97,072 research outputs found
Emergency burr holes:" How to do it"
This paper describes a simple approach to emergency burr hole evacuation of extra-axial intracranial haematoma that can be used in the uncommon situation when life saving specialist neurosurgical intervention is not available
Renormalization Group Treatment of Nonrenormalizable Interactions
The structure of the UV divergencies in higher dimensional nonrenormalizable
theories is analysed. Based on renormalization operation and renormalization
group theory it is shown that even in this case the leading divergencies
(asymptotics) are governed by the one-loop diagrams the number of which,
however, is infinite. Explicit expression for the one-loop counter term in an
arbitrary D-dimensional quantum field theory without derivatives is suggested.
This allows one to sum up the leading asymptotics which are independent of the
arbitrariness in subtraction of higher order operators. Diagrammatic
calculations in a number of scalar models in higher loops are performed to be
in agreement with the above statements. These results do not support the idea
of the na\"ive power-law running of couplings in nonrenormalizable theories and
fail (with one exception) to reveal any simple closed formula for the leading
terms.Comment: LaTex, 11 page
Elite male Flat jockeys display lower bone density and lower resting metabolic rate than their female counterparts: implications for athlete welfare
To test the hypothesis that daily weight-making is more problematic to health in male compared with female jockeys, we compared the bone-density and resting metabolic rate (RMR) in weight-matched male and female Flat-jockeys. RMR (kcal.kg-1 lean mass) was lower in males compared with females as well as lower bone-density Z-scores at the hip and lumbar spine. Data suggest the lifestyle of male jockeysâ compromise health more severely than females, possibly due to making-weight more frequently
Asymptotic Freedom and Bound States in Hamiltonian Dynamics
We study a model of asymptotically free theories with bound states using the
similarity renormalization group for hamiltonians. We find that the
renormalized effective hamiltonians can be approximated in a large range of
widths by introducing similarity factors and the running coupling constant.
This approximation loses accuracy for the small widths on the order of the
bound state energy and it is improved by using the expansion in powers of the
running coupling constant. The coupling constant for small widths is order 1.
The small width effective hamiltonian is projected on a small subset of the
effective basis states. The resulting small matrix is diagonalized and the
exact bound state energy is obtained with accuracy of the order of 10% using
the first three terms in the expansion. We briefly describe options for
improving the accuracy.Comment: plain latex file, 15 pages, 6 latex figures 1 page each, 1 tabl
Agricultural land use mapping
The author has identified the following significant results. Agricultural areas were selected or analysis in southeastern Pennsylvania, north central Montana, and southern Texas. These three sites represent a broad range of soils, soil parent materials, climate, modes of agricultural operation, crops, and field sizes. In each of these three sites, ERTS-1 digital data were processed to determine the feasibility of automatically mapping agricultural land use. In Pennsylvania, forest land, cultivated land, and water were separable within a 25,000 acre area. Four classes of water were also classified and identified, using ground truth. A less complex land use pattern was analyzed in Hill County, Montana. A land use map was prepared shown alternating patterns of summer fallow and stubble fields. The location of farmsteads could be inferred, along with that of a railroad line. A river and a creek flowing into the river were discernible. Six categories of water, related to sediment content and depth, were defined in the reservoir held by the Fresno dam. These classifications were completed on a 150 square mile area. Analysis of the data from Texas is in its formative stages. A test site has been selected and a brightness map has been produced
Mapping of agricultural land use from ERTS-1 digital data
A study area was selected in Lancaster and Lebanon Counties, two of the major agricultural counties in Pennsylvania. This area was delineated on positive transparencies on MSS data collected on October 11, 1972 (1080-15185). Channel seven was used to delineate general land forms, drainage patterns, water and urban areas. Channel five was used to delineate highway networks. These identifiable features were useful aids for locating areas on the computer output. Computer generated maps were used to delineate broad land use categories, such as forest land, agricultural land, urban areas and water. These digital maps have a scale of approximately 1:24,000 thereby allowing direct comparison with U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute quadrangle sheets. Aircraft data were used as a form of ground truth useful for the delineation of land use patterns
Techniques for delineation and portrayal of land cover types using ERTS-1 data
The author has identified the following significant results. ERTS data was used to map land cover in agricultural areas, although in some parts of Pennsylvania, with small irregular fields, many of the pixels overlap field boundaries and cause difficulties in classification. Various techniques and devices were used to display the results of these land cover analyses. The most promising approach would be a user-interactive color monitor interfaced with a large computer so that classification results could be displayed on the CRT and these results output by a hard complete copier
Strings and Branes in Nonabelian Gauge Theory
It is an old speculation that SU(N) gauge theory can alternatively be
formulated as a string theory. Recently this subject has been revived, in the
wake of the discovery of D-branes. In particular, it has been argued that at
least some conformally invariant cousins of the theory have such a string
representation. This is a pedagogical introduction to these developments for
non-string theorists. Some of the existing arguments are simplified.Comment: Reference adde
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