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Akihiro Doi Yusuke Kono Kimihiro Kimura Satomi Nakahara Tomoaki Oyama Nozomi Okada Yasutaka Satou Kazuyoshi Yamashita Naoko Matsumoto Mitsuhisa Baba Daisuke Yasuda Shunsaku Suzuki Yutaka Hasegawa Mareki Honma Hiroaki Tanaka Kosei Ishimura Yasuhiro Murata Reiho Shimomukai Shoko Koyama 《Advances in Space Research (includes Cospar's Information Bulletin, Space Research Today)》2019,63(1):779-793
The balloon-borne very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) experiment is a technical feasibility study for performing radio interferometry in the stratosphere. The flight model has been developed. A balloon-borne VLBI station will be launched to establish interferometric fringes with ground-based VLBI stations distributed over the Japanese islands at an observing frequency of approximately 20?GHz as the first step. This paper describes the system design and development of a series of observing instruments and bus systems. In addition to the advantages of avoiding the atmospheric effects of absorption and fluctuation in high frequency radio observation, the mobility of a station can improve the sampling coverage (“uv-coverage”) by increasing the number of baselines by the number of ground-based counterparts for each observation day. This benefit cannot be obtained with conventional arrays that solely comprise ground-based stations. The balloon-borne VLBI can contribute to a future progress of research fields such as black holes by direct imaging. 相似文献
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F. Yatagai M. Honma A. Ukai K. Omori H. Suzuki T. Shimazu A. Takahashi T. Ohnishi N. Dohmae N. Ishioka 《Advances in Space Research (includes Cospar's Information Bulletin, Space Research Today)》2012
In view of the concern for the health of astronauts that may one day journey to Mars or the Moon, we investigated the effect that space radiation and microgravity might have on DNA damage and repair. We sent frozen human lymphoblastoid TK6 cells to the International Space Station where they were maintained under frozen conditions during a 134-day mission (14 November 2008 to 28 March 2009) except for an incubation period of 8 days under 1G or μG conditions in a CO2 incubator. The incubation period started after 100 days during which the cells had been exposed to 54 mSv of space radiation. The incubated cells were then refrozen, returned to Earth, and compared to ground control samples for the determination of the influence of microgravity on cell survival and mutation induction. The results for both varied from experiment to experiment, yielding a large SD, but the μG sample results differed significantly from the 1G sample results for each of 2 experiments, with the mean ratio of μG to 1G being 0.55 for the concentration of viable cells and 0.59 for the fraction of thymidine kinase deficient (TK−) mutants. Among the mutants, non-loss of zygosity events (point mutations) were less frequent (31%) after μG incubation than after 1G incubation, which might be explained by the influence of μG on cellular metabolic or physiological function. Additional experiments are needed to clarify the effect of μG interferes on DNA repair. 相似文献
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