922 research outputs found
Yang-Lee Edge Singularity on a Class of Treelike Lattices
The density of zeros of the partition function of the Ising model on a class
of treelike lattices is studied. An exact closed-form expression for the
pertinent critical exponents is derived by using a couple of recursion
relations which have a singular behavior near the Yang-Lee edge.Comment: 9 pages AmsTex, 2 eps figures, to appear in J.Phys.
Do personality traits predict post-traumatic stress?: a prospective study in civilians experiencing air attacks
Publisher version available from: http://journals.cambridge.org
Diffusive Transport in Quasi-2D and Quasi-1D Electron Systems
Quantum-confined semiconductor structures are the cornerstone of modern-day
electronics. Spatial confinement in these structures leads to formation of
discrete low-dimensional subbands. At room temperature, carriers transfer among
different states due to efficient scattering with phonons, charged impurities,
surface roughness and other electrons, so transport is scattering-limited
(diffusive) and well described by the Boltzmann transport equation. In this
review, we present the theoretical framework used for the description and
simulation of diffusive electron transport in quasi-two-dimensional and
quasi-one-dimensional semiconductor structures. Transport in silicon MOSFETs
and nanowires is presented in detail.Comment: Review article, to appear in Journal of Computational and Theoretical
Nanoscienc
Behaviour of Cattle on Two Different Types of Upland Pastures
The purpose of this research was to study the influence of the quality of pastures on the behaviour of cows in a \u27cow-calf\u27 system. The behaviour was measured by the four principal activities of the herd: grazing, lying, \u27roaming\u27 and insect repelling, and it is presented with relative indicators. The trial was conducted on pasture areas of the Faculty of Agriculture, University of Zagreb, at the altitude of 650- 850 m. The influence of the pasture quality on the behaviour of cattle on pasture was studied on two different types of pastures: a natural unreclaimed pasture belonging to the Arrhenatheretum medioeuropaeum association and a reclaimed pasture by manuring and reseeding belonging to the Lolio-Cynosuretum association. Grazing behaviour was studied on 26 cows (Charolais x Istrian cattle) kept in a \u27cow-calf\u27 system. During spring and autumn period the cows spent more time, expressed in percentage, in grazing on the pasture belonging to the Arrhenatheretum medioeuropaeum association than on the pasture belonging to the Lolio-Cynosuretum association (53.00% and 44.43% during spring period, and 43.89% and 27.97% during autumn period, respectively). The established differences were significant (P\u3c0.05). The time spent on lying was significantly longer for all the three grazing periods on the pasture belonging to the Lolio-Cynosuretum association. The cows spent significantly more time (P\u3c0.05) on \u27roaming\u27 on the pasture belonging to the Lolio-Cynosuretum vegetal association. The pasture did not have significant influence on the time spent on insect repelling
Concentrations of heavy metals in soil and leaves of plant species Paulownia elongata S.Y.Hu and Paulownia fortunei Hemsl
This paper sums up the results of the research on heavy metals contents (Pb, Ni, Fe, Zn and Mn) in soil and leaves of the plant species, Paulownia elongata S.Y. Hu and Paulownia fortunei Hemsl. at the plantation established on the eutric brown soil in Banat (Vojvodina). The plantation, which served asthe control field is at the municipality of Bela Crkva, far away from the main traffic lines. Concentrations of analyzed heavy metals in the leaves of the tree species, Paulownia growing in urban and suburban conditions were compared with the concentration of polluters in the leaves of the tree species, P. elongata and P. fortunei in the experimental field in Bela Crkva
The Effect of Once-Daily Gabapentin Extended Release Formulation in Patients With Postamputation Pain
ObjectivesTo compare gabapentin extended-release, a gastro-retentive formulation, in relieving postamputation pain among gabapentin-experienced and gabapentin-naïve patients.DesignOpen-labeled pilot study.SubjectsSixteen patients with postamputation pain (8 patients in the gabapentin-experienced and 8 patients in the gabapentin-naïve groups).MethodsPatients were started on gabapentin extended-release and were followed up for 8 weeks. Patients reported their pain severity during rest and movement using a numeric rating scale (NRS), interference of pain with daily activities using the modified brief pain inventory (MBPI) questionnaire, and treatment satisfaction using the treatment satisfaction questionnaire for medication (TSQM).ResultsPatients from both gabapentin-experienced and gabapentin-naïve groups achieved a significant and sustainable pain relief over the course of therapy. The