574 research outputs found
Comparación de tests: Cooper y Rockport
La presente investigación compara los tests de Cooper y Rockport según las variables frecuencia cardiaca (FC), consumo máximo de oxígeno (VO2máx.), valoración del esfuerzo percibido y distancia ¿ tiempo. La muestra se corresponde con 27 alumnos de 2º de ESO de un instituto de Madrid. El registro de FC se hizo a través de pulsómetros en periodos de 60 segundos. Se constataron para el test de Cooper, FC máx > 200 lat.· min-1 en el 66,6 % (sexo femenino). El 100 % (sexo masculino) registró FC > 200 lat.· min-1. En el test de Rockport los valores de FC fueron inferiores; el 40 % (sexo femenino) registró FC > 200 lat.· min-1 y el 44,4% (sexo masculino) observó una FC > 200 lat.· min-1. Cinco sujetos superaron su FC máxima teórica. Se constata diferencias significativas en la valoración de la escala del esfuerzo percibido entre los tests (sexo femenino) y en la valoración del VO2máx. en ambos sexos
Revival of Silenced Echo and Quantum Memory for Light
We propose an original quantum memory protocol. It belongs to the class of
rephasing processes and is closely related to two-pulse photon echo. It is
known that the strong population inversion produced by the rephasing pulse
prevents the plain two-pulse photon echo from serving as a quantum memory
scheme. Indeed gain and spontaneous emission generate prohibitive noise. A
second -pulse can be used to simultaneously reverse the atomic phase and
bring the atoms back into the ground state. Then a secondary echo is radiated
from a non-inverted medium, avoiding contamination by gain and spontaneous
emission noise. However, one must kill the primary echo, in order to preserve
all the information for the secondary signal. In the present work, spatial
phase mismatching is used to silence the standard two-pulse echo. An
experimental demonstration is presented.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Leaf litter breakdown budgets in streams of various trophic status: effects of dissolved inorganic nutrients on microorganisms and invertebrates
1. We investigated the effect of trophic status on the organic matter budget in freshwater ecosystems. During leaf litter breakdown, the relative contribution of the functional groups and the quantity/quality of organic matter available to higher trophic levels are expected to be modified by the anthropogenic release of nutrients. 2. Carbon budgets were established during the breakdown of alder leaves enclosed in coarse mesh bags and submerged in six streams: two oligotrophic, one mesotrophic, two eutrophic and one hypertrophic streams. Nitrate concentrations were 4.5–6.7 mg L−1 and the trophic status of each stream was defined by the soluble reactive phosphorus concentration ranging from 3.4 (oligotrophic) to 89 μg L−1 (hypertrophic). An ammonium gradient paralleled the phosphate gradient with mean concentrations ranging from 1.4 to 560 μg L−1 NH4-N. The corresponding unionised ammonia concentrations ranged from 0.08 to 19 μg L−1 NH3-N over the six streams. 3. The dominant shredder taxa were different in the oligo-, meso- and eutrophic streams. No shredders were observed in the hypertrophic stream. These changes may be accounted for by the gradual increase in the concentration of ammonia over the six streams. The shredder biomass dramatically decreased in eu- and hypertrophic streams compared with oligo- and mesotrophic.
4. Fungal biomass increased threefold from the most oligotrophic to the less eutrophic stream and decreased in the most eutrophic and the hypertrophic. Bacterial biomass increased twofold from the most oligotrophic to the hypertrophic stream. Along the trophic gradient, the microbial CO2 production followed that of microbial biomass whereas the microbial fine particulate organic matter and net dissolved organic carbon (DOC) did not consistently vary. These results indicate that the microorganisms utilised the substrate and the DOC differently in streams of various trophic statuses. 5. In streams receiving various anthropogenic inputs, the relative contribution of the functional groups to leaf mass loss varied extensively as a result of stimulation and the deleterious effects of dissolved inorganic compounds. The quality/quantity of the organic matter produced by microorganisms slightly varied, as they use DOC from stream water instead of the substrate they decompose in streams of higher trophic status
Large self-deflection of soliton beams in LiNbO3
We report the observation of large self-deflection of 2-D bright photorefractive solitons in LiNbO(3) crystal under a dc applied field. Beam deflection as large as 300 mu m after a 7 mm. propagation distance is reported, leading to formation of curved 2-D waveguides. We attribute this large deflection to the low level of impurity acceptors present in the samples, as confirmed by numerical results from a time-dependent photorefractive model
Physical activity and smoking habit in adolescent students
El objetivo de este estudio fue detectar en qué medida afecta la actividad
física y el hábito tabáquico en estudiantes de Enseñanza Secundaria. Se
