9,789 research outputs found
Sterilizable Liquid Propulsion System, Part 1 Final Report, 5 Oct. 1966 - 31 Mar. 1968
Exposure of assembled and fueled bipropellant liquid propulsion system to ethylene oxid
Scattering lengths and universality in superdiffusive L\'evy materials
We study the effects of scattering lengths on L\'evy walks in quenched
one-dimensional random and fractal quasi-lattices, with scatterers spaced
according to a long-tailed distribution. By analyzing the scaling properties of
the random-walk probability distribution, we show that the effect of the
varying scattering length can be reabsorbed in the multiplicative coefficient
of the scaling length. This leads to a superscaling behavior, where the
dynamical exponents and also the scaling functions do not depend on the value
of the scattering length. Within the scaling framework, we obtain an exact
expression for the multiplicative coefficient as a function of the scattering
length both in the annealed and in the quenched random and fractal cases. Our
analytic results are compared with numerical simulations, with excellent
agreement, and are supposed to hold also in higher dimensionsComment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Implant survival and success rates in patients with risk factors: results from a long-term retrospective study with a 10 to 18 years follow-up
OBJECTIVE:
Risk factors for implant therapy are represented by all general and local conditions that through various mechanisms can increase either short-term and long-term failure risk. The aim of this study is to assess the implant survival and implant success rates with single and multiple risk factors.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
To address the research purpose, a retrospective cohort study was designed and implemented, including a sample of 225 patients with a total of 871 implants placed. The following risk factors were considered: smoking, bruxism, bone augmentation procedures and the presence of load risk (implants with crown/implant relation > 0.8; angulation > 25°; presence of cantilever). Follow-up ranged from 10 years to 18 years (average follow-up 13.6 years). Failures were subdivided into short-term failures, before the prosthetic phase, and long-term failures, after definitive prosthesis. The success criteria published by Albrektsson and Zarb were adopted. A Cox proportional hazard regression model was used to calculate hazard ratio, with a statistically significant p-value <0.05.
RESULTS:
Out of the 871 implants placed, 138 did not meet the success criteria, (success rate 84.16%), sixty (43.47%) were classified as "early failure" and seventy-eight as "late failure" (56.53%). A total of 70 dental implants were removed, with a survival rate of 91.96%.
CONCLUSIONS:
The presence of a single risk factor does not imply a marked increase of failure risk. Among the analyzed factors, the one that proved to be the most dangerous was bruxism, even when presented as the only risk factor. Bruxism with load risk proved to be the most dangerous association (success rate 69.23%) and could be included among the absolute contraindications for implant treatment
The twisted open string partition function and Yukawa couplings
We use the operator formalism to derive the bosonic contribution to the
twisted open string partition function in toroidal compactifications. This
amplitude describes, for instance, the planar interaction between g+1
magnetized or intersecting D-branes. We write the result both in the closed and
in the open string channel in terms of Prym differentials on the appropriate
Riemann surface. Then we focus on the g=2 case for a 2-torus. By factorizing
the twisted partition function in the open string channel we obtain an explicit
expression for the 3-twist field correlator, which is the main ingredient in
the computation of Yukawa couplings in D-brane phenomenological models. This
provides an alternative method for computing these couplings that does not rely
on the stress-energy tensor technique.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figures, Latex; v2: typos correcte
Nonequilibrium Langevin Approach to Quantum Optics in Semiconductor Microcavities
Recently the possibility of generating nonclassical polariton states by means
of parametric scattering has been demonstrated. Excitonic polaritons propagate
in a complex interacting environment and contain real electronic excitations
subject to scattering events and noise affecting quantum coherence and
entanglement. Here we present a general theoretical framework for the realistic
investigation of polariton quantum correlations in the presence of coherent and
incoherent interaction processes. The proposed theoretical approach is based on
the {\em nonequilibrium quantum Langevin approach for open systems} applied to
interacting-electron complexes described within the dynamics controlled
truncation scheme. It provides an easy recipe to calculate multi-time
correlation functions which are key-quantities in quantum optics. As a first
application, we analyze the build-up of polariton parametric emission in
semiconductor microcavities including the influence of noise originating from
phonon induced scattering.Comment: some corrections in the presentation mad
- …
