6,023 research outputs found
Effects of quark matter and color superconductivity in compact stars
The equation of state for quark matter is derived for a nonlocal, chiral
quark model within the mean field approximation. We investigate the effects of
a variation of the form factors of the interaction on the phase diagram of
quark matter under the condition of beta-equilibrium and charge neutrality.
Special emphasis is on the occurrence of a diquark condensate which signals a
phase transition to color superconductivity and its effects on the equation of
state. We calculate the quark star configurations by solving the Tolman-
Oppenheimer- Volkoff equations and obtain for the transition from a hot, normal
quark matter core of a protoneutron star to a cool diquark condensed one a
release of binding energy of the order of Delta M c^2 ~ 10^{53} erg. We study
the consequences of antineutrino trapping in hot quark matter for quark star
configurations with possible diquark condensation and discuss the claim that
this energy could serve as an engine for explosive phenomena. A "phase diagram"
for rotating compact stars (angular velocity-baryon mass plane) is suggested as
a heuristic tool for obtaining constraints on the equation of state of QCD at
high densities. It has a critical line dividing hadronic from quark core stars
which is correlated with a local maximum of the moment of inertia and can thus
be subject to experimental verification by observation of the rotational
behavior of accreting compact stars.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, Talk given at 2nd International Workshop on
Hadron Physics: Effective Theories of Low-Energy QCD, Coimbra, Portugal,
25-29 Sep 200
Frame synchronization performance and analysis
The analysis used to generate the theoretical models showing the performance of the frame synchronizer is described for various frame lengths and marker lengths at various signal to noise ratios and bit error tolerances
Nonlocality effects on spin-one pairing patterns in two-flavor color superconducting quark matter and compact stars applications
We study the influence of nonlocality in the interaction on two spin one
pairing patterns of two-flavor quark matter: the anisotropic blue color paring
besides the usual two color superconducting matter (2SCb), in which red and
green colors are paired, and the color spin locking phase (CSL). The effect of
nonlocality on the gaps is rather large and the pairings exhibit a strong
dependence on the form factor of the interaction, especially in the low density
region. The application of these small spin-one condensates for compact stars
is analyzed: the early onset of quark matter in the nonlocal models may help to
stabilize hybrid star configurations. While the anisotropic blue quark pairing
does not survive a big asymmetry in flavor space as imposed by the charge
neutrality condition, the CSL phase as a flavor independent pairing can be
realized as neutral matter in compact star cores. However, smooth form factors
and the missmatch between the flavor chemical potential in neutral matter make
the effective gaps of the order of magnitude keV, and a more
systematic analysis is needed to decide whether such small gaps could be
consistent with the cooling phenomenology.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, corrected version with revised parameterizatio
An Ongoing Treasure Hunt: One Library’s Practical Experiences Documenting Post-Cancellation Perpetual Access
Albertsons Library embarked on a practical effort this past year to document post-cancellation perpetual access for those electronic journal titles that had been or were part of large package purchases. Documenting entitled content was challenging and hampered by limits to accounting records maintained at the library and university; a change in the library’s integrated library system (ILS); limited or incomplete access to third-party subscription agent order and payment records; and changes or the demise of consortia. Decisions were made to work with the known more recent electronic journal content purchased, and to work backwards from there. Procedures for creating standardized perpetual access documentation by title was devised for use in the ILS cataloging module as well as the library’s electronic resource management system. By creating a method for documenting perpetual access, institutions are able to support claims for access purchased by the library, even as content shifts from one publisher to another
Implementación de un componente para el préstamo de material bibliográfico digital para la biblioteca virtual en el cib-ESPOL
En el presente artículo se resume cómo se ha elaborado un componente para la Biblioteca Virtual de la ESPOL,
que busca facilitar la lectura, por medio de libros digitales, completos y de manera legal a través del préstamo de
los mismo, de manera online, usando la tecnología de hoy en día, que se encuentra cada vez mas al alcance de
todos, haciendo uso de la misma con mayor frecuencia gracias a su accesibilidad, rapidez e interactividad.
El componente constará de dos módulos, el administrador en donde se administrará el material bibliográfico y
el módulo usuario que permitirá a los estudiantes de la comunidad politécnica acceder mediante su usuario y
contraseña para así poder realizar el préstamo del material que necesite.
