13,427 research outputs found
Effect of psychotropic drugs on gastric ulcers induced by immobilization: Increased protective effect of amitriptyline caused by chlordiazepoxide
Amitriptyline, but not chlordiazepoxide, protects rats from the occurrence of gastric erosions and ulcers following immobilization. When, however, chlordiazepoxide is given together with amitriptyline the protective effect of the latter is markedly increased
Online Local Learning via Semidefinite Programming
In many online learning problems we are interested in predicting local
information about some universe of items. For example, we may want to know
whether two items are in the same cluster rather than computing an assignment
of items to clusters; we may want to know which of two teams will win a game
rather than computing a ranking of teams. Although finding the optimal
clustering or ranking is typically intractable, it may be possible to predict
the relationships between items as well as if you could solve the global
optimization problem exactly.
Formally, we consider an online learning problem in which a learner
repeatedly guesses a pair of labels (l(x), l(y)) and receives an adversarial
payoff depending on those labels. The learner's goal is to receive a payoff
nearly as good as the best fixed labeling of the items. We show that a simple
algorithm based on semidefinite programming can obtain asymptotically optimal
regret in the case where the number of possible labels is O(1), resolving an
open problem posed by Hazan, Kale, and Shalev-Schwartz. Our main technical
contribution is a novel use and analysis of the log determinant regularizer,
exploiting the observation that log det(A + I) upper bounds the entropy of any
distribution with covariance matrix A.Comment: 10 page
Golden Ratio Prediction for Solar Neutrino Mixing
It has recently been speculated that the solar neutrino mixing angle is
connected to the golden ratio phi. Two such proposals have been made, cot
theta_{12} = phi and cos theta_{12} = phi/2. We compare these Ansatze and
discuss a model leading to cos theta_{12} = phi/2 based on the dihedral group
D_{10}. This symmetry is a natural candidate because the angle in the
expression cos theta_{12} = phi/2 is simply pi/5, or 36 degrees. This is the
exterior angle of a decagon and D_{10} is its rotational symmetry group. We
also estimate radiative corrections to the golden ratio predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure. Matches published versio
Staggered Fermion Actions with Improved Rotational Invariance
We introduce a class of improved actions for staggered fermions which to
O(p^4) and O(p^6), respectively, lead to rotationally invariant propagators. We
discuss the resulting reduction of flavour symmetry breaking in the meson
spectrum and comment on the improvement in the calculation of thermodynamic
observables.Comment: 3 pages and 4 figures, Contribution to Lattice 97 (Poster Session),
late
Brane Supersymmetry Breaking
We show how to construct chiral tachyon-free perturbative orientifold models,
where supersymmetry is broken at the string scale on a collection of branes
while, to lowest order, the bulk and the other branes are supersymmetric. In
higher orders, supersymmetry breaking is mediated to the remaining sectors, but
is suppressed by the size of the transverse space or by the distance from the
brane where supersymmetry breaking primarily occurred. This setting is of
interest for orbifold models with discrete torsion, and is of direct relevance
for low-scale string models. It can guarantee the stability of the gauge
hierarchy against gravitational radiative corrections, allowing an almost exact
supergravity a millimeter away from a non-supersymmetric world.Comment: 15 pages, LaTe
Ion observations from geosynchronous orbit as a proxy for ion cyclotron wave growth during storm times
[1] There is still much to be understood about the processes contributing to relativistic electron enhancements and losses in the radiation belts. Wave particle interactions with both whistler and electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves may precipitate or accelerate these electrons. This study examines the relation between EMIC waves and resulting relativistic electron flux levels after geomagnetic storms. A proxy for enhanced EMIC waves is developed using Los Alamos National Laboratory Magnetospheric Plasma Analyzer plasma data from geosynchronous orbit in conjunction with linear theory. In a statistical study using superposed epoch analysis, it is found that for storms resulting in net relativistic electron losses, there is a greater occurrence of enhanced EMIC waves. This is consistent with the hypothesis that EMIC waves are a primary mechanism for the scattering of relativistic electrons and thus cause losses of such particles from the magnetosphere
Singlet-triplet decoherence due to nuclear spins in a double quantum dot
We have evaluated hyperfine-induced electron spin dynamics for two electrons
confined to a double quantum dot. Our quantum solution accounts for decay of a
singlet-triplet correlator even in the presence of a fully static nuclear spin
system, with no ensemble averaging over initial conditions. In contrast to an
earlier semiclassical calculation, which neglects the exchange interaction, we
find that the singlet-triplet correlator shows a long-time saturation value
that differs from 1/2, even in the presence of a strong magnetic field.
