1,650 research outputs found
Alien Registration- Bourque, Emma M. (Brunswick, Cumberland County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/31500/thumbnail.jp
J/psi dissociation by light mesons in an extended Nambu Jona-Lasinio model
An alternative model for the dissociation of the J/psi is proposed. Chiral
symmetry is properly implemented. Abnormal parity interactions and mesonic form
factors naturally arise from the underlying quark sub-structure. Analytic
confinement for the light quarks is generated by appropriately chosen the quark
interaction kernels. Dissociation cross sections of the J/psi by either a pion
or a rho meson are then evaluated and discussed.Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, final versio
Flat -connections and fatgraphs
We study the moduli space of flat -connections on a punctured
surface from the point of view of graph connections. To each fatgraph, a system
of coordinates is assigned, which involves two bosonic and two fermionic
variables per edge, subject to certain relations. In the case of trivalent
graphs, we provide a closed explicit formula for the Whitehead moves. In
addition, we discuss the invariant Poisson bracket.Comment: 13 page
Stress Myocardial Perfusion Imaging for Assessing Prognosis: An Update
A strength of nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) is the wealth of prognostic data accumulated over 30 years of experience with this technique. Nuclear MPI can predict outcomes and guide revascularization decisions in symptomatic patients and is well validated in special populations such as patients with diabetes and chronic renal disease. Known limitations, such as underestimation of ischemia and radiation burden, are being progressively reduced through advances such as positron emission tomography absolute flow quantification and fusion with computed tomography, new camera hardware and software, and stress-only protocols. Advanced statistical techniques and increasing focus on comparative effectiveness and appropriateness will continue to optimize nuclear cardiology going forward
Idea-caution before exploitation:the use of cybersecurity domain knowledge to educate software engineers against software vulnerabilities
The transfer of cybersecurity domain knowledge from security experts (‘Ethical Hackers’) to software engineers is discussed in terms of desirability and feasibility. Possible mechanisms for the transfer are critically examined. Software engineering methodologies do not make use of security domain knowledge in its form of vulnerability databases (e.g. CWE, CVE, Exploit DB), which are therefore not appropriate for this purpose. An approach based upon the improved use of pattern languages that encompasses security domain knowledge is proposed
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