4,619 research outputs found
Isoscaling and the high Temperature limit
This study shows that isoscaling, usually studied in nuclear reactions, is a
phenomenon common to all cases of fair sampling. Exact expressions for the
yield ratio and approximate expressions for the isoscaling parameters
and are obtained and compared to experimental results. It is
concluded that nuclear isoscaling is bound to contain a component due to
sampling and, thus, a words of caution is issued to those interested in
extracting information about the nuclear equation of state from isoscaling.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Anatomical pathways for auditory memory II: information from rostral superior temporal gyrus to dorsolateral temporal pole and medial temporal cortex
Auditory recognition memory in non-human primates differs from recognition memory in other sensory systems. Monkeys learn the rule for visual and tactile delayed matching-to-sample within a few sessions, and then show one-trial recognition memory lasting 10–20 min. In contrast, monkeys require hundreds of sessions to master the rule for auditory recognition, and then show retention lasting no longer than 30–40 s. Moreover, unlike the severe effects of rhinal lesions on visual memory, such lesions have no effect on the monkeys' auditory memory performance. The anatomical pathways for auditory memory may differ from those in vision. Long-term visual recognition memory requires anatomical connections from the visual association area TE with areas 35 and 36 of the perirhinal cortex (PRC). We examined whether there is a similar anatomical route for auditory processing, or that poor auditory recognition memory may reflect the lack of such a pathway. Our hypothesis is that an auditory pathway for recognition memory originates in the higher order processing areas of the rostral superior temporal gyrus (rSTG), and then connects via the dorsolateral temporal pole to access the rhinal cortex of the medial temporal lobe. To test this, we placed retrograde (3% FB and 2% DY) and anterograde (10% BDA 10,000 mW) tracer injections in rSTG and the dorsolateral area 38DL of the temporal pole. Results showed that area 38DL receives dense projections from auditory association areas Ts1, TAa, TPO of the rSTG, from the rostral parabelt and, to a lesser extent, from areas Ts2-3 and PGa. In turn, area 38DL projects densely to area 35 of PRC, entorhinal cortex (EC), and to areas TH/TF of the posterior parahippocampal cortex. Significantly, this projection avoids most of area 36r/c of PRC. This anatomical arrangement may contribute to our understanding of the poor auditory memory of rhesus monkeys
Tensor mesons produced in tau lepton decays
Light tensor mesons (T = a_2, f_2 and K_2^*) can be produced in decays of tau
leptons. In this paper we compute the branching ratios of tau --> T pi nu
decays by assuming the dominance of intermediate virtual states to model the
form factors involved in the relevant hadronic matrix element. The exclusive
f_2(1270) pi^- decay mode turns out to have the largest branching ratio, of
O(10^-4) . Our results indicate that the contributions of tensor meson
intermediate states to the three-pseudoscalar channels of tau decays are rather
small.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure. Version accepted for publication in PRD, some
typos are corrected and comments are added in section 4. Conclusions remain
unchange
3D photonic crystals from highly monodisperse FRET-based red luminescent PMMA spheres
Red-luminescent PMMA spheres containing a Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) pair were synthesized via a two-step polymerization method. Two reaction parameters, time and monomer volume, are scanned in order to tune the sphere diameter in the 250-500 nm range. Further the polydispersity of the spheres is kept low, at ca. 3%, regardless of sphere diameter or dye concentration. A thorough optical characterization via spectroscopy and time resolved measurements shows a FRET efficiency of over 40% before concentration quenching effects take place, allowing for a precise tuning of their emission in the red region of the visible spectrum. The high quality of these spheres makes them suitable to fabricate self-assembled 3D photonic crystals which act as photonic environment to modify the spectral properties of the FRET pair via Bragg diffraction.España Mineco MAT2012-31659Comunidad de Madrid S2013/MIT-274
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