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They are produced in huge quantities by stars such as the sun, by the explosion of supernovae and by nuclear reactors on Earth, but they interact with other forms of matter so weakly that a piece of lead a light-year thick (around 9 trillion kilometres) would block only half of those passing through.It is this penetrative power which may make these particles useful for diplomats.
For example, MNPs that are composed of magnetite (Fe3O4) or maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) have unique thermal, chemical, and magnetic properties that make these particles particularly well suited for medical applications[5, 6].
The unique optical properties and high degree of tunability inherent in UCNPs make these particles highly attractive candidates for drug delivery and therapy applications.
To make these particles "visible" during the endoscopy, we encapsulated a near-infrared (NIR) dye (D-12731, Invitrogen USA) in the MP core, which becomes fluorescent when illuminated with 785 nm laser radiation.
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The energy required to produce this acceleration makes these particles much heavier than normal, since it is converted into mass at the prevailing exchange rate (E=mc2).
"We don't understand how this force really works when it gets very strong -- when it makes atomic nuclei, for example, or makes these particles," said Dr. Frank Close, a professor of theoretical physics at Oxford University in England.
Incubation at physiological conditions induced ester hydrolysis resulting in a destabilization of the particles making these particles suitable for drug delivery purposes.
The LHC has a good chance of making these particles, but if they are six times as common as ordinary matter in outer space then it ought to be possible to detect them in the wild, as it were.
This ability to open the outer membrane in small regions of deep tissue could provide a second level of spatial and temporal control beyond biochemical targeting, making these particles promising for in vivo animal studies.
"Making these particles so that they break apart at the right amount of force was a challenge," says Ingber.
Singhvi points out that vaccines for the human papilloma virus (HPV) are also made using virus-like particles, and that a newly approved HPV vaccine, Cervarix from GlaxoSmithKline, makes these particles in the same type of insect cells his company uses.
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