33,692 research outputs found
Brans-Dicke DGP Brane Cosmology
We consider a five dimensional DGP-brane scenario endowed with a
non-minimally coupled scalar field within the context of Brans-Dicke theory.
This theory predicts that the mass appearing in the gravitational potential is
modified by the addition of the mass of the effective intrinsic curvature on
the brane. We also derive the effective four dimensional field equations on a
3+1 dimensional brane where the fifth dimension is assumed to have an orbifold
symmetry. Finally, we discuss the cosmological implications of this setup,
predicting an accelerated expanding universe with a value of the Brans-Dicke
parameter consistent with values resulting from the solar system
observations.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, to appear in JCA
Hamara Healthy Living Centre - an evaluation
Hamara is a Healthy Living Centre which aims to improve health and well-being through providing a range of culturally appropriate activities and services. Hamara has a vision of 'bringing communities together' and since it was established in 2004, the Centre has provided a valuable community resource in South Leeds. Partnership work between Hamara and Leeds Met goes back to 2002. In 2007, the Centre for Health Promotion Research carried out an evaluation of Hamara in partnership with Hamara staff and Leeds Met Community Partnerships and Volunteering. This was followed by a highly successful community cohesion conference 'One Community' which was held at Hamara on 10th October 2008, and was supported through a Leeds Met public engagement grant. The event attracted over a hundred people from diverse communities and organisations across Leeds. A packed audience heard Hilary Benn, local MP and Patron of Hamara, talk about the importance of working in collaboration around community cohesion. Jane South, Centre for Health Promotion Research, presented the main evaluation results and set out the some challenges for the future. The proceedings concluded with the presentation of awards to a number of for local community champions who work to bring people together and make a real difference in the city of Leeds
Collective resonances in plasmonic crystals: Size matters
Periodic arrays of metallic nanoparticles may sustain Surface Lattice
Resonances (SLRs), which are collective resonances associated with the
diffractive coupling of Localized Surface Plasmon Resonances (LSPRs). By
investigating a series of arrays with varying number of particles, we traced
the evolution of SLRs to its origins. Polarization resolved extinction spectra
of arrays formed by a few nanoparticles were measured, and found to be in very
good agreement with calculations based on a coupled dipole model. Finite size
effects on the optical properties of the arrays are observed, and our results
provide insight into the characteristic length scales for collective plasmonic
effects: for arrays smaller than 5 x 5 particles, the Q-factors of SLRs are
lower than those of LSPRs; for arrays larger than 20 x 20 particles, the
Q-factors of SLRs saturate at a much larger value than those of LSPRs; in
between, the Q-factors of SLRs are an increasing function of the number of
particles in the array.Comment: 4 figure
Learning and Noisy Equilibrium Behavior in an Experimental Study of Imperfect Price Competition
This paper considers a duopoly price-choice game in which the unique Nash equilibrium is the Bertrand outcome. Price competition, however, is imperfect in the sense that the market share of the high-price firm is not zero. Economic intuition suggests that price levels should be positively related to the market share of the high-price firm. Although this relationship is not predicted by standard game theory, it is implied by a generalization of the Nash equilibrium that results when players make noisy (logit) best responses to expected payoff differences. This logit equilibrium model was used to design a laboratory experiment with treatments that correspond to changing the market share of the high-price firm. The model predicts the final-period price averages for both treatments with remarkable accuracy. Moreover computer simulations of a naive learning model were used, ex ante, to predict the observed differences in the time paths of average prices.laboratory experiments, simulation, decision error, learning, logit equilibrium.
Space VLBI Observations of 3C371
We present the first space VLBI observations of 3C~371, carried out at a
frequency of 4.8 GHz. The combination of the high resolution provided by the
orbiting antenna Highly Advanced Laboratory for Communications and Astronomy
(HALCA) and the high sensitivity of the VLBA allows imaging of the jet of
3C~371 with an angular resolution of approximately 0.26 mas, which for this
relatively nearby source corresponds to 0.4 h pc. Comparison
between two epochs separated by 66 days reveals no apparent motions in the
inner 7 mas jet structure above an upper limit of c. This
value, the absence of detectable counterjet emission from the presumably
symmetric jet, plus the presence of extended double-lobe structure, are
consistent with the knots in the jet being stationary features such as standing
shocks. The jet intensity declines with the angular distance from the core as
. This is more gradual than that derived for 3C~120,
, for which there is evidence for strong intereactions between
the jet and ambient medium. This suggests that in 3C~371 there is a greater
level of {\it in situ} acceleration of electrons and amplification of magnetic
field. We interpret sharp bends in the jet at sites of off-center knots as
further evidence for the interaction between the jet and external medium, which
may also be responsible for the generation of standing recollimation shocks.