pain scores at rest decreased in both gabapentin-experienced and gabapentin-naïve groups from 5.88 ± 1.36 and 4.88 ± 2.95 to 1.88 ± 0.99 and 1.38 ± 1.51, respectively. An average percent of pain relief with gabapentin extended-release was noted to be significant (p < 0.01) after 8 weeks of therapy among gabapentin-experienced (81.25 ± 16.42%) and gabapentin-naïve groups (85 ± 17.73%) when compared to baseline for gabapentin-experienced (31.25 ± 29%) and gabapentin-naïve groups (36.25 ± 34.2%), respectively. Gabapentin-experienced and gabapentin-naïve groups had no significant difference in global satisfaction from treatment (79.14 ± 10.47 and 83.3 ± 20.82), convenience of treatment (73.78 ± 19.04 and 90.44 ± 11.66), effectiveness of treatment (72.6 ± 10.1 and 79.73 ± 11.6). The only statistically significant difference among gabapentin-experienced and gabapentin-naïve groups was found in adverse event tolerability (65.78 ± 10.36 and 85.8 ± 10.14, p < 0.01).ConclusionOnce-daily dosing of gabapentin-extended release showed significant improvement in pain severity and functional status, with no difference found between gabapentin-experienced versus gabapentin-naïve patients
Influence of Fertilization System on Wheat Yields in Terms of Global Climate Change
Over the last few decades, wheat production, both in Serbia and worldwide, has been practiced under characteristic agrometeorological conditions. It has generally been affected by specific strongly marked agrometeorological and climate extremes, most notably extreme temperature and drought events during critical periods in the growing season, which mostly had a negative impact on the growth, development and yield of wheat in Central Serbia.This paper presents results and discussion on both the potential effect of climate change on winter wheat yield and the possibility to alleviate it through an appropriately adjusted fertilization system.The present study on the effect of different rates and ratios of NPK fertilizers on grain yield in seven winter wheat cultivars under different (dry and “normal“) conditions during the year was conducted in a long-term field experiment at the Small Grains Research Centre in Kragujevac over a period of seven years (2000/01-2006/07).Depending on the fertilization treatment, the average yield reduction in dry years showed 50% variation relative to “normal” years. The highest reduction in grain yield and other productive traits of wheat in dry years was observed in the treatment involving nitrogen nutrition, particularly lower application rates. As compared to the non-treated control, the use of complete NPK fertilization having an increased amount of phosphorus resulted in the lowest yield reduction during the dry years that were unfavorable for winter wheat production. The average grain yield reduction in dry years was lowest in wheat cultivar Matica and highest in Kg-100, respectively
Electron mobility in silicon nanowires
The low-field electron mobility in rectangular silicon nanowire (SiNW)
transistors was computed using a self-consistent Poisson-Schr\"{o}dinger-Monte
Carlo solver. The behavior of the phonon-limited and surface-roughness-limited
components of the mobility was investigated by decreasing the wire width from
30 nm to 8 nm, the width range capturing a crossover between two-dimensional
(2D) and one-dimensional (1D) electron transport. The phonon-limited mobility,
which characterizes transport at low and moderate transverse fields, is found
to decrease with decreasing wire width due to an increase in the
electron-phonon wavefunction overlap. In contrast, the mobility at very high
transverse fields, which is limited by surface roughness scattering, increases
with decreasing wire width due to volume inversion. The importance of acoustic
phonon confinement is also discussed briefly
Do Corticosteroids Still Have a Place in the Treatment of Chronic Pain?
Corticosteroids have played a standard role in the multimodal pain management in the treatment of chronic spinal pain (cervical and lumbar) and osteoarthritis pain over the past three decades. In this review we discuss different types of injectable steroids that are mainly used for injection into the epidural space (for the treatment of radicular back and neck pain), and as intra-articular injections for different types of osteoarthritis related pain conditions. Furthermore, we discuss different approaches taken for epidural corticosteroid injections and spinal surgical rates when injections fail to resolve painful conditions, as well as the possibility of using local anesthetics alone for neuraxial injections, instead of in combination with corticosteroids. While we present some beneficial effects of newly available treatment options for low back pain and osteoarthritis pain, such as use of PRP and hyaluronic acid, corticosteroids remain important considerations in the management of these chronic pain conditions
- …