964 research outputs found

    Development of a Virtual Soft X-Ray Diagnostics and its Application to Ideal Kink Instabilities

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    Angular and energy dependence of (e,e)(e,e^{\prime}) cross sections for orbital 1+^+ excitations

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    The main features of the (e,e)(e,e^{\prime}) cross sections of low-lying orbital excitations with Kπ=1+K^{\pi} = 1^+ in heavy deformed nuclei are studied in RPA on the example of 156^{156}Gd. The dependence of the DWBA E2 and M1 cross sections on the scattering angle 0<θ<1800^{\circ} < \theta < 180 ^{\circ} and incident electron energy Ei<210E_i < 210 MeV is analyzed in PWBA. The cross section is larger for M1 than for E2 transitions at any angle if Ei<30E_i < 30 MeV. The longitudinal (Coulomb) C2 excitation dominates the E2 response for 5<θ<1705^{\circ} < \theta < 170 ^{\circ}. Only transverse M1 and E2 excitations compete for θ>175\theta > 175 ^{\circ} and the former one is dominant for q<1.2q < 1.2 fm1^{-1}. The M1 response is almost purely orbital up to q=1.4q = 1.4 fm1^{-1} even in backward scattering. Qualitative PWBA estimates based on the qq-dependence of the form factors alone are not able to predict some important features of the (e,e)(e,e^{\prime}) cross sections stemming from the strong magnetic and orbital character of the studied 1+^+ excitations. The expectation for M1 over E2 dominance in backward scattering should not be extended to higher momentum transfers and incident energies.Comment: Latex, 28 pages, 12 postscript figures included using uufile

    Competing electric and magnetic excitations in backward electron scattering from heavy deformed nuclei

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    Important E2E2 contributions to the (e,e)(e,e^{\prime}) cross sections of low-lying orbital M1M1 excitations are found in heavy deformed nuclei, arising from the small energy separation between the two excitations with IπK=2+1I^{\pi}K = 2^+1 and 1+1^+1, respectively. They are studied microscopically in QRPA using DWBA. The accompanying E2E2 response is negligible at small momentum transfer qq but contributes substantially to the cross sections measured at θ=165\theta = 165 ^{\circ} for 0.6<qeff<0.90.6 < q_{\rm eff} < 0.9 fm1^{-1} (40Ei7040 \le E_i \le 70 MeV) and leads to a very good agreement with experiment. The electric response is of longitudinal C2C2 type for θ175\theta \le 175 ^{\circ} but becomes almost purely transverse E2E2 for larger backward angles. The transverse E2E2 response remains comparable with the M1M1 response for qeff>1.2q_{\rm eff} > 1.2 fm1^{-1} (Ei>100E_i > 100 MeV) and even dominant for Ei>200E_i > 200 MeV. This happens even at large backward angles θ>175\theta > 175 ^{\circ}, where the M1M1 dominance is limited to the lower qq region.Comment: RevTeX, 19 pages, 8 figures included Accepted for publication in Phys Rev

    The Role of Social Perspective-Taking in Developing Students\u27 Leadership Capacities

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    This study examined relationships between social perspective-taking (SPT) and the individual, group, and societal domains of socially responsible leadership. SPT is a higher-order cognitive skill linked to moral development and social coordination, but never empirically connected to leadership development. Analyses determined SPT has a strong direct effect on group-level leadership values and an indirect effect on societallevel leadership values. Results offer critical new insights into directionality in the social change model

    Collective Excitations of (154)Sm nucleus at FEL{gamma}+LHC Collider

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    The production of collective excitations of the (154)Sm at FEL{gamma}+LHC collider is investigated. We show that this machine will be a powerful tool for investigation of high energy level excitations.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, 4 table

    Orbital current mode in elliptical quantum dots

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    An orbital current mode peculiar to deformed quantum dots is theoretically investigated; first by using a simple model that allows to interpret analytically its main characteristics, and second, by numerically solving the microscopic equations of time evolution after an initial perturbation within the time-dependent local-spin-density approximation. Results for different deformations and sizes are shown.Comment: 4 REVTEX pages, 4 PDF figures, accepted in PRB:R