These recollimation shocks may be responsible for the presumably stationary
components. The radio properties of 3C~371 are intermediate between those of
other radio galaxies with bright cores and those of BL Lacertae objects.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Multilevel correlates of household anthropometric typologies in Colombian mothers and their infants
Background. The aim of this study was to establish the association of maternal, family, and contextual correlates of anthropometric typologies at the household level in Colombia using 2005 Demographic Health Survey (DHS/ENDS) data.Methods. Household-level information from mothers 18-49 years old and their children less than 5 years old was included. Stunting and overweight were assessed for each child. Mothers were classified according to their body mass index. Four anthropometric typologies at the household level were constructed: normal, underweight, overweight, and dual burden. Four three-level [households (n = 8598) nested within municipalities (n = 226), nested within states (n = 32)] hierarchical polytomous logistic models were developed. Household log-odds of belonging to one of the four anthropometric categories, holding 'normal' as the reference group, were obtained.Results. This study found that anthropometric typologies were associated with maternal and family characteristics of maternal age, parity, maternal education, and wealth index. Higher municipal living conditions index was associated with a lower likelihood of underweight typology and a higher likelihood of overweight typology. Higher population density was associated with a lower likelihood of overweight typology.Conclusion. Distal and proximal determinants of the various anthropometric typologies at the household level should be taken into account when framing policies and designing interventions to reduce malnutrition in Colombia. Copyright © The Author(s) 2018
Maternal and familial correlates of anthropometric typologies in the nutrition transition of Colombia, 2000–2010
Q2Q1Objective: We aimed to assess the maternal and family determinants of four
anthropometric typologies at the household level in Colombia for the years 2000,
2005 and 2010.
Design: We classified children <5 years old according to height-for-age Z-score
(2) to assess stunting and overweight/obesity,
respectively; mothers were categorized according to BMI to assess underweight
(<18·5 kg/m2
) and overweight/obesity (≥25·0 kg/m2
). At the household level, we
established four final anthropometric typologies: normal, underweight, overweight and dual-burden households. Separate polytomous logistic regression
models for each of the surveyed years were developed to examine several
maternal and familial determinants of the different anthropometric typologies.
Setting: National and sub-regional (urban and rural) representative samples from
Colombia, South America.
Subjects: Drawing on data from three waves of Colombia’s Demographic and
Health Survey/Encuesta Nacional de Salud (DHS/ENDS), we examined individual
and household information from mothers (18–49 years) and their children (birth–
5 years).
Results: Higher parity was associated with an increased likelihood of overweight
and dual burden. Higher levels of maternal education were correlated with lower
prevalence of overweight, underweight and dual burden of malnutrition in all data
collection waves. In 2010, participation in nutrition programmes for children
<5 years, being an indigenous household, food purchase decisions by the mother
and food security classification were also associated with the four anthropometric
typologies.
Conclusions: Results suggest that maternal and family correlates of certain
anthropometric typologies at the household level may be used to better frame
policies aimed at improving social conditions and nutrition outcomes.Revista Internacional - Indexad
Microcanonical versus Canonical Analysis of Protein Folding
The microcanonical analysis is shown to be a powerful tool to characterize
the protein folding transition and to neatly distinguish between good and bad
folders. An off-lattice model with parameter chosen to represent polymers of
these two types is used to illustrate this approach. Both canonical and
microcanonical ensembles are employed. The required calculations were performed
using parallel tempering Monte Carlo simulations. The most revealing features
of the folding transition are related to its first-order-like character,
namely, the S-bend pattern in the caloric curve, which gives rise to negative
microcanonical specific heats, and the bimodality of the energy distribution
function at the transition temperatures. Models for a good folder are shown to
be quite robust against perturbations in the interaction potential parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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