8,195 research outputs found

    Consumers' Experience in Massachusetts: Lessons for National Health Reform

    Get PDF
    Based on interviews, explores the impact of the state's 2006 healthcare reform on access to affordable coverage and on medical debt burdens. Discusses remaining issues and outlines lessons for national reform, including on the role of public programs

    Very Special Relativity

    Full text link
    By Very Special Relativity (VSR) we mean descriptions of nature whose space-time symmetries are certain proper subgroups of the Poincar\'e group. These subgroups contain space-time translations together with at least a 2-parameter subgroup of the Lorentz group isomorphic to that generated by Kx+JyK_{x}+J_{y} and KyJxK_{y}-J_{x}. We find that VSR implies special relativity (SR) in the context of local quantum field theory or of CP conservation. Absent both of these added hypotheses, VSR provides a simulacrum of SR for which most of the consequences of Lorentz invariance remain wholly or essentially intact, and for which many sensitive searches for departures from Lorentz invariance must fail. Several feasible experiments are discussed for which Lorentz-violating effects in VSR may be detectable.Comment: 3 pages, revte

    Sim(2) and SUSY

    Get PDF
    The proposal of hep-ph/0601236, that the laws of physics in flat spacetime need be invariant only under a SIM(2) subgroup of the Lorentz group, is extended to include supersymmetry. N=1\mathcal{N}=1 SUSY gauge theories which include SIM(2) couplings for the fermions in chiral multiplets are formulated. These theories contain two conserved supercharges rather than the usual four.Comment: 10 pages, revtex4. Note added and sign correcte

    Sharp Fronts Due to Diffusion and Viscoelastic Relaxation in Polymers

    Get PDF
    A model for sharp fronts in glassy polymers is derived and analyzed. The major effect of a diffusing penetrant on the polymer entanglement network is taken to be the inducement of a differential viscoelastic stress. This couples diffusive and mechanical processes through a viscoelastic response where the strain depends upon the amount of penetrant present. Analytically, the major effect is to produce explicit delay terms via a relaxation parameter. This accounts for the fundamental difference between a polymer in its rubbery state and the polymer in its glassy state, namely the finite relaxation time in the glassy state due to slow response to changing conditions. Both numerical and analytical perturbation studies of a boundary value problem for a dry glass polymer exposed to a penetrant solvent are completed. Concentration profiles in good agreement with observations are obtained
    corecore