    Evaluating the consistency between conceptual frameworks and factors influencing the safe behavior of Iranian workers in the petrochemical industry : mixed methods study

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    Background: Unsafe worker behavior is often identified as a major cause of dangerous incidents in the petrochemical industry. Behavioral safety models provide frameworks that may help to prevent such incidents by identifying factors promoting safe or unsafe behavior. We recently conducted a qualitative study to identify factors affecting workers' unsafe behaviors in an Iranian petrochemical company. Objective: The aims of this study were to (1) conduct a review of the relevant research literature between the years 2000 and 2019 to identify theoretical models proposed to explain and predict safe behavior in the workplace and (2) to select the model that best reflects our qualitative findings and other evidence about the factors influencing safe behaviors among petrochemical workers. Methods: This research used mixed methods. Initially, we conducted a qualitative study of factors that Iranian petrochemical workers believed affected their safety behavior. Four themes emerged from the semistructured interviews: (1) poor direct safety management and supervision; (2) unsafe workplace conditions; (3) workers’ perceptions, skills, and training; and (4) broader organizational factors. Electronic databases, including PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Google Scholar, EBSCOhost, and Science Direct, were then searched for eligible studies on models to explain and predict safe behaviors, which were published between the years 2000 and 2019. Medical subject headings were used as the primary analytical element. Medical subject headings and subheadings were then extracted from the literature. One researcher conducted the search and 3 researchers performed screening and data extraction. Then, constructs described in each study were assessed to determine which were the most consistent with themes derived from our qualitative analysis. Results: A total of 2032 publications were found using the search strategy. Of these, 142 studies were assessed and 28 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the review. The themes identified in the qualitative study most closely matched 3 scales included in Wu et al's model that measured safety behavior and performance, safety leadership, and safety climate in petrochemical industries. Poor direct safety management and supervision matched with safety leadership and its subscales; unsafe workplace conditions matched with safety climate and its subscales; workers' perceptions, skills, and training matched with safety performance and its subscales; and broader organizational factors matched with some subscales of the model. Conclusions: This is the first literature review to identify models intended to explain and predict safe behavior and select the model most consistent with themes elicited from a qualitative study. Our results showed that effective safety leadership and management and safety climate and culture systems are the most frequently identified factors affecting safe behaviors in the petrochemical industry. These results can further help safety researchers and professionals design effective behavior-based safety interventions, which can have a more sustainable and persistent impact on workers’ safety behaviors

    Polydispersity and ordered phases in solutions of rodlike macromolecules

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    We apply density functional theory to study the influence of polydispersity on the stability of columnar, smectic and solid ordering in the solutions of rodlike macromolecules. For sufficiently large length polydispersity (standard deviation σ>0.25\sigma>0.25) a direct first-order nematic-columnar transition is found, while for smaller σ\sigma there is a continuous nematic-smectic and first-order smectic-columnar transition. For increasing polydispersity the columnar structure is stabilized with respect to solid perturbations. The length distribution of macromolecules changes neither at the nematic-smectic nor at the nematic-columnar transition, but it does change at the smectic-columnar phase transition. We also study the phase behaviour of binary mixtures, in which the nematic-smectic transition is again found to be continuous. Demixing according to rod length in the smectic phase is always preempted by transitions to solid or columnar ordering.Comment: 13 pages (TeX), 2 Postscript figures uuencode

    Universality of Symmetry and Mixed-symmetry Collective Nuclear States

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    The global correlation in the observed variation with mass number of the E2E2 and summed M1M1 transition strengths is examined for rare earth nuclei. It is shown that a theory of correlated SS and DD fermion pairs with a simple pairing plus quadrupole interaction leads naturally to this universality. Thus a unified and quantitative description emerges for low-lying quadrupole and dipole strengths.Comment: In press, Phys. Rev. Lett. 199
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