrino luminosity and effective temperature., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures
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- 2021
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48. Abundances of Uranium and Thorium Elements in Earth Estimated by Geoneutrino Spectroscopy
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Maemura, N, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Sambonsugi, H, Shimizu, I, Shirahata, Y, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, AK, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Winslow, LA, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Li, A, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Grant, C, Song, H, O’Donnell, T, and Dell’Oro, S
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Affordable and Clean Energy ,geoneutrino ,radiogenic heat ,Earth's interior ,mantle composition ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
The decay of the primordial isotopes 238U, 235U, 232Th, and 40K has contributed to the terrestrial heat budget throughout the Earth's history. Hence, the individual abundance of those isotopes are key parameters in reconstructing contemporary Earth models. The geoneutrinos produced by the radioactive decays of uranium and thorium have been observed with the Kamioka Liquid-Scintillator Antineutrino Detector (KamLAND). Those measurements have been improved with more than 18-year observation time, and improvement in detector background levels mainly with an 8-year nearly reactor-free period, which now permit spectroscopy with geoneutrinos. Our results yield the first constraint on both uranium and thorium heat contributions. The KamLAND result is consistent with geochemical estimations based on elemental abundances of chondritic meteorites and mantle peridotites. The High-Q model is disfavored at 99.76% C.L. and a fully radiogenic model is excluded at 5.2σ assuming a homogeneous heat producing element distribution in the mantle.
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- 2022
49. Search for Supernova Neutrinos and Constraint on the Galactic Star Formation Rate with the KamLAND Data
- Author
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Abe, S, Asami, S, Eizuka, M, Futagi, S, Gando, A, Gando, Y, Gima, T, Goto, A, Hachiya, T, Hata, K, Hosokawa, K, Ichimura, K, Ieki, S, Ikeda, H, Inoue, K, Ishidoshiro, K, Kamei, Y, Kawada, N, Kishimoto, Y, Koga, M, Kurasawa, M, Maemura, N, Mitsui, T, Miyake, H, Nakahata, T, Nakamura, K, Nakamura, R, Ozaki, H, Sakai, T, Sambonsugi, H, Shimizu, I, Shirai, J, Shiraishi, K, Suzuki, A, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, A, Tamae, K, Watanabe, H, Yoshida, Y, Obara, S, Ichikawa, A, Yoshida, S, Umehara, S, Fushimi, K, Kotera, K, Urano, Y, Berger, BE, Fujikawa, BK, Learned, JG, Maricic, J, Axani, SN, Winslow, LA, Fu, Z, Smolsky, J, Efremenko, Y, Karwowski, HJ, Markoff, DM, Tornow, W, Li, A, Detwiler, JA, Enomoto, S, Decowski, MP, Grant, C, Song, H, O’Donnell, T, and Dell’Oro, S
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Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a search for core-collapse supernova neutrinos, using long-term KamLAND data from 2002 March 9 to 2020 April 25. We focus on the electron antineutrinos emitted from supernovae in the energy range of 1.8-111 MeV. Supernovae will make a neutrino event cluster with the duration of ∼10 s in the KamLAND data. We find no neutrino clusters and give the upper limit on the supernova rate to be 0.15 yr−1 with a 90% confidence level. The detectable range, which corresponds to a >95% detection probability, is 40-59 kpc and 65-81 kpc for core-collapse supernovae and failed core-collapse supernovae, respectively. This paper proposes to convert the supernova rate obtained by the neutrino observation to the Galactic star formation rate. Assuming a modified Salpeter-type initial mass function, the upper limit on the Galactic star formation rate is
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- 2022
50. Moving beyond the 'CAP' of the Iceberg: Intrinsic connectivity networks in fMRI are continuously engaging and overlapping.
- Author
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Iraji, A, Faghiri, A, Fu, Z, Kochunov, P, Adhikari, BM, Belger, A, Ford, JM, McEwen, S, Mathalon, DH, Pearlson, GD, Potkin, SG, Preda, A, Turner, JA, Van Erp, TGM, Chang, C, and Calhoun, VD
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Brain ,Nerve Net ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Mapping ,Functional Neuroimaging ,Activation spatial map ,Co-activation patterns ,Event absent time points ,Event present time points ,Functional connectivity ,Independent component analysis ,Intrinsic connectivity networks ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging is currently the mainstay of functional neuroimaging and has allowed researchers to identify intrinsic connectivity networks (aka functional networks) at different spatial scales. However, little is known about the temporal profiles of these networks and whether it is best to model them as continuous phenomena in both space and time or, rather, as a set of temporally discrete events. Both categories have been supported by series of studies with promising findings. However, a critical question is whether focusing only on time points presumed to contain isolated neural events and disregarding the rest of the data is missing important information, potentially leading to misleading conclusions. In this work, we argue that brain networks identified within the spontaneous blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal are not limited to temporally sparse burst moments and that these event present time points (EPTs) contain valuable but incomplete information about the underlying functional patterns. We focus on the default mode and show evidence that is consistent with its continuous presence in the BOLD signal, including during the event absent time points (EATs), i.e., time points that exhibit minimum activity and are the least likely to contain an event. Moreover, our findings suggest that EPTs may not contain all the available information about their corresponding networks. We observe distinct default mode connectivity patterns obtained from all time points (AllTPs), EPTs, and EATs. We show evidence of robust relationships with schizophrenia symptoms that are both common and unique to each of the sets of time points (AllTPs, EPTs, EATs), likely related to transient patterns of connectivity. Together, these findings indicate the importance of leveraging the full temporal data in functional studies, including those using event-detection approaches.
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- 2022
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