5,077 research outputs found
The Design of Mechanically Compatible Fasteners for Human Mandible Reconstruction
Mechanically compatible fasteners for use with thin or weakened bone sections in the human mandible are being developed to help reduce large strain discontinuities across the bone/implant interface. Materials being considered for these fasteners are a polyetherertherketone (PEEK) resin with continuous quartz or carbon fiber for the screw. The screws were designed to have a shear strength equivalent to that of compact/trabecular bone and to be used with a conventional nut, nut plate, or an expandable shank/blind nut made of a ceramic filled polymer. Physical and finite element models of the mandible were developed in order to help select the best material fastener design. The models replicate the softer inner core of trabecular bone and the hard outer shell of compact bone. The inner core of the physical model consisted of an expanding foam and the hard outer shell consisted of ceramic particles in an epoxy matrix. This model has some of the cutting and drilling attributes of bone and may be appropriate as an educational tool for surgeons and medical students. The finite element model was exercised to establish boundary conditions consistent with the stress profiles associated with mandible bite forces and muscle loads. Work is continuing to compare stress/strain profiles of a reconstructed mandible with the results from the finite element model. When optimized, these design and fastening techniques may be applicable, not only to other skeletal structures, but to any composite structure
Long distance contribution to decay and terms in CHPT
The long distance contribution to is
calculated using chiral perturbation theory. The leading contribution comes
from tree terms. The branching ratio of the long distance
contribution is found to be of order smaller than the short distance
contributions.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure (available upon request
Comment on soft-pion emission in DVCS
The soft-pion theorem for pion production in deeply virtual Compton
scattering, derived by Guichon, Mosse and Vanderhaegen, is shown to be
consistent with chiral perturbation theory. Chiral symmetry requires that the
nonsinglet operators corresponding to spin-independent and spin-dependent
parton distributions have the same anomalous dimensions in cases where those
operators are related by chiral transformations. In chiral perturbation theory,
their scale-dependences can thus be absorbed in the coefficents of the
corresponding effective operators, without affecting their chiral structures.Comment: 2 pages, RevTe
Rare Kaon Decays in the -Expansion
We study the unknown coupling constants that appear at order in the
Chiral Perturbation Theory analysis of ,
and decays. To that
end, we compute the chiral realization of the Hamiltonian
in the framework of the -expansion of the low-energy action. The
phenomenological implications are also discussed.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, CPT-92/P.279
Curvature estimates for Weingarten hypersurfaces in Riemannian manifolds
We prove curvature estimates for general curvature functions. As an
application we show the existence of closed, strictly convex hypersurfaces with
prescribed curvature , where the defining cone of is \C_+. is only
assumed to be monotone, symmetric, homogeneous of degree 1, concave and of
class C^{m,\al}, .Comment: 9 pages, v2:final version, to be publishe
Real CP violation in a simple extension of the standard model
I present a simple three-Higgs-doublet extension of the standard model in
which real CP violation takes place. The strong CP problem is attenuated by
this model.Comment: 8 page
Radiative Kaon Decays and Direct CP Violation
It is stressed that a measurement of the electric dipole amplitude for direct
photon emission in \kpm decays through its interference with inner
bremsstrahlung is important for differentiating among various models. Effects
of amplitude CP violation in the radiative decays of the charged kaon are
analyzed in the Standard Model in conjunction with the large approach. We
point out that gluon and electromagnetic penguin contributions to the
CP-violating asymmetry between the Dalitz plots of \kpm are of equal weight.
The magnitude of CP asymmetry ranges from to when the photon energy in the kaon rest frame varies from 50 MeV to
170 MeV.Comment: Latex, 11 pages, ITP-SB-93-36, IP-ASTP-22-9
Role of Scalar Meson Resonances in $K_{L}^{0} \rightarrow \pi^{0} \gamma \gamma Decay
Corrections to decay induced by
scalar meson exchange are studied within chiral perturbation theory. In spite
of bad knowledge of scalar-mesons parameters, the calculated branching ratio
can be changed by a few percent.Comment: 18 pages of text, 2 figures (available upon request); preprint
IJS-TP-16-94 , TUM-T31-63-94
On the nucleon self-energy in nuclear matter
We consider the nucleon self-energy in nuclear matter in the absence of Pauli
blocking. It is evaluated using the partial-wave analysis of scattering
data. Our results are compared with that of a realistic calculation to estimate
the effect of this blocking. It is also possible to use our results as a check
on the realistic calculations.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Low Energy Constants from High Energy Theorems
New constraints on resonance saturation in chiral perturbation theory are
investigated. These constraints arise because each consistent saturation scheme
must map to a representation of the full QCD chiral symmetry group. The
low-energy constants of chiral perturbation theory are then related by a set of
mixing angles. It is shown that vector meson dominance is a consequence of the
fact that nature has chosen the lowest-dimensional nontrivial chiral
representation. It is further shown that chiral symmetry places an upper bound
on the mass of the lightest scalar in the hadron spectrum.Comment: 11 pages TeX and mtexsis.te
- …
