2,838 research outputs found
Effects of creatine monohydrate supplementation on simulated soccer performance
Purpose: To determine the effects of acute short-term creatine (Cr) supplementation on physical performance during a 90-min soccer-specific performance test. Methods: A double-blind, placebo-controlled experimental design was adopted during which 16 male amateur soccer players were required to consume 20 g/d Cr for 7 d or a placebo. A Ball-Sport Endurance and Speed Test (BEAST) comprising measures of aerobic (circuit time), speed (12- and 20-m sprint), and explosive-power (vertical jump) abilities performed over 90 min was performed presupplementation and postsupplementation. Results: Performance measures during the BEAST deteriorated during the second half relative to the first for both Cr (1.2–2.3%) and placebo (1.0–2.2%) groups, indicating a fatigue effect associated with the BEAST. However, no significant differences existed between groups, suggesting that Cr had no performance-enhancing effect or ability to offset fatigue. When effect sizes were considered, some measures (12-m sprint, –0.53 ± 0.69; 20-m sprint, –0.39 ± 0.59) showed a negative tendency, indicating chances of harm were greater than chances of benefit. Conclusions: Acute short-term Cr supplementation has no beneficial effect on physical measures obtained during a 90-min soccer-simulation test, thus bringing into question its potential as an effective ergogenic aid for soccer players
Can conventional forces really explain the anomalous acceleration of Pioneer 10/11 ?
A conventional explanation of the correlation between the Pioneer 10/11
anomalous acceleration and spin-rate change is given. First, the rotational
Doppler shift analysis is improved. Finally, a relation between the radio beam
reaction force and the spin-rate change is established. Computations are found
in good agreement with observational data. The relevance of our result to the
main Pioneer 10/11 anomalous acceleration is emphasized. Our analysis leads us
to conclude that the latter may not be merely artificial.Comment: 9 pages, no figur
Abundance analysis of prime B-type targets for asteroseismology II. B6--B9.5 stars in the field of view of the CoRoT
The CoRoT satellite is collecting precise time-resolved photometry for tens
of asteroseismology targets. To ensure a correct interpretation of the CoRoT
data, the atmospheric parameters, chemical compositions, and rotational
velocities of the stars must be determined. The main goal of the ground-based
seismology support program for the CoRoT mission was to obtain photometric and
spectroscopic data for stars in the fields monitored by the satellite. These
ground-based observations were collected in the GAUDI archive. High-resolution
spectra of more than 200 B-type stars are available in this database, and about
45% of them is analysed here. To derive the effective temperature of the stars,
we used photometric indices. Surface gravities were obtained by comparing
observed and theoretical Balmer line profiles. To determine the chemical
abundances and rotational velocities, we used a spectrum synthesis method,
which consisted of comparing the observed spectrum with theoretical ones based
on the assumption of LTE. Atmospheric parameters, chemical abundances, and
rotational velocities were determined for 89 late-B stars. The dominant species
in their spectra are iron-peak elements. The average Fe abundance is
7.24+/-0.45 dex. The average rotational velocity is 126 km/sec, but there are
13 and 20 stars with low and moderate Vsin i values, respectively. The analysis
of this sample of 89 late B-type stars reveals many chemically peculiar (CP)
stars. Some of them were previously known, but at least 9 new CP candidates,
among which at least two HgMn stars, are identified in our study. These CP
stars as a group exhibit Vsin i values lower than the stars with normal surface
chemical composition.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, accepted to Astronomy and Astrophysic
Understanding Bottom Production
We describe calculations of b b-bar production to next-to-next-to-leading
order (NNLO) and next-to-next-to-leading logarithm (NNLL) near threshold in pp
interactions. Our calculations are in good agreement with the b b-bar total
cross section measured by HERA-B.Comment: contribution to the proceedings of Quark Matter'02, 4 pages, 1 .eps
figure, uses special included style fil
Diffractive Meson Production and the Quark-Pomeron Coupling
Diffractive meson production at HERA offers interesting possibilities to
investigate diffractive processes and thus to learn something about the
properties of the pomeron. The most succesful phenomenological description of
the pomeron so far assumes it to couple like a isoscalar photon to
single quarks. This coupling leads, however, to problems for exclusive
diffractive reactions. We propose a new phenomenological pomeron vertex, which
leads to very good fits to the known data, but avoids the problems of the old
