18,842 research outputs found
Dispersion and decay of collective modes in neutron star cores
We calculate the frequencies of collective modes of neutrons, protons and
electrons in the outer core of neutron stars. The neutrons and protons are
treated in a hydrodynamic approximation and the electrons are regarded as
collisionless. The coupling of the nucleons to the electrons leads to Landau
damping of the collective modes and to significant dispersion of the low-lying
modes. We investigate the sensitivity of the mode frequencies to the strength
of entrainment between neutrons and protons, which is not well characterized.
The contribution of collective modes to the thermal conductivity is evaluated.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Color-flavor locked superconductor in a magnetic field
We study the effects of moderately strong magnetic fields on the properties
of color-flavor locked color superconducting quark matter in the framework of
the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model. We find that the energy gaps, which describe the
color superconducting pairing as well as the magnetization, are oscillating
functions of the magnetic field. Also, we observe that the oscillations of the
magnetization can be so strong that homogeneous quark matter becomes metastable
for a range of parameters. We suggest that this points to the possibility of
magnetic domains or other types of magnetic inhomogeneities in the quark cores
of magnetars.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Integrated care and the working record
By default, many discussions and specifications of electronic health records or integrated care records often conceptualize the record as a passive information repository. This article presents data from a case study of work in a medical unit in a major metropolitan hospital. It shows how the clinicians tailored, re-presented and augmented clinical information to support their own roles in the delivery of care for individual patients. This is referred to as the working record: a set of complexly interrelated clinician-centred documents that are locally evolved, maintained and used to support delivery of care in conjunction with the more patient-centred chart that will be stored in the medical records department on the patient’s discharge. Implications are drawn for how an integrated care record could support the local tailorability and flexibility that underpin this working record and hence underpin practice
Non-Compositional Term Dependence for Information Retrieval
Modelling term dependence in IR aims to identify co-occurring terms that are
too heavily dependent on each other to be treated as a bag of words, and to
adapt the indexing and ranking accordingly. Dependent terms are predominantly
identified using lexical frequency statistics, assuming that (a) if terms
co-occur often enough in some corpus, they are semantically dependent; (b) the
more often they co-occur, the more semantically dependent they are. This
assumption is not always correct: the frequency of co-occurring terms can be
separate from the strength of their semantic dependence. E.g. "red tape" might
be overall less frequent than "tape measure" in some corpus, but this does not
mean that "red"+"tape" are less dependent than "tape"+"measure". This is
especially the case for non-compositional phrases, i.e. phrases whose meaning
cannot be composed from the individual meanings of their terms (such as the
phrase "red tape" meaning bureaucracy). Motivated by this lack of distinction
between the frequency and strength of term dependence in IR, we present a
principled approach for handling term dependence in queries, using both lexical
frequency and semantic evidence. We focus on non-compositional phrases,
extending a recent unsupervised model for their detection [21] to IR. Our
approach, integrated into ranking using Markov Random Fields [31], yields
effectiveness gains over competitive TREC baselines, showing that there is
still room for improvement in the very well-studied area of term dependence in
IR
Neutrino Propagation In Color Superconducting Quark Matter
We calculate the neutrino mean free path in color superconducting quark
matter, and employ it to study the cooling of matter via neutrino diffusion in
the superconducting phase as compared to a free quark phase. The cooling
process slows when quark matter undergoes a second order phase transition to a
superconducting phase at the critical temperature . Cooling subsequently
accelerates as the temperature decreases below . This will directly impact
the early evolution of a newly born neutron star should its core contain quark
matter. Consequently, there may be observable changes in the early neutrino
emission which would provide evidence for superconductivity in hot and dense
matter.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Experimental Evidence of Time Delay Induced Death in Coupled Limit Cycle Oscillators
Experimental observations of time delay induced amplitude death in a pair of
coupled nonlinear electronic circuits that are individually capable of
exhibiting limit cycle oscillations are described. In particular, the existence
of multiply connected death islands in the parameter space of the coupling
strength and the time delay parameter for coupled identical oscillators is
established. The existence of such regions was predicted earlier on theoretical
grounds in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 5109 (1998); Physica 129D, 15 (1999)]. The
experiments also reveal the occurrence of multiple frequency states, frequency
suppression of oscillations with increased time delay and the onset of both
in-phase and anti-phase collective oscillations.Comment: 4 aps formatted RevTeX pages; 6 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
- …