29,540 research outputs found

    The status of the Excited Baryon Analysis Center

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    The Excited Baryon Analysis Center (EBAC), which is associated with the Theory Group at Jefferson Laboratory, was initiated in 2006. Its main goal is to extract and interpret properties of nucleon resonances (N*) from the world data of meson production reactions induced by pions, photons and electrons. We review the main accomplishments of the center since then and sketch its near future perspectives.Comment: Invited plenary talk, to appear in the Proceedings of XIII International Conference on Hadron Spectroscopy, November 29 - December 4, 2009, Florida State University. (v2, references added, fig6 slightly modified

    Dynamical Coupled-Channels Effects on Pion Photoproduction

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    The electromagnetic pion production reactions are investigated within the dynamical coupled-channels model developed in {\bf Physics Reports, 439, 193 (2007)}. The meson-baryon channels included in this study are γN\gamma N, πN\pi N, ηN\eta N, and the πΔ\pi\Delta, ρN\rho N and σN\sigma N resonant components of the ππN\pi\pi N channel. With the hadronic parameters of the model determined in a recent study of πN\pi N scattering, we show that the pion photoproduction data up to the second resonance region can be described to a very large extent by only adjusting the bare γNN\gamma N \to N^* helicity amplitudes, while the non-resonant electromagnetic couplings are taken from previous works. It is found that the coupled-channels effects can contribute about 10 - 20 % of the production cross sections in the Δ\Delta (1232) resonance region, and can drastically change the magnitude and shape of the cross sections in the second resonance region. The importance of the off-shell effects in a dynamical approach is also demonstrated. The meson cloud effects as well as the coupled-channels contributions to the γNN\gamma N \to N^* form factors are found to be mainly in the low Q2Q^2 region. For the magnetic M1 γNΔ\gamma N \to \Delta (1232) form factor, the results are close to that of the Sato-Lee Model. Necessary improvements to the model and future developments are discussed.Comment: Corrected version. 14 pages, 10 figure

    Progression of myopathology in Kearns-Sayre syndrome

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    We report on the progression of myopathology by comparing two biopsies from a patient with a Kearns-Sayre-Syndrome. The first biopsy was taken in 1979 and showed 10% ragged-red fibers. Myopathic changes were slight including internal nuclei and fiber splitting in 10% of the fibers. Electron microscopy revealed typical mitochondrial abnormalities with regard to number and shape. In 1989 a second biopsy was performed for an extended analysis of mitochondrial DNA. This time less than 5% of all fibers were ragged-red. Severe myopathic changes could be detected which so far has rarely been reported in mitochondrial cytopathy

    The effect of phosphorus on the iron redox ratio, viscosity, and density of an evolved ferro-basalt

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    Despite the abundant evidence for the enrichment of phosphorus during the petrogenesis of natural ferro-basalts, the effect of phosphorus on the physical properties of these melts is poorly understood. The effects of phosphorus on the viscosity, density and redox ratio of a ferro-basaltic melt have been determined experimentally. The viscosity measurements were obtained using the concentric cylinder method on a ferro-basaltic melt above its liquidus, at 1 atm, in equilibrium with air and with CO2. The density measurements were performed using the double Pt-bob Archimedean method at superliquidus conditions under 1 atm of air. The redox ratio was obtained by wet chemical analysis of samples collected during physical property measurements. Phosphorus pentoxide reduces ferric iron in ferro-basaltic melt. The reduction due to P2O5 is much larger than that for most other oxide components in basaltic melts. A coefficient for the reduction of ferric iron has been generated for inclusion in calculation schemes. The effect of P2O5 on the viscosity is shown to be complex. The initial reduction of ferric iron with the addition of P2O5 results in a relatively small change in viscosity, while further addition of P2O5 results in a strong increase. The addition of phosphorus to a ferro-basaltic melt also reduces the density. A partial molar volume of 64.5±0.7 cm3/mol for P2O5 in this melt has been obtained at 1300° C, yielding a volume of 12.9 cm3/mol per oxygen, consistent with a tetrahedral coordination for this high field strength cation. The effects of P2O5 on redox state, density and viscosity provide constraints on the structural role of phosphorus in these melts. The results suggest a complex interaction of phosphorus with the aluminosilicate network, and tetrahedral ferric iron. In light of the significant effects of phosphorus on the physical and chemical properties of ferro-basaltic liquids, and the extreme enrichments possible in these liquids in nature, the role of phosphorus in these melts should, in future, be considered more carefully

    Photon- and pion-nucleon interactions in a unitary and causal effective field theory based on the chiral Lagrangian

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    We present and apply a novel scheme for studying photon- and pion-nucleon scattering beyond the threshold region. Partial-wave amplitudes for the γN\gamma\, N and πN\pi N states are obtained by an analytic extrapolation of subthreshold reaction amplitudes computed in chiral perturbation theory, where the constraints set by electromagnetic-gauge invariance, causality and unitarity are used to stabilize the extrapolation. Based on the chiral Lagrangian we recover the empirical s- and p-wave amplitudes up to energies s1300\sqrt{s}\simeq 1300 MeV in terms of the parameters relevant at order Q3Q^3.Comment: 76 pages, 23 figures, one additional figure, Tables 4,5 and Figure 4 are corrected, a few references and comments are added. The role of higher partial waves in pion photoproduction is clarifie

    Age, growth, and reproduction of dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus) caught off the coast of North Carolina

