14,764 research outputs found
Flavor SU(3) analysis of charmless B->PP decays
We perform a global fits to charmless decays which independently
constrain the vertex of the unitarity triangle. The
fitted amplitudes and phase are used to predict the branching ratios and CP
asymmetries of all decay modes, including those of the system. Different
schemes of SU(3) breaking in decay amplitude sizes are analyzed. The
possibility of having a new physics contribution to decays is also
discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figs. Talk given at EPS-HEP07 To appear in the
proceedings, Reference adde
Cosmological and Solar-System Tests of f(R) Modified Gravity
We investigate the cosmological and the local tests of the f(R) theory of
modified gravity via the observations of (1) the cosmic expansion and (2) the
cosmic structures and via (3) the solar-system experiments. To fit the possible
cosmic expansion histories under consideration, for each of them we reconstruct
f(R), known as "designer f(R)". We then test the designer f(R) via the
cosmic-structure constraints on the metric perturbation ratio Psi/Phi and the
effective gravitational coupling G_eff and via the solar-system constraints on
the Brans-Dicke theory with the chameleon mechanism. We find that among the
designer f(R) models specified by the CPL effective equation of state w_eff,
only the model closely mimicking general relativity with a cosmological
constant (LambdaCDM) can survive all the tests. Accordingly, these tests rule
out the frequently studied "w_eff = -1" designer f(R) models which are distinct
in cosmic structures from LambdaCDM. When considering only the cosmological
tests, we find that the surviving designer f(R) models, although exist for a
variety of w_eff, entail fine-tuning.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, LaTe
Performance improvement of robots using a learning control scheme
Many applications of robots require that the same task be repeated a number of times. In such applications, the errors associated with one cycle are also repeated every cycle of the operation. An off-line learning control scheme is used here to modify the command function which would result in smaller errors in the next operation. The learning scheme is based on a knowledge of the errors and error rates associated with each cycle. Necessary conditions for the iterative scheme to converge to zero errors are derived analytically considering a second order servosystem model. Computer simulations show that the errors are reduced at a faster rate if the error rate is included in the iteration scheme. The results also indicate that the scheme may increase the magnitude of errors if the rate information is not included in the iteration scheme. Modification of the command input using a phase and gain adjustment is also proposed to reduce the errors with one attempt. The scheme is then applied to a computer model of a robot system similar to PUMA 560. Improved performance of the robot is shown by considering various cases of trajectory tracing. The scheme can be successfully used to improve the performance of actual robots within the limitations of the repeatability and noise characteristics of the robot
The Revolving Door: A Report on U.S. Hospital Readmissions
The U.S. health care system suffers from a chronic malady -- the revolving door syndrome at its hospitals. It is so bad that the federal government says one in five elderly patients is back in the hospital within 30 days of leaving.Some return trips are predictable elements of a treatment plan. Others are unplanned but difficult to prevent: patients go home, new and unexpected problems arise, and they require an immediate trip back to the hospital.But many of these readmissions can and should be prevented. They are the result of a fragmented system of care that too often leaves discharged patients to their own devices, unable to follow instructions they didn't understand, and not taking medications or getting the necessary follow-up care.The federal government has pegged the cost of readmissions for Medicare patients alone at 17 billion of it pays for return trips that need not happen if patients get the right care. This is one reason the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has identified avoidable readmissions as one of the leading problems facing the U.S. health care system and now penalizes hospitals with high rates of readmissions for their heart failure, heart attack, and pneumonia patients. This report is being released in conjunction with the Robert Wood John Foundation's Care About Your Care initiative, which is devoted to improving care transitions when people leave the hospital. It looks at the issue of readmissions in two ways: by the numbers and through the eyes of the people who live them
Spherical squeeze-film hybrid bearing with small steady-state radial displacement
Spherical squeeze-film hybrid bearing with small steady-state radial displacement analysi
U-Spin Tests of the Standard Model and New Physics
Within the standard model, a relation involving branching ratios and direct
CP asymmetries holds for the B-decay pairs that are related by U-spin. The
violation of this relation indicates new physics (NP). In this paper, we assume
that the NP affects only the Delta S = 1 decays, and show that the NP operators
are generally the same as those appearing in B -> pi K decays. The fit to the
latest B -> pi K data shows that only one NP operator is sizeable. As a
consequence, the relation is expected to be violated for only one decay pair:
Bd -> K0 pi0 and Bs -> Kbar0 pi0.Comment: 12 pages, latex, no figures. References changed to follow MPL
guidelines; info added about U-spin breaking and small NP strong phases;
discussion added about final-state pi-K rescattering; analysis and
conclusions unaltere
Quantum Melting of the Charge Density Wave State in 1T-TiSe2
We report a Raman scattering study of low-temperature, pressure-induced
melting of the CDW phase of 1T-TiSe2. Our Raman scattering measurements reveal
that the collapse of the CDW state occurs in three stages: (i) For P<5 kbar,
the pressure dependence of the CDW amplitude mode energies and intensities are
indicative of a ``crystalline'' CDW regime; (ii) for 5 < P < 25 kbar, there is
a decrease in the CDW amplitude mode energies and intensities with increasing
pressure that suggests a regime in which the CDW softens, and may decouple from
the lattice; and (iii) for P>25 kbar, the absence of amplitude modes reveals a
melted CDW regime.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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