24,510 research outputs found
Robustness of predator-prey models for confinement regime transitions in fusion plasmas
Energy transport and confinement in tokamak fusion plasmas is usually determined by the coupled nonlinear interactions of small-scale drift turbulence and larger scale coherent nonlinear structures, such as zonal flows, together with free energy sources such as temperature gradients. Zero-dimensional models, designed to embody plausible physical narratives for these interactions, can help to identify the origin of enhanced energy confinement and of transitions between confinement regimes. A prime zero-dimensional paradigm is predator-prey or Lotka-Volterra. Here, we extend a successful three-variable (temperature gradient; microturbulence level; one class of coherent structure) model in this genre [M. A. Malkov and P. H. Diamond, Phys. Plasmas 16, 012504 (2009)], by adding a fourth variable representing a second class of coherent structure. This requires a fourth coupled nonlinear ordinary differential equation. We investigate the degree of invariance of the phenomenology generated by the model of Malkov and Diamond, given this additional physics. We study and compare the long-time behaviour of the three-equation and four-equation systems, their evolution towards the final state, and their attractive fixed points and limit cycles. We explore the sensitivity of paths to attractors. It is found that, for example, an attractive fixed point of the three-equation system can become a limit cycle of the four-equation system. Addressing these questions which we together refer to as “robustness” for convenience is particularly important for models which, as here, generate sharp transitions in the values of system variables which may replicate some key features of confinement transitions. Our results help to establish the robustness of the zero-dimensional model approach to capturing observed confinement phenomenology in tokamak fusion plasmas
Shear viscosity and damping for a Fermi gas in the unitarity limit
The shear viscosity of a two-component Fermi gas in the normal phase is
calculated as a function of temperature in the unitarity limit, taking into
account strong-coupling effects that give rise to a pseudogap in the spectral
density for single-particle excitations. The results indicate that recent
measurements of the damping of collective modes in trapped atomic clouds can be
understood in terms of hydrodynamics, with a decay rate given by the viscosity
integrated over an effective volume of the cloud.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Discussion significantly extended. Appendix
added. To appear in PR
Investigation of wheat coleoptile response to phototropic stimulations
This report provides a summary of the preparations for, and the conduct and post-flight data analysis of, the Spacelab flight investigation FOTRAN, which flew on the IML-1 mission (STS-42) in January, 1992. The investigation was designed to provide data on the responses of wheat seedlings to various blue-light stimuli given while the plants were exposed to orbital microgravity conditions. Before the flight, a number of hypotheses were established which were to be tested by the data from the flight and parallel ground studies. A description of the experiment protocol developed for the mission is provided, and an account of the activities supported during preparations for and support of the flight experiment is given. Details of the methods used to reduce and analyze the data from the flight are outlined
Schools Respond to Risk Management Programs for Asbestos, Lead in Drinking Water and Radon
Based on a study of the three EPA-initiated, public school risk management programs noted in the title, the authors find that state agency involvement is an important factor in the success of such programs. They also find, e.g., that school districts are justifiably reluctant to comply with tentative program
Some gamma-ray shielding measurements made at altitudes greater than 115000 feet using large Ge(Li) detectors
A series of balloon-flight experiments at altitudes greater than 115,000 feet were conducted to gain information relative to the use of composite shields (passive and/or active) for shielding large-volume, lithium-drifted, germanium (Ge(Li)) detectors used in gamma-ray spectrometers. Data showing the pulse-height spectra of the environmental gamma radiation as measured at 5.3 and 3.8 gms sq cm residual atmosphere with an unshielded diode detector are also presented
A proposal to determine properties of the gravitropic response of plants in the absence of a complicating g-force (GTHRES)
Gravitropic responses of oat seedlings (Avena sativa L.) were measured on Earth and in microgravity (IML-1). The seedlings were grown at 1 g either on Earth or on 1 g centrifuges. They were challenged by centripetal accelerations for which the intensity and duration of the stimulations were varied. All stimulation intensities were in the hypogravity region from 0.1 to 1.0 g. All responses occurred either in Spacelab microgravity or during clinorotation on Earth. The experiments were carried out with the same apparatus in Spacelab and on Earth. The experiments addressed a series of scientific questions and useful data were obtained to provide answers to some but not all of those questions
Many--Particle Correlations in Relativistic Nuclear Collisions
Many--particle correlations due to Bose-Einstein interference are studied in
ultrarelativistic heavy--ion collisions. We calculate the higher order
correlation functions from the 2--particle correlation function by assuming
that the source is emitting particles incoherently. In particular
parametrizations of and relations between longitudinal, sidewards, outwards and
invariant radii and corresponding momenta are discussed. The results are
especially useful in low statistics measurements of higher order correlation
functions. We evaluate the three--pion correlation function recently measured
by NA44 and predict the 2--pion--2--kaon correlation function. Finally, many
particle Coulomb corrections are discussed.Comment: 5 corrected misprints, 14 pages, revtex, epsfig, 6 figures included,
manuscript also available at http://www.nbi.dk/~vischer/publications.htm
Systematic review of the current status of cadaveric simulation for surgical training
Background:
There is growing interest in and provision of cadaveric simulation courses for surgical trainees. This is being driven by the need to modernize and improve the efficiency of surgical training within the current challenging training climate. The objective of this systematic review is to describe and evaluate the evidence for cadaveric simulation in postgraduate surgical training.