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    Age, growth, and reproductive data were obtained from dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus, size range: 89 to 1451 mm fork length [FL]) collected between May 2002 and May 2004 off North Carolina. Annual increments from scales (n=541) and daily increments from sagittal otoliths (n=107) were examined; estimated von Bertalanffy parameters were L∞ (asymptotic length)=1299 mm FL and k (growth coefficient)=1.08/yr. Daily growth increments reduced much of the residual error in length-at-age estimates for age-0 dolphinfish; the estimated average growth rate was 3.78 mm/day during the first six months. Size at 50% maturity was slightly smaller for female (460 mm FL) than male (475 mm FL) dolphinfish. Based on monthly length-adjusted gonad weights, peak spawning occurs from April through July off North Carolina; back-calculated hatching dates from age-0 dolphinfish and prior reproductive studies on the east coast of Florida indicate that dolphinfish spawning occurs year round off the U.S. east coast and highest levels range from January through June. No major changes in length-at-age or size-at-maturity have occurred since the early 1960s, even after substantial increases in fishery landings

    RRS James Cook Cruise 36, 19 Jul-28 Jul 2009. The Geobiology of Whittard Submarine Canyon

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    The biological and geological research programme for James Cook cruise 36 was built around a series of ROV video transects to determine variations in species and community structure and composition in different geological and topographic settings down the canyon. ROV transects were planned to undertake detailed studies of recognised biological hotspots on both hard and soft substrates, to collect specimens for taxonomic studies, including molecular genetics, and to carry out biological experiments, including the use of in situ incubation chambers and tracer feeding experiments to study the physiology of deep-water fauna. Additional coring, CTD and water column particulate sampling programmes were planned to investigate the recent geological history of the canyon, and, in particular, to investigate whether significant sediment is currently accumulating in any part of the canyon, to sample macro- and meiofauna in areas of soft substrate, and to investigate the fate of organic carbon in the canyon. JC36 was highly successful. The cruise built on the successful mapping of the canyon, using swath bathymetry and 30 kHz sidescan sonar, undertaken during JC35. The main achievements of JC36 included the completion of 26 ROV dives, totalling 340 hr. Seafloor video and photographs along 12 transects from the eastern and western canyon branches between 500 and 3600 m waterdepth were collected. A collection of over 240 biological specimens was collected to verify species identification from the video transects. Pushcores for sedimentology, organic geochemistry, biology and microbiology were also collected. Ultra high-resolution swath bathymetry of the canyon floor using the multibeam system mounted on the ROV was collected on 8 dives. A total of 10 dives were dedicated to placing, initiating and recovering a variety of biological experiments on the seafloor, mainly to examine respiration rates of individual animals or animal communities. The coring programme completed 19 successful piston core stations and 29 successful megacore stations. Most of the latter were processed for macrofauna and meiofauna but some were subsampled for sedimentology and geochemistry. A preliminary assessment suggests that most of the sediment recovered is late glacial in age, and that little Holocene sediment has been deposited in the canyon. 6 CTD profiles and 5 SAPS (stand-alone pump) stations were completed to characterise the suspended particulate matter above the canyon floor. A total of 30 pushcores and megacores also sampled for organic geochemistry

    Noise measurements at Stockton Airport obtained during engineering evaluation of two-segment approaches in a 727-222 aircraft

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    The results of acoustic measurements made on a 727-222 aircraft during standard ILS and two-segment approaches are presented. The aircraft was equipped with a special purpose glide slope computer to provide the capability of making two-segment noise abatement approaches. For upper segment computations, the computer used barometric-corrected pressure altitude and the slant range to a DME transmitter which was colocated with the glide slope transmitter. The computer used the ILS glide slope deviation for lower segment computations. Additional measurements were made on 737 revenue aircraft using the Stockton Airport. The purpose of the acoustical portion of the test was to measure and identify the noise levels during the various approaches

    Human Vulnerability to Climatic Dry Periods in the Prehistoric U.S. Southwest

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    abstract: This study investigates the vulnerability of subsistence agriculturalists to food shortfalls associated with dry periods. I approach this effort by evaluating prominent and often implicit conceptual models of vulnerability to dry periods used by archaeologists and other scholars investigating past human adaptations in dry climates. The conceptual models I evaluate rely on an assumption of regional-scale resource marginality and emphasize the contribution of demographic conditions (settlement population levels and watershed population density) and environmental conditions (settlement proximity to perennial rivers and annual precipitation levels) to vulnerability to dry periods. I evaluate the models and the spatial scales they might apply by identifying the extent to which these conditions influenced the relationship between dry-period severity and residential abandonment in central Arizona from A.D. 1200 to 1450. I use this long-term relationship as an indicator of potential vulnerability to dry periods. I use tree-ring precipitation and streamflow reconstructions to identify dry periods. Critically examining the relationship between precipitation conditions and residential abandonment potentially sparked by the risk of food shortfalls due to demographic and environmental conditions is a necessary step toward advancing understanding of the influences of changing climate conditions on human behavior. Results of this study support conceptual models that emphasize the contribution of high watershed population density and watershed-scale population-resource imbalances to relatively high vulnerability to dry periods. Models that emphasize the contribution of: (1) settlement population levels, (2) settlement locations distant from perennial rivers, (3) settlement locations in areas of low average annual precipitation; and (4) settlement-scale population-resource imbalances to relatively high vulnerability to dry periods are, however, not supported. Results also suggest that people living in watersheds with the greatest access to and availability of water were the most vulnerable to dry periods, or at least most likely to move when confronted with dry conditions. Thus, commonly held assumptions of differences in vulnerability due to settlement population levels and inherently water poor conditions are not supported. The assumption of regional-scale resource marginality and widespread vulnerability to dry periods in this region of the U.S. Southwest is also not consistently supported throughout the study area.Dissertation/ThesisPh.D. Anthropology 201
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