10,566 research outputs found
Scalar field phase dynamics in preheating
We study the model of a massive inflaton field coupled to another
scalar filed with interaction term for the first stage
of preheating. We obtain the the behavior of the phase in terms of the
iteration of a simple family of circle maps. When expansion of the universe is
taken into account the qualitative behavior of the phase and growth number
evolution is reminiscent of the behavior found in the case without expansion.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX; submitted to the Proceedings of Eleventh
Marcel Grossmann Meetin
The Distribution of the Asymptotic Number of Citations to Sets of Publications by a Researcher or From an Academic Department Are Consistent With a Discrete Lognormal Model
How to quantify the impact of a researcher's or an institution's body of work
is a matter of increasing importance to scientists, funding agencies, and
hiring committees. The use of bibliometric indicators, such as the h-index or
the Journal Impact Factor, have become widespread despite their known
limitations. We argue that most existing bibliometric indicators are
inconsistent, biased, and, worst of all, susceptible to manipulation. Here, we
pursue a principled approach to the development of an indicator to quantify the
scientific impact of both individual researchers and research institutions
grounded on the functional form of the distribution of the asymptotic number of
citations. We validate our approach using the publication records of 1,283
researchers from seven scientific and engineering disciplines and the chemistry
departments at the 106 U.S. research institutions classified as "very high
research activity". Our approach has three distinct advantages. First, it
accurately captures the overall scientific impact of researchers at all career
stages, as measured by asymptotic citation counts. Second, unlike other
measures, our indicator is resistant to manipulation and rewards publication
quality over quantity. Third, our approach captures the time-evolution of the
scientific impact of research institutions.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 3 table
Cerebral and cardiovascular effects of analgesic doses of ketamine during a target controlled general anesthesia: a prospective randomized study
Introduction: Ketamine is increasingly being used in various pain settings. The purpose of this study was to
assess the effect of an analgesic dose of ketamine in the bispectral index (BIS), spectral edge frequency (SEF-95), density spectral array (DSA), cerebral oximetry (rSO2) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) during general
anaesthesia with a target controlled infusion.
Methods: A prospective, single-blinded and randomized study on adult patients scheduled for elective spine
surgery was carried out. After anaesthesia induction with propofol, remifentanil and rocuronium, when a stable BIS
value (45-55) was achieved, an automatic recording of BIS, SEF-95, rSO2 and MAP values during 9 min was
performed to establish patients baseline values. Subsequently, patients were randomly assigned to receive a
ketamine bolus dose of 0.2 mg/kg, 0.5 mg/kg or 1 mg/kg; all variables were recorded for additional 9 min after the
ketamine bolus, in the absence of any surgical stimulus. A p-value <0.05 was considered significant in the statistical
analysis.
Results and discussion: Thirty-nine patients were enrolled in the study. Our results show a dose-related
increase of SEF-95 and BIS values. DSA demonstrate a shift in the frequency range and power distribution towards
higher frequencies. Our results do not show significant differences in MAP and rSO2 values.
Conclusion: When ketamine is used intraoperatively in analgesic doses, the anaesthetist should anticipate an
increase in SEF-95 and BIS values which will not be associated with the level of anaesthesia.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Reheating induced by competing decay modes
We address the problem of studying the decay of the inflaton field to
another scalar field through parametric resonance in the case of a
coupling that involves several decay modes. This amounts to the presence of
extra harmonic terms in the perturbation of the field dynamics. For the
case of two frequencies we compute the geometry of the resonance regions, which
is significantly altered due to the presence of non-cuspidal resonance regions
associated to higher harmonics and to the emergence of instability `pockets'.
We discuss the effect of this change in the efficiency of the energy transfer
process for the simplest case of a coupling given by a combination of the two
interaction terms of homogeneous degree usually considered in the literature.
We find that the presence of higher harmonics has limited cosmological
implications.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures Added references. Corrected typo
Endoscopic diagnosis of an intramural hematoma presenting as an anticoagulant ileus
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Aves da fazenda Nhumirim, Pantanal da Nhecolândia, MS.
Neste trabalho é apresentada uma caracterização da comunidade de aves ocorrentes na Estação Experimental da fazenda Nhumirim, contribuindo com o desenvolvimento da Ornitologia na região.bitstream/CPAP/55966/1/DOC81.pdfFormato Eletrônic
Synthesis of sub-5 nm Co-doped SnO nanoparticles and their structural, microstructural, optical and photocatalytic properties
A swift chemical route to synthesize Co-doped SnO nanopowders is
described. Pure and highly stable SnCoO (0 x
0.15) crystalline nanoparticles were synthesized, with mean grain sizes <
5 nm and the dopant element homogeneously distributed in substitutional sites
of the SnO matrix. The UV-visible diffuse reflectance spectra of the
SnCoO samples reveal red shifts, the optical bandgap
energies decreasing with increasing Co concentration. The Urbach energies of
the samples were calculated and correlated with their bandgap energies. The
photocatalytic activity of the SnCoO samples was
investigated for the 4-hydroxylbenzoic acid (4-HBA) degradation process. A
complete photodegradation of a 10 ppm 4-HBA solution was achieved using 0.02%
(w/w) of SnCoO nanoparticles in 60 min of
irradiation.Comment: 29 pages, 2 tables, 10 figure
Fluctuations and oscillations in a simple epidemic model
We show that the simplest stochastic epidemiological models with spatial
correlations exhibit two types of oscillatory behaviour in the endemic phase.
In a large parameter range, the oscillations are due to resonant amplification
of stochastic fluctuations, a general mechanism first reported for
predator-prey dynamics. In a narrow range of parameters that includes many
infectious diseases which confer long lasting immunity the oscillations persist
for infinite populations. This effect is apparent in simulations of the
stochastic process in systems of variable size, and can be understood from the
phase diagram of the deterministic pair approximation equations. The two
mechanisms combined play a central role in explaining the ubiquity of
oscillatory behaviour in real data and in simulation results of epidemic and
other related models.Comment: acknowledgments added; a typo in the discussion that follows Eq. (3)
is corrected
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