1,962 research outputs found
Improvement of uncoupled Hartree-Fock expectation values for physical properties
Hartree-Fock calculation method as zero-order approximation for determining atomic and molecular second-order propertie
The Higgs Sector of the Minimal 3 3 1 Model Revisited
The mass spectrum and the eigenstates of the Higgs sector of the minimal 3 3
1 model are revisited in detail. There are discrepancies between our results
and previous results by another author.Comment: 20 pages, latex, two figures. One note and one reference are adde
Semantic categories underlying the meaning of ‘place’
This paper analyses the semantics of natural language expressions that are associated with the intuitive notion of ‘place’. We note that the nature of such terms is highly contested, and suggest that this arises from two main considerations: 1) there are a number of logically
distinct categories of place expression, which are not always clearly distinguished in discourse about ‘place’; 2) the many non-substantive place count nouns (such as ‘place’, ‘region’, ‘area’, etc.) employed in natural
language are highly ambiguous. With respect to consideration 1), we propose that place-related expressions
should be classified into the following distinct logical types: a) ‘place-like’ count nouns (further subdivided into abstract, spatial and substantive varieties), b) proper names of ‘place-like’ objects, c) locative property phrases, and d) definite descriptions of ‘place-like’ objects. We outline possible formal representations for each of these. To address consideration 2), we examine meanings, connotations and ambiguities of the English vocabulary of abstract and generic place count nouns, and identify underlying elements of meaning, which explain both
similarities and differences in the sense and usage of the various terms
Search for the Charmonium States as Solution to the CDF Puzzle
The efforts of Roy-Sridhar-Close-Cho-Wise-Trivedi to resolve the CDF
anomaly with cascades from above-threshold states require well
defined signature states require well defined signatures [a small total width
and a large branching fraction for \cp \ra \gamma + \pp] for the solution to
be viable. Here we estimte the production of such states from BR (B \ra \cp +
X)BR (\cp \ra \gamma \pp) and production of
at CLEO II, and comment on the feasbility of testing the hypothesis in terms of
current experimental capabilities.Comment: 8 pages Latex File, No figure
Increased biomass, seed yield and stress tolerance is conferred in Arabidopsis by a novel enzyme from the resurrection grass Sporobolus stapfianus that glycosylates the strigolactone analogue GR24
Isolation of gene transcripts from desiccated leaf tissues of the resurrection grass, Sporobolus stapfianus, resulted in the identification of a gene, SDG8i, encoding a Group 1 glycosyltransferase (UGT). Here, we examine the effects of introducing this gene, under control of the CaMV35S promoter, into the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Results show that Arabidopsis plants constitutively over-expressing SDG8i exhibit enhanced growth, reduced senescence, cold tolerance and a substantial improvement in protoplasmic drought tolerance. We hypothesise that expression of SDG8i in Arabidopsis negatively affects the bioactivity of metabolite/s that mediate/s environmentally-induced repression of cell division and expansion, both during normal development and in response to stress. The phenotype of transgenic plants over-expressing SDG8i suggests modulation in activities of both growth- and stress-related hormones. Plants overexpressing the UGT show evidence of elevated auxin levels, with the enzyme acting downstream of ABA to reduce drought-induced senescence. Analysis of the in vitro activity of the UGT recombinant protein product demonstrates that SDG8i can glycosylate the synthetic strigolactone analogue GR24, evoking a link with strigolactone-related processes in vivo. The large improvements observed in survival of transgenic Arabidopsis plants under cold-, salt- and drought-stress, as well as the substantial increases in growth rate and seed yield under non-stress conditions, indicates that overexpression of SDG8i in crop plants may provide a novel means of increasing plant productivity
Sense of place in the changing process of house form: Case studies from Ankara, Turkey
This paper aims to investigate the impact of typomorphological changes of residential environments on residents’ sense of place’. Seven housing developments representing different types introduced in Ankara, Turkey since the late 19th-century are selected as case studies. Their morphological characters at the building, street and neighbourhood scales are examined, and typological transformations among the cases in terms of the degrees of continuity are identified. The paper proposes a conceptual model consisting of ten indicators to assess sense of place at the building, street and neighbourhood scales of the residents of the seven cases. The scores of sense of place are generated through structured interviews with the residents and analysed in SPSS. The results show that sense of place is negatively affected by typomorphological changes over time, particularly when mutational changes occur. Continuity in typomorphological transformation helps to maintain sense of place at a desirable level. Furthermore, physical changes at the street and neighbourhood scales have larger impact on sense of place than that at the building scale. The research thus suggests that planning and design should be responsive to traditional types in residential development, particularly at the street and neighbourhood scales to maintain residents’ sense of place
Elusive vector glueball
If the vector glueball exists in the mass range that theory suggests, its
resonance production cross section can be seen in e+e- annihilation only if the
decay width is very narrow (< a few MeV). Otherwise it willbe observed only
indirectly through its mixing with psi(2S). A few tests of the glueball-psi'
mixing are proposed for future charm factories.Comment: One misleading short sentence delete
Yet Another Extension of the Standard Model: Oases in the Desert?
We have searched for conceptually simple extensions of the standard model,
and describe here a candidate model which we find attractive. Our starting
point is the assumption that off-diagonal CKM mixing matrix elements are
directly related by lowest order perturbation theory to the quark mass
matrices. This appears to be most easily and naturally implemented by assuming
that all off-diagonal elements reside in the down-quark mass matrix. This
assumption is in turn naturally realized by introducing three generations of
heavy, electroweak-singlet down quarks which couple to the Higgs sector
diagonally in flavor, while mass-mixing off-diagonally with the light
down-quarks. Anomaly cancellation then naturally leads to inclusion of
electroweak vector-doublet leptons. It is then only a short step to completing
the extension to three generations of fundamental representations of E(6).
Assuming only that the third generation B couples to the Higgs sector at least
as strongly as does the top quark, the mass of the B is roughly estimated to
lie between 1.7 TeV and 10 TeV, with lower-generation quarks no heavier. The
corresponding guess for the new leptons is a factor two lower. Within the
validity of the model, flavor and CP violation are ``infrared'' in nature,
induced by semi-soft mass mixing terms, not Yukawa couplings. If the Higgs
couplings of the new quarks are flavor symmetric, then there necessarily must
be at least one ``oasis'' in the desert, induced by new radiative corrections
to the top quark and Higgs coupling constants, and roughly at 1000 TeV.Comment: LaTex, 40 page
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