vertex.Comment: 20 pages, latex with uuencoded postscript, revised versio
Discovery of a strong magnetic field in the rapidly rotating B2Vn star HR 7355
We report the detection of a strong, organized magnetic field in the
helium-variable early B-type star HR 7355 using spectropolarimetric data
obtained with ESPaDOnS on the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope within the
context of the Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) Large Program. HR 7355 is
both the most rapidly rotating known main-sequence magnetic star and the most
rapidly rotating helium-strong star, with = 300 15 km s
and a rotational period of 0.5214404 0.0000006 days. We have modeled our
eight longitudinal magnetic field measurements assuming an oblique dipole
magnetic field. Constraining the inclination of the rotation axis to be between
and , we find the magnetic obliquity angle to be
between and , and the polar strength of the magnetic
field at the stellar surface to be between 13-17 kG. The photometric light
curve constructed from HIPPARCOS archival data and new CTIO measurements shows
two minima separated by 0.5 in rotational phase and occurring 0.25 cycles
before/after the magnetic extrema. This photometric behavior coupled with
previously-reported variable emission of the H line (which we confirm)
strongly supports the proposal that HR 7355 harbors a structured magnetosphere
similar to that in the prototypical helium-strong star, Ori E.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
The MAJORANA 76Ge neutrino less double-beta decay project: A brief update
At present, MAJORANA is a research and development (R&D) project to
investigate the feasibility and cost of constructing and operating a one ton
decay experiment with ~1000 kg of Ge detectors fabricated from germanium
enriched to 86% in . The study will include three separate cryostats with
various types of detectors: un-segmented, un-segmented point-contact, minimally
segmented, and highly segmented. One cryostat will contain at least 30 kg of
enriched (preferably point-contact) detectors. The performance of the cryostats
and detectors as well as background levels will be investigated. The goal of
the demonstrator project is to reach a discovery sensitivity of ~ 1026 y.Comment: 3 pages, no figure
Rotational velocities of A-type stars I. Measurement of vsini in the southern hemisphere
Within the scope of a Key Programme determining fundamental parameters of
stars observed by HIPPARCOS, spectra of 525 B8 to F2-type stars brighter than
V=8 have been collected at ESO. Fourier transforms of several line profiles in
the range 4200-4500 A are used to derive vsini from the frequency of the first
zero. Statistical analysis of the sample indicates that measurement error is a
function of vsini and this relative error of the rotational velocity is found
to be about 6% on average. The results obtained are compared with data from the
literature. There is a systematic shift from standard values from Slettebak et
al. (1975), which are 10 to 12% lower than our findings. Comparisons with other
independent vsini values tend to prove that those from Slettebak et al. are
underestimated. This effect is attributed to the presence of binaries in the
standard sample of Slettebak et al., and to the model atmosphere they used.Comment: 17 pages, includes 18 figures, accepted in A&
HD148937: a multiwavelength study of the third Galactic member of the Of?p class
Three Galactic O-type stars belong to the rare class of Of?p objects: HD108,
HD191612, and HD148937. The first two stars show a wealth of phenomena,
including magnetic fields and strong X-ray emission, light variability, and
dramatic periodic spectral variability. We present here the first detailed
optical and X-ray study of the third Galactic Of?p star, HD148937.
Spectroscopic monitoring has revealed low-level variability in the Balmer and
HeII4686 lines, but constancy at HeI and CIII4650. The Ha line exhibits profile
variations at a possible periodicity of ~7d. Model atmosphere fits yield
T_{eff}=41000+-2000K, log(g)=4.0+-0.1, Mdot_{sph}<~ 10^{-7}Msol/yr and a
surabondance of nitrogen by a factor of four. At X-ray wavelengths, HD148937
resembles HD108 and HD191612 in having a thermal spectrum dominated by a
relatively cool component (kT=0.2keV), broad lines (>1700km/s), and an
order-of-magnitude overluminosity compared to normal O stars (log
[L_X^unabs/L_BOL] ~ -6).Comment: accepted by AJ; 15p, 15fig available in jp
Preasymptotic nature of hadron scattering vs small-x HERA Data
We emphasize that recently observed regularities in hadron interactions and
deep-inelastic scattering are of preasymptotic nature and it is impossible to
make conclusions on the true asymptotic behavior of observables without
unitarization procedure. Unitarization is important and changes scattering
picture drastically.Comment: LaTeX file, 9 pages; 4 tarred, gzipped and uuencoded figures in a
separate fil
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