Furthermore, we find that the form of the long-time decay undergoes a
transition from a rapid Gaussian to a slow power law () when
the exchange interaction becomes nonzero and the singlet-triplet correlator
acquires a phase shift given by a universal (parameter independent) value of
at long times. The oscillation frequency and time-dependent phase
shift of the singlet-triplet correlator can be used to perform a precision
measurement of the exchange interaction and Overhauser field fluctuations in an
experimentally accessible system. We also address the effect of orbital
dephasing on singlet-triplet decoherence, and find that there is an optimal
operating point where orbital dephasing becomes negligible.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
The Stellar Content of Obscured Galactic Giant HII Regions. VI: W51A
We present K-band spectra of newly born OB stars in the obscured Galactic
giant H II region W51A and ~ 0.8'' angular resolution images in the J, H and
K_S-bands. Four objects have been spectroscopically classified as O-type stars.
The mean spectroscopic parallax of the four stars gives a distance of 2.0 \pm
0.3 kpc (error in the mean), significantly smaller than the radio recombination
line kinematic value of 5.5 kpc or the values derived from maser propermotion
observations (6--8 kpc). The number of Lyman continuum photons from the
contribution of all massive stars (NLyc ~ 1.5 x 10^{50} s^{-1}) is in good
agreement with that inferred from radio recombination lines (NLyc = 1.3 x
10^{50} s^{-1}) after accounting for the smaller distance derived here.
We present analysis of archival high angular resolution images (NAOS CONICA
at VLT and T-ReCS at Gemini) of the compact region W51 IRS2. The K_S--band
images resolve the infrared source IRS~2 indicating that it is a very young
compact HII region. Sources IRS2E was resolved into compact cluster (within 660
AU of projected distance) of 3 objects, but one of them is just bright extended
emission. W51d1 and W51d2 were identified with compact clusters of 3 objects
(maybe 4 in the case of W51d1) each one. Although IRS~2E is the brightest
source in the K-band and at 12.6 \micron, it is not clearly associated with a
radio continuum source. Our spectrum of IRS~2E shows, similar to previous work,
strong emission in Br and HeI, as well as three forbidden emission
lines of FeIII and emission lines of molecular hydrogen (H_2) marking it as a
massive young stellar object.Comment: 31 pages and 9 figures, submitted to A
Effects of non-universal large scales on conditional structure functions in turbulence
We report measurements of conditional Eulerian and Lagrangian structure
functions in order to assess the effects of non-universal properties of the
large scales on the small scales in turbulence. We study a 1m 1m
1.5m flow between oscillating grids which produces
while containing regions of nearly homogeneous and highly inhomogeneous
turbulence. Large data sets of three-dimensional tracer particle velocities
have been collected using stereoscopic high speed cameras with real-time image
compression technology. Eulerian and Lagrangian structure functions are
measured in both homogeneous and inhomogeneous regions of the flow. We
condition the structure functions on the instantaneous large scale velocity or
on the grid phase. At all scales, the structure functions depend strongly on
the large scale velocity, but are independent of the grid phase. We see clear
signatures of inhomogeneity near the oscillating grids, but even in the
homogeneous region in the center we see a surprisingly strong dependence on the
large scale velocity that remains at all scales. Previous work has shown that
similar correlations extend to very high Reynolds numbers. Comprehensive
measurements of these effects in a laboratory flow provide a powerful tool for
assessing the effects of shear, inhomogeneity and intermittency of the large
scales on the small scales in turbulence
The three flavour chiral phase transition with an improved quark and gluon action in lattice QCD
The finite-temperature chiral phase transition is investigated for three
flavours of staggered quarks on a lattice of temporal extent N_t=4. In the
simulation we use an improved fermion action which reduces rotational symmetry
breaking of the quark propagator (p4-action), include fat-links to improve the
flavour symmetry and use the tree level improved (1,2) gluon action. We study
the nature of the phase transition for quark masses of ma=0.025, ma=0.05 and
ma=0.1 on lattices with spatial sizes of 8^3 and 16^3.Comment: LATTICE98(hightemp), 3 pages, 7 figures, LaTeX2e-File, espcrc2.st
- …