90 research outputs found
The use of electrochemically activated saline as a uterine instillation in pony mares
Twelve pony mares were randomly assigned to either a control or a treatment group and inseminated with fresh, raw semen from a single stallion of known fertility in a cross-over trial design. Pregnancy was diagnosed by transrectal ultrasound 12-14 days post-ovulation and then terminated by administration of a luteolytic dose of cloprostenol. Treatment mares received a uterine instillation of 100 m of electrochemically activated (ECA) saline 4-12 hours post-insemination. Control mares received no treatment post-insemination. Per cycle pregnancy rate was 58.3 % in the control group and 50 % in the treatment group. There was no statistical difference (P = 1.000) in pregnancy rate between the 2 groups. The principles of ECA and applications of ECA saline are discussed
Freezing in random graph ferromagnets
Using T=0 Monte Carlo and simulated annealing simulation, we study the energy
relaxation of ferromagnetic Ising and Potts models on random graphs. In
addition to the expected exponential decay to a zero energy ground state, a
range of connectivities for which there is power law relaxation and freezing to
a metastable state is found. For some connectivities this freezing persists
even using simulated annealing to find the ground state. The freezing is caused
by dynamic frustration in the graphs, and is a feature of the local
search-nature of the Monte Carlo dynamics used. The implications of the
freezing on agent-based complex systems models are briefly considered.Comment: Published version: 1 reference deleted, 1 word added. 4 pages, 5
figure
Unified description of long-time tails and long-range correlation functions for sheared granular liquids
Unified description on the long-time tail of velocity autocorrelation
function and the long-range correlation for the equal-time spatial correlation
functions is developed based on the generalized fluctuating hydrodynamics. The
cross-over of the long-time tail from to is predicted
independent of the density, and the equal-time spatial density correlation
function and the equal-time spatial velocity correlation function respectively
satisfy and for large limit.Comment: 10 pages. to be published in Euro. Phys. J.
Stochastic optimization methods for extracting cosmological parameters from CMBR power spectra
The reconstruction of the CMBR power spectrum from a map represents a major
computational challenge to which much effort has been applied. However, once
the power spectrum has been recovered there still remains the problem of
extracting cosmological parameters from it. Doing this involves optimizing a
complicated function in a many dimensional parameter space. Therefore efficient
algorithms are necessary in order to make this feasible. We have tested several
different types of algorithms and found that the technique known as simulated
annealing is very effective for this purpose. It is shown that simulated
annealing is able to extract the correct cosmological parameters from a set of
simulated power spectra, but even with such fast optimization algorithms, a
substantial computational effort is needed.Comment: 7 pages revtex, 3 figures, to appear in PR
Localization of electromagnetic waves in a two dimensional random medium
Motivated by previous investigations on the radiative effects of the electric
dipoles embedded in structured cavities, localization of electromagnetic waves
in two dimensions is studied {\it ab initio} for a system consisting of many
randomly distributed two dimensional dipoles. A set of self-consistent
equations, incorporating all orders of multiple scattering of the
electromagnetic waves, is derived from first principles and then solved
numerically for the total electromagnetic field. The results show that
spatially localized electromagnetic waves are possible in such a simple but
realistic disordered system. When localization occurs, a coherent behavior
appears and is revealed as a unique property differentiating localization from
either the residual absorption or the attenuation effects
Random subcubes as a toy model for constraint satisfaction problems
We present an exactly solvable random-subcube model inspired by the structure
of hard constraint satisfaction and optimization problems. Our model reproduces
the structure of the solution space of the random k-satisfiability and
k-coloring problems, and undergoes the same phase transitions as these
problems. The comparison becomes quantitative in the large-k limit. Distance
properties, as well the x-satisfiability threshold, are studied. The model is
also generalized to define a continuous energy landscape useful for studying
several aspects of glassy dynamics.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figure
Diffusive and localization behavior of electromagnetic waves in a two-dimensional random medium
In this paper, we discuss the transport phenomena of electromagnetic waves in
a two-dimensional random system which is composed of arrays of electrical
dipoles, following the model presented earlier by Erdogan, et al. (J. Opt. Soc.
Am. B {\bf 10}, 391 (1993)). A set of self-consistent equations is presented,
accounting for the multiple scattering in the system, and is then solved
numerically. A strong localization regime is discovered in the frequency
domain. The transport properties within, near the edge of and nearly outside
the localization regime are investigated for different parameters such as
filling factor and system size. The results show that within the localization
regime, waves are trapped near the transmitting source. Meanwhile, the
diffusive waves follow an intuitive but expected picture. That is, they
increase with travelling path as more and more random scattering incurs,
followed by a saturation, then start to decay exponentially when the travelling
path is large enough, signifying the localization effect. For the cases that
the frequencies are near the boundary of or outside the localization regime,
the results of diffusive waves are compared with the diffusion approximation,
showing less encouraging agreement as in other systems (Asatryan, et al., Phys.
Rev. E {\bf 67}, 036605 (2003).)Comment: 8 pages 9 figure
The use of electrochemically activated saline as a uterine instillation in pony mares
Twelve pony mares were randomly assigned to either a control or a treatment group and inseminated with fresh, raw semen from a single stallion of known fertility in a cross-over trial design. Pregnancy was diagnosed by transrectal ultrasound 12-14 days post-ovulation and then terminated by administration of a luteolytic dose of cloprostenol. Treatment mares received a uterine instillation of 100 m of electrochemically activated (ECA) saline 4-12 hours post-insemination. Control mares received no treatment post-insemination. Per cycle pregnancy rate was 58.3 % in the control group and 50 % in the treatment group. There was no statistical difference (P = 1.000) in pregnancy rate between the 2 groups. The principles of ECA and applications of ECA saline are discussed
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