3,887 research outputs found
On invariants of graphs related to quantum at roots of unity
We show how to define invariants of graphs related to quantum
when the graph has more then one connected component and
components are colored by blocks of representations with zero quantum
dimensions
Relations between some invariants of algebraic varieties in positive characteristic
We discuss relations between certain invariants of varieties in positive
characteristic, like the a-number and the height of the Artin-Mazur formal
group. We calculate the a-number for Fermat surfacesComment: 13 page
Non semi-simple sl(2) quantum invariants, spin case
Invariants of 3-manifolds from a non semi-simple category of modules over a
version of quantum sl(2) were obtained by the last three authors in
[arXiv:1404.7289]. In their construction the quantum parameter is a root of
unity of order where is odd or congruent to modulo . In this
paper we consider the remaining cases where is congruent to zero modulo
and produce invariants of -manifolds with colored links, equipped with
generalized spin structure. For a given -manifold , the relevant
generalized spin structures are (non canonically) parametrized by
.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figure
Genre Interference in the Process of Foreign Language Speaking Training
This article is devoted to a study of speech genre competence formation in technical students studying foreign language (English or Russian as a foreign). Correlations of terms of speech genre theory and types of speech genre classification are the subject of this work; the need to form speech genre competence as a component of communicative competence during the educational process is substantiated. The authors suppose that during the process of learning a foreign language, processes not only of phonetic, grammar and lexical, but also of genre interference are observed. On the basis of a "genre" experiment, material types of deviations from genre forms were classified, a hypothesis for the reasons for deviation was developed, comparison study of speech product in foreign (non-native) and native language, was carried out. Conclusion on significant interfering influence of native language on formation of speech genre competence of secondary linguistic identity was drawn
Initial report from the ICFA Neutrino Panel
In July 2013 ICFA established the Neutrino Panel with the mandate "To promote
international cooperation in the development of the accelerator-based
neutrino-oscillation program and to promote international collaboration in the
development a neutrino factory as a future intense source of neutrinos for
particle physics experiments". This, the Panel's Initial Report, presents the
conclusions drawn by the Panel from three regional "Town Meetings" that took
place between November 2013 and February 2014.
After a brief introduction and a short summary of the status of the knowledge
of the oscillation parameters, the report summarises the approved programme and
identifies opportunities for the development of the field. In its conclusions,
the Panel recognises that to maximise the discovery potential of the
accelerator-based neutrino-oscillation programme it will be essential to
exploit the infrastructures that exist at CERN, FNAL and J-PARC and the
expertise and resources that reside in laboratories and institutes around the
world. Therefore, in its second year, the Panel will consult with the
accelerator-based neutrino-oscillation community and its stakeholders to:
develop a road-map for the future accelerator-based neutrino-oscillation
programme that exploits the ambitions articulated at CERN, FNAL and J-PARC and
includes the programme of measurement and test-beam exposure necessary to
ensure the programme is able to realise its potential; develop a proposal for a
coordinated "Neutrino RD" programme, the accelerator and detector R&D programme
required to underpin the next generation of experiments; and to explore the
opportunities for the international collaboration necessary to realise the
Neutrino Factory.Comment: ICFA Neutrino Panel 2014(01
Probing lepton flavour violation in scattering and conversion on nucleons
We study lepton flavour-violating interactions which could result in the
-lepton production in the scattering or in
conversion on nucleons at high energies. Phenomenological bounds on the
strength of interactions are extracted from
the combined result of the NOMAD and CHORUS experiments on searching for
oscillations. Some of these bounds supersede limits
from rare decays. We also propose a ``missing energy'' type experiment
searching for conversion on nucleons. The experiment can be
performed at a present accelerator or at a future neutrino factory.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Wolfram Syndrome protein, Miner1, regulates sulphydryl redox status, the unfolded protein response, and Ca2+ homeostasis.
Miner1 is a redox-active 2Fe2S cluster protein. Mutations in Miner1 result in Wolfram Syndrome, a metabolic disease associated with diabetes, blindness, deafness, and a shortened lifespan. Embryonic fibroblasts from Miner1(-/-) mice displayed ER stress and showed hallmarks of the unfolded protein response. In addition, loss of Miner1 caused a depletion of ER Ca(2+) stores, a dramatic increase in mitochondrial Ca(2+) load, increased reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, an increase in the GSSG/GSH and NAD(+)/NADH ratios, and an increase in the ADP/ATP ratio consistent with enhanced ATP utilization. Furthermore, mitochondria in fibroblasts lacking Miner1 displayed ultrastructural alterations, such as increased cristae density and punctate morphology, and an increase in O2 consumption. Treatment with the sulphydryl anti-oxidant N-acetylcysteine reversed the abnormalities in the Miner1 deficient cells, suggesting that sulphydryl reducing agents should be explored as a treatment for this rare genetic disease
Long-Baseline Study of the Leading Neutrino Oscillation at a Neutrino Factory
Within the framework of three-flavor neutrino oscillations, we consider the
physics potential of \nu_e --> \nu_\mu appearance and \nu_\mu --> \nu_\mu
survival measurements at a neutrino factory for a leading oscillation scale
\delta m^2 ~ 3.5 \times 10^{-3} eV^2. Event rates are evaluated versus baseline
and stored muon energy, and optimal values discussed. Over a sizeable region of
oscillation parameter space, matter effects would enable the sign of \delta m^2
to be determined from a comparison of \nu_e --> \nu_\mu with \bar\nu_e -->
\bar\nu_\mu event rates and energy distributions. It is important, therefore,
that both positive and negative muons can be stored in the ring. Measurements
of the \nu_\mu --> \nu_\mu survival spectrum could determine the magnitude of
\delta m^2 and the leading oscillation amplitude with a precision of O(1%--2%).Comment: 33 pages, single-spaced Revtex, uses epsf.sty, 14 postscript figures.
Added references, expanded conclusions, improved figs. 13 and 14. Version to
be published in Phys. Rev.
The Study of Goldstone Modes in =2 Bilayer Quantum Hall Systems
At the filling factor =2, the bilayer quantum Hall system has three
phases, the spin-ferromagnet phase, the spin singlet phase and the canted
antiferromagnet (CAF) phase, depending on the relative strength between the
Zeeman energy and interlayer tunneling energy. We present a systematic method
to derive the effective Hamiltonian for the Goldstone modes in these three
phases. We then investigate the dispersion relations and the coherence lengths
of the Goldstone modes. To explore a possible emergence of the interlayer phase
coherence, we analyze the dispersion relations in the zero tunneling energy
limit. We find one gapless mode with the linear dispersion relation in the CAF
phase.Comment: 13 pages, no figures. One reference is added. Typos correcte
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