Methods:
A PRISMA‐compliant systematic literature review of studies that prospectively evaluated a cadaveric simulation training intervention for surgical trainees was undertaken. All relevant databases and trial registries were searched to January 2019. Methodological rigour was assessed using the widely validated Medical Education Research Quality Index (MERSQI) tool.
Results:
A total of 51 studies were included, involving 2002 surgical trainees across 69 cadaveric training interventions. Of these, 22 assessed the impact of the cadaveric training intervention using only subjective measures, five measured impact by change in learner knowledge, and 23 used objective tools to assess change in learner behaviour after training. Only one study assessed patient outcome and demonstrated transfer of skill from the simulated environment to the workplace. Of the included studies, 67 per cent had weak methodology (MERSQI score less than 10·7).
Conclusion:
There is an abundance of relatively low‐quality evidence showing that cadaveric simulation induces short‐term skill acquisition as measured by objective means. There is currently a lack of evidence of skill retention, and of transfer of skills following training into the live operating theatre
Use of extended and prepared reference objects in experimental Fourier transform X-ray holography
The use of one or more gold nanoballs as reference objects for Fourier
Transform holography (FTH) is analysed using experimental soft X-ray
diffraction from objects consisting of separated clusters of these balls. The
holograms are deconvoluted against ball reference objects to invert to images,
in combination with a Wiener filter to control noise. A resolution of ~30nm,
smaller than one ball, is obtained even if a large cluster of balls is used as
the reference, giving the best resolution yet obtained by X-ray FTH. Methods of
dealing with missing data due to a beamstop are discussed. Practical prepared
objects which satisfy the FTH condition are suggested, and methods of forming
them described.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Applied Physics Letter
Realistic Expanding Source Model for Invariant One-Particle Multiplicity Distributions and Two-Particle Correlations in Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collisions
We present a realistic expanding source model with nine parameters that are
necessary and sufficient to describe the main physics occuring during
hydrodynamical freezeout of the excited hadronic matter produced in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions. As a first test of the model, we compare it
to data from central Si + Au collisions at p_lab/A = 14.6 GeV/c measured in
experiment E-802 at the AGS. An overall chi-square per degree of freedom of
1.055 is achieved for a fit to 1416 data points involving invariant pi^+, pi^-,
K^+, and K^- one-particle multiplicity distributions and pi^+ and K^+
two-particle correlations. The 99-percent-confidence region of parameter space
is identified, leading to one-dimensional error estimates on the nine fitted
parameters and other calculated physical quantities. Three of the most
important results are the freezeout temperature, longitudinal proper time, and
baryon density along the symmetry axis. For these we find values of 92.9 +/-
4.4 MeV, 8.2 +/- 2.2 fm/c, and 0.0222 + 0.0096 / - 0.0069 fm^-3, respectively.Comment: 37 pages and 12 figures. RevTeX 3.0. Submitted to Physical Review C.
Complete preprint, including device-independent (dvi), PostScript, and LaTeX
versions of the text, plus PostScript files of all figures, are available at
http://t2.lanl.gov/publications/publications.html or at
ftp://t2.lanl.gov/publications/res
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