Para el desarrollo de este componente se han utilizado tecnologías modernas como Responsive Web Design
Calibre, eCub y las tecnologías clásicas como MySQL, PHP, JavaScript, Jquery, entre otros
Frequency-Shaped Second-Order Sliding Mode Control for Smart Suspension Systems
© 2018 IEEE. Design of a frequency-shaped second-order sliding mode (FS2SM) controller is demonstrated by means of exploiting second-order low-pass filter (LPF) to model the dynamic sliding surface to shape the frequency characteristics of the equivalent dynamics. The proposed technique is numerically verified in the simulation of a half-car model (HCM) with inbuilt active hydraulically interconnected suspension (HIS) system. The closed-loop performances confirm that inclusion of an appropriate filter in the control scheme allows not only to reduce the roll angle but also its spectrum can be shaped
Simultaneous Optical Model Analyses of Elastic Scattering, Breakup, and Fusion Cross Section Data for the He + Bi System at Near-Coulomb-Barrier Energies
Based on an approach recently proposed by us, simultaneous
-analyses are performed for elastic scattering, direct reaction (DR)
and fusion cross sections data for the He+Bi system at
near-Coulomb-barrier energies to determine the parameters of the polarization
potential consisting of DR and fusion parts. We show that the data are well
reproduced by the resultant potential, which also satisfies the proper
dispersion relation. A discussion is given of the nature of the threshold
anomaly seen in the potential
A Meiotic Checkpoint Alters Repair Partner Bias to Permit Inter-sister Repair of Persistent DSBs
Accurate meiotic chromosome segregation critically depends on the formation of inter-homolog crossovers initiated by double-strand breaks (DSBs). Inaccuracies in this process can drive aneuploidy and developmental defects, but how meiotic cells are protected from unscheduled DNA breaks remains unexplored. Here we define a checkpoint response to persistent meiotic DSBs in C. elegans that phosphorylates the synaptonemal complex (SC) to switch repair partner from the homolog to the sister chromatid. A key target of this response is the core SC component SYP-1, which is phosphorylated in response to ionizing radiation (IR) or unrepaired meiotic DSBs. Failure to phosphorylate (syp-16A) or dephosphorylate (syp-16D) SYP-1 in response to DNA damage results in chromosome non-dysjunction, hyper-sensitivity to IR-induced DSBs, and synthetic lethality with loss of brc-1BRCA1. Since BRC-1 is required for inter-sister repair, these observations reveal that checkpoint-dependent SYP-1 phosphorylation safeguards the germline against persistent meiotic DSBs by channelling repair to the sister chromatid.Cancer Research UK FC0010048UK Medical Research Council FC0010048Wellcome Trust FC0010048Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2016-75058-PEuropean Research Council ERC2014 AdG669898 TARLOO
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Studying Configurations with QCA: Best Practices in Strategy and Organization Research
Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) is increasingly applied in strategy and organization research. The main purpose of our essay is to support this growing community of QCA scholars by identifying best practices that can help guide researchers through the key stages of a QCA empirical study (model building, sampling, calibration, data analysis, reporting and interpretation of findings) and by providing examples of such practices drawn from strategy and organization studies. Coupled with this main purpose, we respond to Miller’s (2017) essay on configuration research by highlighting our points of agreement regarding his recommendations for configurational research and by addressing some of his concerns regarding QCA. Our article thus contributes to configurational research by articulating how to leverage QCA for enriching configurational theories of strategy and organization
Synthesis and characterization of polymeric nanoparticles and their application in anticancer therapy
Motivation: Traditional and current chemotherapy used to treat cancer disease has always been characterized by the high prevalence of side effects. In order to avoid them, nanotechnology has raised as an acceptable solution to this problem by selectively targeting anticancer drugs to the tumoral cells. Within this project to antitumoral agents, tannic acid and amitriptyline, have been encapsulated in polymeric nanoparticles to allow their targeted delivery. Amitriptyline is a tricyclic antidepressant whose antitumoral activity against lung cancer was recently described [1], and this agent could be a good approach for treating other tumoral diseases.Methods: Tannic acid nanoparticles (TA) were synthetized according to a method previously described by our group [2], and PLGA-amitriptyline nanoparticles (PLGAMI) by emulsion solvent evaporation method. The so-obtained nanoparticles were characterized by dynamic light scattering (DLS), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and FTIR spectroscopy.Results: Both nanoparticles, TA and PLGAMI, are small and spherical. TA nanoparticles showed a mean diameter of 60 nm (SEM), a hydrodynamic diameter of 500 nm and a zeta potential of -22 mV (DLS). PLGAMI nanoparticles showed a mean diameter of 25 nm, a hydrodynamic diameter of 110 nm and a zeta potential of -8 mV. The presence of the antitumoral agents in nanoparticles was confirmed by FTIR spectroscopy, and the entrapment efficiency determined by colorimetric methods, using an UV-Vis spectroscope.Conclusions: We have synthetized two polymeric nanoparticles bearing antitumoral agents as cargo. Our data confirm that these nanoparticles are suitable for continuing with the in-vitro assays, where we will compare the pro-apoptotic effect of both nanoparticles in cell cultures (H460 tumor cell line)
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