1,338 research outputs found
Symmetrized mean-field description of magnetic instabilities in k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu[N(CN)]_2 Y salts
We present a novel and convenient mean-field method, and apply it to study
the metallic/antiferromagnetic interface of k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu[N(CN)]_2 Y organic
superconductors (BEDT_TTF is bis-ethylen-dithio-tetrathiafulvalene, Y=Cl, Br).
The method, which fully exploits the crystal symmetry, allows one to obtain the
mean-field solution of the 2D Hubbard model for very large lattices, up to
6x10^5 sites, yielding a reliable description of the phase boundary in a wide
region of the parameter space. The metal/antiferromagnet transtion appears to
be second order, except for a narrow region of the parameter space, where the
transition is very sharp and possibly first order. The cohexistence of metallic
and antiferromagnetic properties is only observed for the transient state in
the case of smooth second order transitions. The relevance of the present
resaults to the complex experimental behavior of centrosymmetric k-phase
BEDT-TTF salts is discussed.Comment: 9 pages in PS format, 7 figures (included in PS), 1 tabl
A meson-exchange piN model up to energies sqrt(s) < 2.0 GeV
A meson-exchange piN model, previously constructed using three-dimensional
reduction scheme of the Bethe-Salpeter equation for a model Lagrangian
involving \pi, \eta, N, \Delta, rho, and \sigma fields, is extended to energies
up to 2 GeV by including the \eta N channel and all the four stars \pi N
resonances up to the F-waves. The effects of other 2 pion channels are taken
into account phenomenologically. The extended model gives an excellent fit to
both piN phase shifts and inelasticity parameters in all channels up to the
F-waves. However, a few of the extracted resonance parameters differ
considerably from the PDG values.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figire, 1 table. Talk presented at the 18th International
Conference on "Few-Body Problems in Physics", Aug. 21-26, 2006, Santos,
Brazi
The oblique plane deformity in slipped capital femoral epiphysis.
Background
Slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) is commonly treated with in situ pinning. However, a severe slip may not be suitable for in situ pinning because the required screw trajectory is such that it risks perforating the posterior cortex and damaging the remaining blood supply to the capital epiphysis. In such cases, an anteriorly placed screw may also cause impingement. It is also possible to underestimate the severity of the slip using conventional radiographs. The aim of this study was to describe and evaluate a novel method for calculating the true deformity in SCFE and to assess the interobserver and intraobserver reliability of this technique.
Methods
We selected 20 patients with varying severity of SCFE who presented to our institution. Cross-sectional imaging [either axial computed tomography (CT) scans or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans] and anteroposterior (AP) pelvis radiographs were assessed by four reviewers with varying levels of experience on two occasions. The degree of slip on the axial image and on the AP pelvis radiographs were measured and, from this, the oblique plane deformity was calculated using the method as popularised by Paley. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was calculated to determine the interobserver and intraobserver reliabilities between and amongst the raters.
Results
The interobserver reliability for the calculated oblique plane deformity in SCFE ICC was 0.947 [95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.90–0.98] and the intraobserver reliability for the calculated oblique plane deformity of individual raters ranged from 0.81 to 0.94. The deformity in the oblique plane was always greater than the deformity measured in the axial or the coronal plane alone.
Conclusion
This method for calculating the true deformity in SCFE has excellent interobserver and intraobserver reliability and can be used to guide treatment options. This technique is a reliable and reproducible method for assessing the degree of deformity in SCFE. It may help orthopaedic surgeons with varying degrees of experience to identify which hips are suitable for in situ pinning and those which require surgical dislocation and anatomical reduction, given that plain radiographs in a single plane will underestimate the true deformity in the oblique plane.
Level of evidence
Level II diagnostic study
Multiplicities and Transverse Energies in Central AA Collisions at RHIC and LHC from pQCD, Saturation and Hydrodynamics
We compute the particle multiplicities and transverse energies at central and
nearly central AA collisions at RHIC and LHC. The initial state is computed
from perturbative QCD supplemented by the conjecture of saturation of produced
partons. The expansion stage is described in terms of hydrodynamics assuming
longitudinal boost invariance and azimuthal symmetry. Transverse flow effects,
a realistic list of hadrons and resonance decays are included. Comparison with
the data of the multiplicities at AGeV and 130 AGeV from RHIC is
done and predictions for the full RHIC energy and LHC energy are made for the
multiplicities and transverse energies. The reduction from the initially
released minijet transverse energy to the in the final state is less than
in the one-dimensional case but still dramatic: a factor of 2.7 at RHIC, and
3.6 at the LHC.Comment: The results for LHC have been correcte
Dependence of hadron spectra on decoupling temperature and resonance contributions
Using equilibrium hydrodynamics with initial conditions for the energy and
net baryon number densities from the perturbative QCD + saturation model, a
good simultaneous description of the measured pion, kaon and (anti)proton
spectra in central Au+Au collisions at GeV is found with a
single decoupling temperature \Tdec=150...160 MeV. The interplay between the
resonance content of the EoS and the development of the transverse flow leads
to inverse slopes and of hadrons which increase with decreasing
\Tdec. The origin of this result is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps-figures. Section 3 rewritten, table 1 and figure 1
redrawn, 2 references adde
Energy States of Colored Particle in a Chromomagnetic Field
The unitary transformation, which diagonalizes squared Dirac equation in a
constant chromomagnetic field is found. Applying this transformation, we find
the eigenfunctions of diagonalized Hamiltonian, that describe the states with
definite value of energy and call them energy states. It is pointed out that,
the energy states are determined by the color interaction term of the particle
with the background chromofield and this term is responsible for the splitting
of the energy spectrum.
