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1.
Nature ; 587(7832): 63-65, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33149293

ABSTRACT

Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration radio transients of unknown physical origin observed at extragalactic distances1-3. It has long been speculated that magnetars are the engine powering repeating bursts from FRB sources4-13, but no convincing evidence has been collected so far14. Recently, the Galactic magnetar SRG 1935+2154 entered an active phase by emitting intense soft γ-ray bursts15. One FRB-like event with two peaks (FRB 200428) and a luminosity slightly lower than the faintest extragalactic FRBs was detected from the source, in association with a soft γ-ray/hard-X-ray flare18-21. Here we report an eight-hour targeted radio observational campaign comprising four sessions and assisted by multi-wavelength (optical and hard-X-ray) data. During the third session, 29 soft-γ-ray repeater (SGR) bursts were detected in γ-ray energies. Throughout the observing period, we detected no single dispersed pulsed emission coincident with the arrivals of SGR bursts, but unfortunately we were not observing when the FRB was detected. The non-detection places a fluence upper limit that is eight orders of magnitude lower than the fluence of FRB 200428. Our results suggest that FRB-SGR burst associations are rare. FRBs may be highly relativistic and geometrically beamed, or FRB-like events associated with SGR bursts may have narrow spectra and characteristic frequencies outside the observed band. It is also possible that the physical conditions required to achieve coherent radiation in SGR bursts are difficult to satisfy, and that only under extreme conditions could an FRB be associated with an SGR burst.

2.
J Therm Biol ; 64: 92-99, 2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28166952

ABSTRACT

In this paper, the three-dimensional thermal effects of a clinically-extracted vascular tissue undergoing cryo-freezing are numerically investigated. Based on the measured experimental temperature field, the numerical results of the Pennes bioheat model combined with the boundary condition-enforced immersed boundary method (IBM) agreed well with experimental data with a maximum temperature discrepancy of 2.9°C. For simulating the temperature profile of a tumor sited in a dominantly vascularized tissue, our model is able to capture with ease the thermal effects at specified junctions of the blood vessels. The vascular complexity and the ice-ball shape irregularity which cannot be easily quantified via clinical experiments are also analyzed and compared for both two-dimensional and three-dimensional settings with different vessel configurations and developments. For the three-dimensional numerical simulations, a n-furcated liver vessels model from a three-dimensional segmented volume using hole-making and subdivision methods is applied. A specific study revealed that the structure and complexity of the vascular network can markedly affect the tissue's freezing configuration with increasing ice-ball irregularity for greater blood vessel complexity.


Subject(s)
Blood Vessels/physiology , Computer Simulation , Freezing/adverse effects , Animals , Cryopreservation , Cryosurgery/adverse effects , Humans , Liver/blood supply , Neovascularization, Pathologic
3.
Nanotechnology ; 21(42): 425702, 2010 Oct 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20858938

ABSTRACT

Nickel oxide (NiO) nanoflowers, prepared by thermal decomposition, exhibit anomalous magnetic properties far below the blocking temperature, i.e., a cusp in both the zero-field-cooled and field-cooled curves at about 21 K. Detailed characterization discloses that the individual NiO nanoflower consists of porous crystals with holes (1.0-1.5 nm in size) inside. We believe that the low temperature magnetic feature observed here could be a new kind of spin transition for the uncompensated spins around the holes and will trigger more studies in other nanostructured antiferromagnetic materials.

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