1,171 research outputs found
Security guide for subcontractors
This security guide of the Department of Energy covers contractor and subcontractor access to DOE and Mound facilities. The topics of the security guide include responsibilities, physical barriers, personnel identification system, personnel and vehicular access controls, classified document control, protecting classified matter in use, storing classified matter repository combinations, violations, security education clearance terminations, security infractions, classified information nondisclosure agreement, personnel security clearances, visitor control, travel to communist-controlled or sensitive countries, shipment security, and surreptitious listening devices
No evidence that prefrontal HD-tDCS influences cue-induced food craving.
This study investigated whether the application of high definition transcranial DC stimulation (HD-tDCS) to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex reduces cue-induced food craving when combined with food-specific inhibitory control training. Using a within-subjects design, participants (N = 55) received both active and sham HD-tDCS across 2 sessions while completing a Go/No-Go task in which foods were either associated with response inhibition or response execution. Food craving was measured pre and post stimulation using a standardized questionnaire as well as desire to eat ratings for foods associated with both response inhibition and response execution in the training task. Results revealed no effect of HD-tDCS on reducing state food craving or desire to eat. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we were unable to achieve our maximum preplanned sample size or our minimum desired Bayesian evidence strength across all a priori hypotheses; however 6 of the 7 hypotheses converged with moderate or stronger evidence in favor of the null hypothesis over the alternative hypothesis. We discuss the importance of individual differences and provide recommendations for future studies with an emphasis on the importance of cognitive interventions
Twisted K-Theory from Monodromies
RR fluxes representing different cohomology classes may correspond to the
same twisted K-theory class. We argue that such fluxes are related by
monodromies, generalizing and sometimes T-dual to the familiar monodromies of a
D7-brane. A generalized theta angle is also transformed, but changes by a
multiple of 2pi. As an application, NS5-brane monodromies modify the twisted
K-theory classification of fluxes. Furthermore, in the noncompact case K-theory
does not distinguish flux configurations in which dG is nontrivial in compactly
supported cohomology. Such fluxes are realized as the decay products of
unstable D-branes that wrapped nontrivial cycles. This is interpreted using the
E8 bundle formalism.Comment: 24 Pages, 6 eps figure
Strange prospects for LHC energies
Strange quark and hadron production will be studied at the Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) energies in order to explore the properties of both pp and
heavy-ion collisions. The ALICE experiment will be specifically efficient in
the strange sector with the identification of baryons and mesons over a wide
range of transverse momentum. Dedicated measurements are proposed for
investigating chemical equilibration and bulk properties. Strange particles can
also help to probe kinematical regions where hard processes and pQCD dominate.
We try to anticipate here several ALICE analyses to be performed as the first
Pb--Pb and pp data will be available.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of Hot Quarks 2006,
Villasimius, Italy, 15-20 May 200
Fuzzy Rings in D6-Branes and Magnetic Field Background
We use the Myers T-dual nonabelin Born-Infeld action to find some new
nontrivial solutions for the branes in the background of D6-branes and Melvin
magnetic tube field. In the D6-Branes background we can find both of the fuzzy
sphere and fuzzy ring solutions, which are formed by the gravitational
dielectric effect. We see that the fuzzy ring solution has less energy then
that of the fuzzy sphere. Therefore the fuzzy sphere will decay to the fuzzy
ring configuration. In the Melvin magnetic tube field background there does not
exist fuzzy sphere while the fuzzy ring configuration may be formed by the
magnetic dielectric effect. The new solution shows that propagating in
the D6-branes and magnetic tube field background may expand into a rotating
fuzzy ring. We also use the Dirac-Born-Infeld action to construct the ring
configuration from the D-branes.Comment: Latex, 15 pages, detailed comments in section 2, typos correcte
Neural control of the heart: developmental changes in ionic conductances in mammalian intrinsic cardiac neurons
The expression and properties of ionic channels were investigated in dissociated neurons from neonatal and adult rat intracardiac ganglia. Changes in the hyperpolarization-activated and ATP-sensitive K+ conductances during postnatal development and their role in neuronal excitability were examined. The hyperpolarization-activated nonselective cation current, I-h, was observed in all neurons studied and displayed slow time-dependent rectification. An inwardly rectifying K+ current, I-K(I), was present in a population of neurons from adult but not neonatal rats and was sensitive to block by extracellular Ba2+. Using the perforated-patch recording configuration, an ATP-sensitive K+ (K-ATP) conductance was identified in greater than or equal to 50% of intracardiac neurons from adult rats. Levcromakalim evoked membrane hyperpolarization, which was inhibited by the sulphonylurea drugs. glibenclamide and tolbutamide. Exposure to hypoxic conditions also activated a membrane current similar to that induced by levcromakalim and was inhibited by glibenclamide. Changes in the complement of ion channels during postnatal development may underlie observed differences in the function of intracardiac ganglion neurons during maturation. Furthermore, activation of hyperpolarization-activated and KATP channels in mammalian intracardiac neurons may play a role in neural regulation of the mature heart and cardiac function during ischaemia-reperfusion. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V All rights reserved
Impacts and effects of ocean warming on intertidal rocky habitats.
âą Intertidal rocky habitats comprise over 50% of the shorelines of the world, supporting a diversity of marine life and providing extensive ecosystem services worth in the region of US$ 5-10 trillion per year. âą They are valuable indicators of the impacts of climate change on the wider marine environment and ecosystems. âą Changes in species distributions, abundance and phenology have already been observed around the world in response to recent rapid climate change. âą Species-level responses will have considerable ramifications for the structure of communities and trophic interactions, leading to eventual changes in ecosystem functioning (e.g. less primary producing canopy-forming algae in the North-east Atlantic). âą Whilst progress is made on the mitigation1 required to achieve goals of a lower-carbon world, much can be done to enhance resilience to climate change. Managing the multitude of other interactive impacts on the marine environment, over which society has greater potential control (e.g. overfishing, invasive non-native species, coastal development, and pollution), will enable adaptation1 in the short and medium term of the next 5-50 years
Deconstructing Noncommutativity with a Giant Fuzzy Moose
We argue that the worldvolume theories of D-branes probing orbifolds with
discrete torsion develop, in the large quiver limit, new non-commutative
directions. This provides an explicit `deconstruction' of a wide class of
noncommutative theories. This also provides insight into the physical meaning
of discrete torsion and its relation to the T-dual B field. We demonstrate that
the strict large quiver limit reproduces the matrix theory construction of
higher-dimensional D-branes, and argue that finite `fuzzy moose' theories
provide novel regularizations of non-commutative theories and explicit string
theory realizations of gauge theories on fuzzy tori. We also comment briefly on
the relation to NCOS, (2,0) and little string theories.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, typos caught and refs added; expanded
interpretation of discrete torsio
Jet hadrochemistry as a characteristics of jet quenching
Jets produced in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC are expected to be
strongly modified due to the interaction of the parton shower with the dense
QCD matter. Here, we point out that jet quenching can leave signatures not only
in the longitudinal and transverse jet energy and multiplicity distributions,
but also in the hadrochemical composition of the jet fragments. In particular,
we show that even in the absence of medium effects at or after hadronization,
the medium-modification of the parton shower can result in significant changes
in jet hadrochemistry. We discuss how jet hadrochemistry can be studied within
the high-multiplicity environment of nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, LaTe
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