estudiaron 168 adolescentes no fumadores y fumadores recién iniciados. Se
midieron peso, talla, presión arterial, frecuencia cardíaca, actividad física, fuerza,
flexibilidad y resistencia y una prueba espirométrica. Tanto en chicas y chicos
fumadores, se evidenciaron peores resultados en la mayoría de los parámetros
espirométricos (FEV1, FEF25-75%, FVC) y un envejecimiento prematuro del
pulmón, más acentuado en chicas. La actividad físico-deportiva moderada se
asocia a adolescentes que menos fuman y tienen más facilidad para abandonar
el hábito tabáquicoThe aim of the study was to detect how physical education and smoking habits
affect secondary school students, 168 non smokers and newly initiated were
studied. Weight, height, heart rate, blood pressure, physical activity, strength,
flexibility and endurance, and spirometric tests were analyzed. In both, female
and male smokers, obtained worse results in the mayority of spirometric
parameters (FEV1, FEF25-75%, FVC) and premature lung ageing, more pointed in
females. Moderate physical-sporting activity is associated to adolescents who
smoke less and quit smoking more easil
Homogeneous Conformal String Backgrounds
We present exact solutions characterised by Bianchi-type I,II,III,V,VI
four-dimensional metric, space-independent dilaton, and vanishing torsion
background, for the low energy string effective action with zero central charge
deficit. We show that, in such a context, curvature singularities cannot be
avoided, except for the trivial case of flat spacetime and constant dilaton. We
also provide a further example of the failure of the standard prescription for
connecting conformal string backgrounds through duality transformations
associated to non-semisimple, non-Abelian isometry group.Comment: 20 pages, latex, no figures, to appear in Class. Q. Gra
Isotropization of Bianchi-Type Cosmological Solutions in Brans-Dicke Theory
The cosmic, general analitic solutions of the Brans--Dicke Theory for the
flat space of homogeneous and isotropic models containing perfect, barotropic,
fluids are seen to belong to a wider class of solutions --which includes
cosmological models with the open and the closed spaces of the
Friedmann--Robertson--Walker metric, as well as solutions for models with
homogeneous but anisotropic spaces corresponding to the Bianchi--Type metric
clasification-- when all these solutions are expressed in terms of reduced
variables. The existence of such a class lies in the fact that the scalar
field, , times a function of the mean scale factor or ``volume element'',
, which depends on time and on the barotropic index of the
equation of state used, can be written as a function of a ``cosmic time''
reduced in terms of another function of the mean scale factor depending itself
again on the barotropic index but independent of the metrics here employed.
This reduction procedure permites one to analyze if explicitly given
anisotropic cosmological solutions ``isotropize'' in the course of their time
evolution. For if so can happen, it could be claimed that there exists a
subclass of solutions that is stable under anisotropic perturbations.Comment: 15 pages, Late
Isotropization of Bianchi type models and a new FRW solution in Brans-Dicke theory
Using scaled variables we are able to integrate an equation valid for
isotropic and anisotropic Bianchi type I, V, IX models in Brans-Dicke (BD)
theory. We analyze known and new solutions for these models in relation with
the possibility that anisotropic models asymptotically isotropize, and/or
possess inflationary properties. In particular, a new solution of curve
() Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) cosmologies in Brans-Dicke theory
is analyzed.Comment: 15 pages, 4 postscript figures, to appear in Gen. Rel. Grav., special
issue dedicated in honour of Prof. H. Dehne
Electric Pulse Induced Resistive Switching, Electronic Phase Separation, and Possible Superconductivity in a Mott insulator
Metal-insulator transitions (MIT) belong to a class of fascinating physical
phenomena, which includes superconductivity, and colossal magnetoresistance
(CMR), that are associated with drastic modifications of electrical resistance.
In transition metal compounds, MIT are often related to the presence of strong
electronic correlations that drive the system into a Mott insulator state. In
these systems the MIT is usually tuned by electron doping or by applying an
external pressure. However, it was noted recently that a Mott insulator should
also be sensitive to other external perturbations such as an electric field. We
report here the first experimental evidence of a non-volatile
electric-pulse-induced insulator-to-metal transition and possible
superconductivity in the Mott insulator GaTa4Se8. Our Scanning Tunneling
Microscopy experiments show that this unconventional response of the system to
short electric pulses arises from a nanometer scale Electronic Phase Separation
(EPS) generated in the bulk material.Comment: Highlight in Advanced Functional Materials 18, 1-4 (2008) doi :
10.1002/adfm.20080055
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