527 research outputs found
Pavement stresses due to tire impact
Road surfaces wear continually under the effects of vehicular motions in an environment of changing temperature, humidity, etc. Regulatory agencies need to set limits on vehicular loads, tire pressures, etc., in order to mitigate the damage caused by the traveling stress footprints of vehicular traffic. In order to understand and quantify the relationship between damage caused and the parameters influencing the forces generated by a moving vehicle on a road surface, it is necessary to construct a model for a mechanical system of vehicle body, suspension springs, axle, wheel rim and tire, transmitting forces back and forward to the road surface.
The previous paragraph describes the broad problem presented to the workshop. In what follows we organize a simple mathematical model to represent the major components of the system, and we indicate how this model may be validated (or not) by tests and, if it is successful, how it can be used in a predictive capacity
Signatures of clumpy dark matter in the global 21 cm background signal
We examine the extent to which the self-annihilation of supersymmetric
neutralino dark matter, as well as light dark matter, influences the rate of
heating, ionisation and Lyman-alpha pumping of interstellar hydrogen and helium
and the extent to which this is manifested in the 21cm global background
signal. We fully consider the enhancements to the annihilation rate from DM
halos and substructures within them. We find that the influence of such
structures can result in significant changes in the differential brightness
temperature. The changes at redsfhits z<25 are likely to be undetectable due to
the presence of the astrophysical signal; however, in the most favourable
cases, deviations in the differential brightness temperature, relative to its
value in the absence of self-annihilating DM, of up to ~20 mK at z=30 can
occur. Thus we conclude that, in order to exclude these models, experiments
measuring the global 21cm signal, such as EDGES and CORE, will need to reduce
the systematics at 50 MHz to below 20 mK.Comment: V3: 32 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables. Replaced to match version
accepted for publication in PRD. Major revisions to address referee's
comment
Solving the cosmic lithium problems with primordial late-decaying particles
We investigate the modifications to predictions for the abundances of light
elements from standard Big-Bang nucleosynthesis when exotic late-decaying
particles with lifetimes exceeding ~1 sec are prominent in the early Universe.
Utilising a model-independent analysis of the properties of these long-lived
particles, we identify the parameter space associated with models that are
consistent with all observational data and hence resolve the much discussed
discrepancies between observations and theoretical predictions for the
abundances of Li^7 and Li^6.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review D; minor changes to
reference
Heavy Dark Matter Through the Higgs Portal
Motivated by Higgs Portal and Hidden Valley models, heavy particle dark
matter that communicates with the supersymmetric Standard Model via pure Higgs
sector interactions is considered. We show that a thermal relic abundance
consistent with the measured density of dark matter is possible for masses up
to \sim 30\tev. For dark matter masses above \sim 1\tev, non-perturbative
Sommerfeld corrections to the annihilation rate are large, and have the
potential to greatly affect indirect detection signals. For large dark matter
masses, the Higgs-dark-matter-sector couplings are large and we show how such
models may be given a UV completion within the context of so-called "Fat-Higgs"
models. Higgs Portal dark matter provides an example of an attractive
alternative to conventional MSSM neutralino dark matter that may evade
discovery at the LHC, while still being within the reach of current and
upcoming indirect detection experiments.Comment: LaTex, 21 pages, 9 figures. Discussion improved, comments and
references adde
A case of acute-colonic pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie Syndrome) post robot-assisted radical prostatectomy
Acute Colonic Pseudo-obstruction (ACPO), or Ogilvie Syndrome, is a rare phenomenon where acute colonic distension occurs, in the absence of mechanical obstruction. Several post-operative cases of Ogilvie Syndrome are noted within the literature, pertaining to patients post hepatectomy, trauma or spinal surgery; but rarely following urological procedures. This case describes a 68-year-old gentleman who developed Ogilvie Syndrome post an uncomplicated robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP). While bowel injury is an acknowledged rare complication following prostatectomy, patients with Ogilvie Syndrome may present in a similar manner, and an atypical case of colonic obstruction should raise suspicion of this as a cause
Light neutralino in the MSSM: An update with the latest LHC results
We discuss the scenario of light neutralino dark matter in the minimal
supersymmetric standard model, which is motivated by the results of some of the
direct detection experiments --- DAMA, CoGENT, and CRESST. We update our
previous analysis with the latest results of the LHC. We show that new LHC
constraints disfavour the parameter region that can reproduce the results of
DAMA and CoGENT.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the conference proceedings of TAUP
2011, Munich Germany, 5-9 September 201
Occupational bladder cancer: a cross section survey of previous employments, tasks and exposures matched to cancer phenotypes
Objectives
Up to 10% of Bladder Cancers may arise following occupational exposure to carcinogens. We hypothesised that different cancer phenotypes reflected different patterns of occupational exposure.
Methods
Consecutive participants, with bladder cancer, self-completed a structured questionnaire detailing employment, tasks, exposures, smoking, lifestyle and family history. Our primary outcome was association between cancer phenotype and occupational details.
Results
We collected questionnaires from 536 patients, of whom 454 (85%) participants (352 men and 102 women) were included. Women were less likely to be smokers (68% vs. 81% Chi sq. p<0.001), but more likely than men to inhale environmental tobacco smoke at home (82% vs. 74% p = 0.08) and use hair dye (56% vs. 3%, p<0.001). Contact with potential carcinogens occurred in 282 (62%) participants (mean 3.1 per worker (range 0–14)). High-grade cancer was more common than low-grade disease in workers from the steel, foundry, metal, engineering and transport industries (p<0.05), and in workers exposed to crack detection dyes, chromium, coal/oil/gas by-products, diesel fumes/fuel/aircraft fuel and solvents (such as trichloroethylene). Higher staged cancers were frequent in workers exposed to Chromium, coal products and diesel exhaust fumes/fuel (p<0.05). Various workers (e.g. exposed to diesel fuels or fumes (Cox, HR 1.97 (95% CI 1.31–2.98) p = 0.001), employed in a garage (HR 2.19 (95% CI 1.31–3.63) p = 0.001), undertaking plumbing/gas fitting/ventilation (HR 2.15 (95% CI 1.15–4.01) p = 0.017), undertaking welding (HR 1.85 (95% CI 1.24–2.77) p = 0.003) and exposed to welding materials (HR 1.92 (95% CI 1.27–2.91) p = 0.002)) were more likely to have disease progression and receive radical treatment than others. Fewer than expected deaths were seen in healthcare workers (HR 0.17 (95% CI 0.04–0.70) p = 0.014).
Conclusions
We identified multiple occupational tasks and contacts associated with bladder cancer. There were some associations with phenotype, although our study design precludes robust assessment
Do the Barker Codes End?
A Barker code is a binary code with k^th autocorrelation <= 1 for all nonzero k.
At the workshop, the Barker code group split into four non-disjoint subgroups:
- An "algebra group", who explored symmetries of the search space that preserve the autocorrelations' magnitude.
- A "computing group", who explored methods for quickly finding binary codes with very good autocorrelation properties.
- A "statistics group", who explored ways to quantify what has been empirically observed about autocorrelation in the search space S_2^N.
- A "continuous group", who explored a non-discrete analogue of the problem of finding sequences with good autocorrelations
- …