Institution
University of Mons
Education•Mons, Belgium•
About: University of Mons is a education organization based out in Mons, Belgium. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Standard Model. The organization has 3073 authors who have published 9465 publications receiving 294776 citations.
Topics: Large Hadron Collider, Standard Model, Lepton, Fiber Bragg grating, Muon
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A framework can be used to characterize software change support tools and to identify the factors that impact on the use of these tools and the ultimate goal is to provide a framework that positions concrete tools, formalisms and methods within the domain of software evolution.
Abstract: Previous taxonomies of software change have focused on the purpose of the change (i.e., the why) rather than the underlying mechanisms. This paper proposes a taxonomy of software change based on characterizing the mechanisms of change and the factors that influence these mechanisms. The ultimate goal of this taxonomy is to provide a framework that positions concrete tools, formalisms and methods within the domain of software evolution. Such a framework would considerably ease comparison between the various mechanisms of change. It would also allow practitioners to identify and evaluate the relevant tools, methods and formalisms for a particular change scenario. As an initial step towards this taxonomy, the paper presents a framework that can be used to characterize software change support tools and to identify the factors that impact on the use of these tools. The framework is evaluated by applying it to three different change support tools and by comparing these tools based on this analysis. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
275 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the conjugated polymer poly(2-methoxy-5-(2′-ethyl-hexyloxy)-p-phenylene vinylene) (MEH-PPV) was studied by means of photocurrent measurements and quantumchemical calculations.
Abstract: Conjugated polymers such as poly(p-phenylene vinylene)s (PPVs) allow low-cost fabrication of thin semiconducting films by solution processing onto substrates. Several polymeric optoelectronic devices have been developed in recent years, including field-effect transistors1, light-emitting diodes2, photocells3,4 and lasers5. It is still not clear, however, whether the description of electronic excitations in these materials is most appropriately formulated within a molecular or semiconductor (band-theory) picture. In the former case, excited states are localized and are described as excitons; in the latter they are delocalized and described as free electron–hole pairs. Here we report studies of the electronic states associated with optical excitations in the visible and ultraviolet range for the conjugated polymer poly(2-methoxy-5-(2′-ethyl-hexyloxy)-p-phenylene vinylene) (MEH-PPV), by means of photocurrent measurements and quantum-chemical calculations. We find several photocurrent spectral features between 3 and 5 eV which are coupled with bands in the absorption spectrum. On modelling the excited states in this energy range, we have discovered an important feature that is likely to be general for materials composed of coupled molecular units: that mixing of delocalized conduction- and valence-band states with states localized on the molecular units produces a sequence of excited states in which positive and negative charges can be separated further at higher energies. In other words, these excited states facilitate charge separation, and provide a conceptual bridge between the molecular (localized) and semiconductor (delocalized) pictures.
274 citations
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TL;DR: A novel genetic tool, inducible cassette exchange, enabling rapid generation of isogenetically modified cells with conditional and variable transgene expression is described, and a hypothesis for FSHD is proposed in which DUX4 expression interferes with Pax7 in satellite cells, and inappropriately regulates Pax targets, including myogenic regulatory factors, during regeneration.
Abstract: Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is caused by an unusual deletion with neomorphic activity. This deletion derepresses genes in cis; however which candidate gene causes the FSHD phenotype, and through what mechanism, is unknown. We describe a novel genetic tool, inducible cassette exchange, enabling rapid generation of isogenetically modified cells with conditional and variable transgene expression. We compare the effects of expressing variable levels of each FSHD candidate gene on myoblasts. This screen identified only one gene with overt toxicity: DUX4 (double homeobox, chromosome 4), a protein with two homeodomains, each similar in sequence to Pax3 and Pax7. DUX4 expression recapitulates key features of the FSHD molecular phenotype, including repression of MyoD and its target genes, diminished myogenic differentiation, repression of glutathione redox pathway components, and sensitivity to oxidative stress. We further demonstrate competition between DUX4 and Pax3/Pax7: when either Pax3 or Pax7 is expressed at high levels, DUX4 is no longer toxic. We propose a hypothesis for FSHD in which DUX4 expression interferes with Pax7 in satellite cells, and inappropriately regulates Pax targets, including myogenic regulatory factors, during regeneration.
273 citations
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Vardan Khachatryan, Albert M. Sirunyan, Armen Tumasyan, Wolfgang Adam1 +2204 more•Institutions (181)
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of the Cern LHC detector for photon reconstruction and identification in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV at the CERN LHC is described.
Abstract: A description is provided of the performance of the CMS detector for photon reconstruction and identification in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV at the CERN LHC. Details are given on the reconstruction of photons from energy deposits in the electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL) and the extraction of photon energy estimates. The reconstruction of electron tracks from photons that convert to electrons in the CMS tracker is also described, as is the optimization of the photon energy reconstruction and its accurate modelling in simulation, in the analysis of the Higgs boson decay into two photons. In the barrel section of the ECAL, an energy resolution of about 1% is achieved for unconverted or late-converting photons from H→γγ decays. Different photon identification methods are discussed and their corresponding selection efficiencies in data are compared with those found in simulated events.
272 citations
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TL;DR: Ferrite superparamagnetic (SPM) nanoparticles in aqueous suspensions shorten the nuclear magnetic relaxation of water protons as mentioned in this paper, and that effect is enhanced when agglomeration of elementary SPM cores occurs, because of an increase of the secular part of the transverse relaxivity.
265 citations
Authors
Showing all 3115 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Giacomo Bruno | 158 | 1687 | 124368 |
Krzysztof Piotrzkowski | 141 | 1269 | 99607 |
Maria Elena Pol | 139 | 1414 | 99240 |
Rupert Leitner | 136 | 1201 | 90597 |
Christophe Delaere | 135 | 1320 | 96742 |
Vincent Lemaitre | 134 | 1310 | 99190 |
Jean-Luc Brédas | 134 | 1026 | 85803 |
Luiz Mundim | 133 | 1413 | 89792 |
Ulrich Landgraf | 131 | 959 | 83320 |
Markus Elsing | 131 | 1111 | 82757 |
Evangelos Gazis | 131 | 1147 | 84159 |
Loic Quertenmont | 129 | 905 | 76221 |
Michele Selvaggi | 129 | 1214 | 83525 |
Roberto Castello | 128 | 965 | 76820 |
Olivier Bondu | 128 | 1049 | 76124 |