51 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of pairing in mesoscopic systems
Using numerical and analytical methods implemented for different models we
conduct a systematic study of thermodynamic properties of pairing correlation
in mesoscopic nuclear systems. Various quantities are calculated and analyzed
using the exact solution of pairing. An in-depth comparison of canonical, grand
canonical, and microcanonical ensemble is conducted. The nature of the pairing
phase transition in a small system is of a particular interest. We discuss the
onset of discontinuity in the thermodynamic variables, fluctuations, and
evolution of zeros of the canonical and grand canonical partition functions in
the complex plane. The behavior of the Invariant Correlational Entropy is also
studied in the transitional region of interest. The change in the character of
the phase transition due to the presence of magnetic field is discussed along
with studies of superconducting thermodynamics.Comment: 19 pages, 24 figure
Winter wheat, 2000
"July 2000.""Publication costs paid by Missouri Seed Improvement Association."The objective of the Missouri Winter Wheat Performance Tests is to provide wheat growers in Missouri with a reliable, unbiased, up-to-date source of information that will permit valid comparisons among improved wheat varieties. This information should help Missouri wheat growers select varieties best suited to their particular area and growing conditions. This report summarizes soft red winter wheat variety trials conducted throughout Missouri during the 1999-00 cropping season. No hard red winter wheat test was grown in 2000
Classification of the Nuclear Multifragmentation Phase Transition
Using a recently proposed classification scheme for phase transitions in
finite systems [Phys.Rev.Lett.{\bf 84},3511 (2000)] we show that within the
statistical standard model of nuclear multifragmentation the predicted phase
transition is of first order.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.C (in
press
Does training increase the use of more emotionally laden words by nurses when talking with cancer patients? A randomised study
The emotional content of health care professionalsâcancer patient communication is often considered as poor and has to be improved by an enhancement of health care professionals empathy. One hundred and fifteen oncology nurses participating in a communication skills training workshop were assessed at three different periods. Nurses randomly allocated to a control group arm (waiting list) were assessed a first time and then 3 and 6 months later. Nurses allocated to the training group were assessed before training workshop, just after and 3 months later. Each nurse completed a 20-min clinical and simulated interview. Each interview was analysed by three content analysis systems: two computer-supported content analysis of emotional words, the Harvard Third Psychosocial Dictionary and the Martindale Regressive Imagery Dictionary and an observer rating system of utterances emotional depth level, the Cancer Research Campaign Workshop Evaluation Manual. The results show that in clinical interviews there is an increased use of emotional words by health care professionals right after having been trained (P=0.056): training group subjects use 4.3 (std: 3.7) emotional words per 1000 used before training workshop, and 7.0 (std: 5.8) right after training workshop and 5.9 (std: 4.3) 3 months later compared to control group subjects which use 4.5 (std: 4.8) emotional words at the first assessment point, 4.3 (std: 4.1) at the second and 4.4 (std: 3.3) at the third. The same trend is noticeable for emotional words used by health care professionals in simulated interviews (P=0.000). The emotional words registry used by health care professionals however remains stable over time in clinical interviews (P=0.141) and is enlarged in simulated interviews (P=0.041). This increased use of emotional words by trained health care professionals facilitates cancer patient emotion words expressions compared to untrained health care professionals especially 3 months after training (P=0.005). This study shows that health care professionals empathy may be improved by communication skills training workshop and that this improvement facilitates cancer patients emotions expression
Recommended from our members
Swimming performance and fishway model passage success of Rio Grande Silvery Minnow
We used a swim chamber, flume, and large-scale fishway models to assess the swimming performance, behaviour, and passage success of endangered Rio Grande silvery minnow (Hybognathus amarus). Field-captured silvery minnow (53-88 mm total length) swam114-118 cm/s (i.e., up to 20.9 body lengths/s) in a swim chamber in water temperatures of 15, 19,and 23°C. The relationship between time to fatigue and water velocity showed that endurance declined sharply at velocities above 60 cm/s, a threshold that is consistent with critical swimming speed estimates and may represent a transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism. Water temperature and fish length were positively correlated with swimming performance. At water velocities of 60 cm/s and less, silvery minnow routinely swam the equivalent of 50 km (125 km maximum) in a swim chamber in less than 72 h. The proportions of silvery minnow that successfully ascended a flume over sand, gravel, or cobble substrate declined as water velocity increased to 53 cm/s. Passage times increased at higher water velocities and at a faster rate over sand substrate because fish were stationary for longer periods over the lower-velocity boundary layers created by gravel and cobble at all velocities. Dual-vertical-slot fishway passage was 52%in a less turbulent flow of 78 cm/s; passage was 8% at a faster, more turbulent flow of 87 cm/s.Conversely, 75% of silvery minnow ascended a rock channel fishway with a holding pool present and a 1% hydraulic gradient in low (58-cm/s) and high (83-cm/s) mean flow velocities. Differences in willingness to swim, longer test duration, and the mosaic of water velocities created by the bed roughness elements may explain the higher silvery minnow passage success in the rock channel.Predictive swimming fatigue relationships, together with fish length and water temperature, may guide decisions regarding fishway lengths and velocities so as to permit passage of Rio Grande silvery minnow
Winter wheat, 2001
"July 2001.""Publication costs paid by Missouri Seed Improvement Association."The objective of the Missouri Winter Wheat Performance Tests is to provide wheat growers in Missouri with a reliable, unbiased, up-to-date source of information that will permit valid comparisons among improved wheat varieties. This information should help Missouri wheat growers select varieties best suited to their particular area and growing conditions. This report summarizes soft red winter wheat variety trials conducted throughout Missouri during the 2000-01 cropping season. No hard red winter wheat test was conducted in 2001
- âŠ