5,968 research outputs found
Lunar response to the time-varying interplanetary magnetic field and application to the ALSEP magnetometer experiment
Mathematical model for predicting lunar response to time varying interplanetary magnetic fields and its applicability to interpretation of ALSEP magnetometer dat
Electrostatic potential distribution of the sunlit lunar surface
Electrostatic potential distribution on sunlit lunar surfac
Interaction of the solar wind with a planetary ionosphere
An electrodynamic model for an ionosphere-solar wind interaction is developed based on the existence of a low beta plasma below the anemopause. The currents for the interaction are driven by the solar wind motional electric field and induce a stagnation magnetic field at the anemopause. For Venus and Mars the lower region of the ionosphere near the electron density peak has the highest conductivity, and therefore the tangential component of the induction current flows substantially in this region. The current paths close in the anemopause, which is a solar wind current sheath analogous to the magnetopause. Both the fraction of the undisturbed solar wind motional electric field, which drives the induction current, and the required fraction of incident solar wind particles, crossing the anemopause to produce this current, are shown to be small
Method for estimating the electrical conductivity of the lunar interior
Estimation method for electrical conductivity of lunar interio
Stochastic stability versus localization in chaotic dynamical systems
We prove stochastic stability of chaotic maps for a general class of Markov
random perturbations (including singular ones) satisfying some kind of mixing
conditions. One of the consequences of this statement is the proof of Ulam's
conjecture about the approximation of the dynamics of a chaotic system by a
finite state Markov chain. Conditions under which the localization phenomenon
(i.e. stabilization of singular invariant measures) takes place are also
considered. Our main tools are the so called bounded variation approach
combined with the ergodic theorem of Ionescu-Tulcea and Marinescu, and a random
walk argument that we apply to prove the absence of ``traps'' under the action
of random perturbations.Comment: 27 pages, LaTe
Seafoods : their wartime role in maintaining nutritional standards
Recent years have witnessed improved dietary changes, due largely to an increase in knowledge of nutrition and to a wide dissemination of this knowledge.
Since about 1915 there has been a significant upward trend in· the consumption of milk, green leafy vegetables, tomatoes, and citrus fruits-the so-called protective foods-all of which are extremely rich in those nutrients that are often deficient in low-cost diets. The total weight of food consumed per person per year has remained fairly constant, but there has been a downward trend for meats, grain products, and potatoes, and the use of the protective foods has been increasing. The proportion of calories derived from these latter sources has approximately doubled since the beginning of the century. From.a health standpoint this trend is most encouraging, yet the proportion of calories derived from meats, grains, and mature legumes is still over 70 per cent. Probably half the food calories should be derived from milk and milk products, fruits, vegetables, and eggs.
Now, wartime restrictions have changed what were fairly well-balanced family diets into diets deficient not only in certain minerals and vitamins but also in animal proteins essential for the maintenance of normal health. Fresh seafoods, since these are not rationed, should be seriously considered as a source of the indispensable animal proteins
Multicomponent dynamical systems: SRB measures and phase transitions
We discuss a notion of phase transitions in multicomponent systems and
clarify relations between deterministic chaotic and stochastic models of this
type of systems. Connections between various definitions of SRB measures are
considered as well.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX 2
Precision measurement of the half-life and the decay branches of 62Ga
In an experiment performed at the Accelerator Laboratory of the University of
Jyvaskyla, the beta-decay half-life of 62Ga has been studied with high
precision using the IGISOL technique. A half-life of T1/2 = 116.09(17)ms was
measured. Using beta-gamma coincidences, the gamma intensity of the 954keV
transition and an upper limit of the beta-decay feeding of the 0+_2 state have
been extracted. The present experimental results are compared to previous
measurements and their impact on our understanding of the weak interaction is
discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, submitted to EPJ
Hysteresis phenomenon in deterministic traffic flows
We study phase transitions of a system of particles on the one-dimensional
integer lattice moving with constant acceleration, with a collision law
respecting slower particles. This simple deterministic ``particle-hopping''
traffic flow model being a straightforward generalization to the well known
Nagel-Schreckenberg model covers also a more recent slow-to-start model as a
special case. The model has two distinct ergodic (unmixed) phases with two
critical values. When traffic density is below the lowest critical value, the
steady state of the model corresponds to the ``free-flowing'' (or ``gaseous'')
phase. When the density exceeds the second critical value the model produces
large, persistent, well-defined traffic jams, which correspond to the
``jammed'' (or ``liquid'') phase. Between the two critical values each of these
phases may take place, which can be interpreted as an ``overcooled gas'' phase
when a small perturbation can change drastically gas into liquid. Mathematical
analysis is accomplished in part by the exact derivation of the life-time of
individual traffic jams for a given configuration of particles.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, corrected and improved version, to appear in the
Journal of Statistical Physic
Primary radiotherapy in progressive optic nerve sheath meningiomas: a long-term follow-up study
Background/aims: To report the outcome of primary radiotherapy in patients with progressive optic nerve sheath meningioma (ONSM). Methods: The clinical records of all patients were reviewed in a retrospective, observational, multicentre study. Results: Thirty-four consecutive patients were included. Twenty-six women and eight men received conventional or stereotactic fractionated radiotherapy, and were followed for a median 58 (range 51–156) months. Fourteen eyes (41%) showed improved visual acuity of at least two lines on the Snellen chart. In 17 (50%) eyes, the vision stabilised, while deterioration was noted in three eyes (9%). The visual outcome was not associated with age at the time of radiotherapy (p=0.83), sex (p=0.43), visual acuity at the time of presentation (p=0.22) or type of radiotherapy (p=0.35). Optic disc swelling was associated with improved visual acuity (p<0.01) and 4/11 patients with optic atrophy also showed improvement. Long-term complications were dry eyes in five patients, cataracts in three, and mild radiation retinopathy in four. Conclusion: Primary radiotherapy for patients with ONSM is associated with long-term improvement of visual acuity and few adverse effects.Peerooz Saeed, Leo Blank, Dinesh Selva, John G. Wolbers, Peter J.C.M. Nowak, Ronald B. Geskus, Ezekiel Weis, Maarten P. Mourits, Jack Rootma
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