3,452 research outputs found
Aproximative solutions to the neutrino oscillation problem in matter
We present approximative solutions to the neutrino evolution equation
calculated by different methods. In a two neutrino framework, using the
physical parameters which gives the main effects to neutrino oscillations from
nu{e} to another flavors for L=3000Km and E=1GeV, the results for the
transition probability calculated by using series solutions, by to take the
neutrino evolution operator as a product of ordered partial operators and by
numerical methods, for a linearly and sinusoidally varying matter density are
compared. The extension to an arbitrary density profile is discussed and the
evolution operator as a product of partial operators in the three neutrino case
is obtained.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Memory Effects in the Standard Model for Glasses
The standard model of glasses is an ensemble of two-level systems interacting
with a thermal bath. The general origin of memory effects in this model is a
quasi-stationary but non-equilibrium state of a single two-level system, which
is realized due to a finite-rate cooling and very slow thermally activated
relaxation. We show that single particle memory effects, such as negativity of
the specific heat under reheating, vanish for a sufficiently disordered
ensemble. In contrast, a disordered ensemble displays a collective memory
effect [similar to that described by Kovacs for glassy polymers], where
non-equilibrium features of the ensemble are monitored via a macroscopic
observable. An experimental realization of the effect can be used to further
assess the consistency of the model.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Kovacs Effect in a Fragile Glass Model
The Kovacs protocol, based on the temperature shift experiment originally
conceived by A.J. Kovacs for glassy polymers, is implemented in an exactly
solvable dynamical model. This model is characterized by interacting fast and
slow modes represented respectively by spherical spins and harmonic oscillator
variables. Due to this fundamental property, the model reproduces the
characteristic non-monotonic evolution known as the ``Kovacs effect'', observed
in polymers, in granular materials and models of molecular liquids, when
similar experimental protocols are implemented.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Contraceptive use and sexual function: a comparison of Italian female medical students and women attending family planning services
Objectives: The aims of the study were to understand how education relates to contraceptive choice and how sexual function can vary in relation to the use of a contraceptive method. Methods: We surveyed female medical students and women attending a family planning service (FPS) in Italy. Participants completed an online questionnaire which asked for information on sociodemographics, lifestyle, sexuality and contraceptive use and also included items of the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI). Results: The questionnaire was completed by 413 women (362 students and 51 women attending the FPS) between the ages of 18 and 30 years. FSFI scores revealed a lower risk of sexual dysfunction among women in the control group who did not use oral hormonal contraception. The differences in FSFI total scores between the two study groups, when subdivided by the primary contraceptive method used, was statistically significant (p < 0.005). Women using the vaginal ring had the lowest risk of sexual dysfunction, compared with all other women, and had a positive sexual function profile. In particular, the highest FSFI domain scores were lubrication, orgasm and satisfaction, also among the control group. Expensive contraception, such as long-acting reversible contraception, was not preferred by this young population, even though such methods are more contemporary and manageable. Compared with controls, students had lower compliance with contraception and a negative attitude towards voluntary termination of pregnancy. Conclusion: Despite their scientific knowledge, Italian female medical students were found to need sexual and contraceptive assistance. A woman's sexual function responds to her awareness of her body and varies in relation to how she is guided in her contraceptive choice. Contraceptive counselling is an excellent means to improve female sexuality
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Women's views of continuity of information provided during and after pregnancy: A qualitative interview study
Straightforward transfer of care from pregnancy to the postpartum period is associated with health benefits and is desired by women worldwide. Underpinning this transfer of care is the sharing of information between healthcare professionals and the provision of consistent information to women. In this qualitative study, two aspects of continuity of information were examined; first the information passed on from midwife to health visitor regarding a woman and her baby before the health visitor meets the woman postnatally and second, the consistency of information received by women from these two healthcare professionals (the main healthcare providers during and after pregnancy in England). To be eligible for the study, women had to have had a baby in England within 12Â months prior to the interview. Participants also needed to be able to read and speak English and be over 18Â years old. Recruitment of participants was via word of mouth and social media. Twenty-nine mothers were interviewed of whom 19 were first time mothers. The interviews took place in the summer and autumn of 2016 and were transcribed verbatim and analysed using Framework Analysis. Two overarching themes were identified: not feeling listened to and information inconsistencies. Women reported little experience of midwives and health visitors sharing information about their care, forcing women to repeat information. This made women feel not listened to and participants recommended that healthcare professionals share information; prioritising information about labour, mental health, and chronic conditions. Women had mixed experiences regarding receiving information from midwives and health visitors, with examples of both consistent and inconsistent information received. To avoid inconsistent information, joint appointments were recommended. Findings from this study clearly suggest that better communication pathways need to be developed and effectively implemented for midwives and health visitors to improve the care that they provide to women
Optimal receptor-cluster size determined by intrinsic and extrinsic noise
Biological cells sense external chemical stimuli in their environment using
cell-surface receptors. To increase the sensitivity of sensing, receptors often
cluster, most noticeably in bacterial chemotaxis, a paradigm for signaling and
sensing in general. While amplification of weak stimuli is useful in absence of
noise, its usefulness is less clear in presence of extrinsic input noise and
intrinsic signaling noise. Here, exemplified on bacterial chemotaxis, we
combine the allosteric Monod-Wyman- Changeux model for signal amplification by
receptor complexes with calculations of noise to study their
interconnectedness. Importantly, we calculate the signal-to-noise ratio,
describing the balance of beneficial and detrimental effects of clustering for
the cell. Interestingly, we find that there is no advantage for the cell to
build receptor complexes for noisy input stimuli in absence of intrinsic
signaling noise. However, with intrinsic noise, an optimal complex size arises
in line with estimates of the sizes of chemoreceptor complexes in bacteria and
protein aggregates in lipid rafts of eukaryotic cells.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures,accepted for publication on Physical Review
Beyond the Death of Linear Response: 1/f optimal information transport
Non-ergodic renewal processes have recently been shown by several authors to
be insensitive to periodic perturbations, thereby apparently sanctioning the
death of linear response, a building block of nonequilibrium statistical
physics. We show that it is possible to go beyond the ``death of linear
response" and establish a permanent correlation between an external stimulus
and the response of a complex network generating non-ergodic renewal processes,
by taking as stimulus a similar non-ergodic process. The ideal condition of
1/f-noise corresponds to a singularity that is expected to be relevant in
several experimental conditions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, in press on Phys. Rev. Let
Rural-urban migration in d-dimensional lattices
The rural-urban migration phenomenon is analyzed by using an agent-based
computational model. Agents are placed on lattices which dimensions varying
from d=2 up to d=7. The localization of the agents in the lattice define their
social neighborhood (rural or urban) not being related to their spatial
distribution. The effect of the dimension of lattice is studied by analyzing
the variation of the main parameters that characterizes the migratory process.
The dynamics displays strong effects even for around one million of sites, in
higher dimensions (d=6, 7).Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to be published in International Journal of
Modern Physics C 1
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