We construct supercharge operators for the diagonal Hamiltonian, that ensure
the superpartner property of the energy states.Comment: 25 pages, some calculation details have been removed, typos correcte
Threshold pi^0 photo- and electro-production in a meson-exchange model
We show that, within a meson-exchange dynamical model describing well most of
the existing pion electromagnetic production data up to the second resonance
region, one is also able to obtain a good agreement with the pi^0 photo- and
electroproduction data near threshold. In the case of pi^0 production, the
effects of final state interaction in the threshold region are nearly saturated
by single charge exchange rescattering. This indicates that in ChPT, it might
be sufficient to carry out the calculation just up to one-loop diagrams for
threshold neutral pion production.Comment: 6 pages LATEX including 1 tables and 4 figures, uses espcrc1.st
Observables from a solution of 1+3 dimensional relativistic hydrodynamics
In this paper we analyze a 1+3 dimensional solution of relativistic
hydrodynamics. We calculate momentum distribution and other observables from
the solution and compare them to measurements from the Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider (RHIC). We find that the solution we analyze is compatible with the
data. In the last several years many numerical models were tested, but it is
the first time that an exact, parametric, 1+3 dimensional relativistic solution
is compared to data.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Published in EPJ A. This work was supported by
the OTKA grant NK73143 and M. Csanad's Bolyai scholarshi
Reaching key populations through key venues: Insights from the Jamaica HIV prevention Program
Introduction HIV prevention strategies often include outreach to female sex workers at social venues identified as places where people meet new sexual partners. Patrons and staff at these venues may include female sex workers, their clients, as well as others who have high rates of new sexual partnerships. Few studies have compared HIV/STI among venue-based and general populations, across types of venues, or by sub-group of the venue population. Program planners often assume that the prevalence of infection is highest among female sex workers and considerably lower among other people at these venues, but there are few empiric studies assessing the prevalence of infection by sex worker status and type of venue. Methods In 2011, we used the PLACE method to identify public venues where people meet new sexual partners across Jamaica. The study team visited all venues with reported sex work as well as a 10% random sample of other venues and subsequently interviewed and tested a probability sample of 991 venue patrons and workers for HIV and other STI. Results Community informants identified 1207 venues. All venues where sex work was reported (735 venues) and a random sample of the remainder (134 of 472) were selected for onsite visits. Of these, 585 were found and operational. At a stratified random sample of venues, survey teams interviewed and tested 717 women and 274 men. 394 women reported recent sex work and 211 of these women reported soliciting clients on the street. Women exchanging sex for money were more likely to be infected with HIV (5.4% vs 1.0%; OR = 5.6, 95% CI = 1.8,17.3) or syphilis (11.7% vs. 5.8%, OR = 2.2, 95% CI = 1.7,4,0) than other women, but not significantly more likely to be infected with gonorrhea (8.4% vs 7.8%; OR = 1.1,95% CI = 0.6,1.9), chlamydia (16.2% vs 21.6%;OR = 0.7,95% CI = 0.5,1.0) or trichomoniasis (23.0% vs 17.0%, OR = 1.5,95% CI = 0.9,2.2). Women at venues were more likely to report sex work and multiple partners than women interviewed in a 2008 national population-based household survey commissioned by the Ministry of Health. Conclusions In Jamaica, although the highest HIV prevalence was among street-based sex workers, the risk of HIV and STI extends to men and women at high risk venues, even those who do not self-identify as sex workers. Findings confirm the appropriateness of outreach to all men and women at these venues
A model for net-baryon rapidity distribution
In nuclear collisions, a sizable fraction of the available energy is carried
away by baryons. As the baryon number is conserved, the net-baryon
retains information on the energy-momentum carried by the incoming nuclei. A
simple and consistent model for net-baryon production in high energy
proton-proton and nucleus-nucleus collisions is presented. The basic
ingredients of the model are valence string formation based on standard PDFs
with QCD evolution and string fragmentation via the Schwinger mechanism. The
results of the model are presented and compared with data at different
centre-of-mass energies and centralities, as well as with existing models.
These results show that a good description of the main features of net-baryon
data is possible in the framework of a simplistic model, with the advantage of
making the fundamental production mechanisms manifest.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures; in fig. 11 a) the vertical scale was correcte
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