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White matter hyperintensities and within-person variability in community-dwelling adults aged 60â64 years
Estimates of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) derived from T2-weighted MRI were investigated in relation to cognitive performance in 469 healthy community-dwelling adults aged 60â64 years. Frontal lobe WMH but not WMH from other brain regions (temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes, anterior and posterior horn, periventricular body) were associated with elevated within-person reaction time (RT) variability (trial to trial fluctuations in RT performance) but not performance on several other cognitive tasks including psychomotor speed, memory, and global cognition. The findings are consistent with the view that elevated within-person variability is related to neurobiological disturbance, and that attentional mechanisms supported by the frontal cortex play a key role in this type of variability
Transitions in non-conserving models of Self-Organized Criticality
We investigate a random--neighbours version of the two dimensional
non-conserving earthquake model of Olami, Feder and Christensen [Phys. Rev.
Lett. {\bf 68}, 1244 (1992)]. We show both analytically and numerically that
criticality can be expected even in the presence of dissipation. As the
critical level of conservation, , is approached, the cut--off of the
avalanche size distribution scales as . The
transition from non-SOC to SOC behaviour is controlled by the average branching
ratio of an avalanche, which can thus be regarded as an order
parameter of the system. The relevance of the results are discussed in
connection to the nearest-neighbours OFC model (in particular we analyse the
relevance of synchronization in the latter).Comment: 8 pages in latex format; 5 figures available upon reques
The Temperature Evolution of the Out-of-Plane Correlation Lengths of Charge-Stripe Ordered La(1.725)Sr(0.275)NiO(4)
The temperature dependence of the magnetic order of stripe-ordered
La(1.725)Sr(0.275)NiO(4) is investigated by neutron diffraction. Upon cooling,
the widths if the magnetic Bragg peaks are observed to broaden. The degree of
broadening is found to be very different for l = odd-integer and l =
even-integer magnetic peaks. We argue that the observed behaviour is a result
of competition between magnetic and charge order.Comment: 3 figure
Correlations and invariance of seismicity under renormalization-group transformations
The effect of transformations analogous to those of the real-space
renormalization group are analyzed for the temporal occurrence of earthquakes.
The distribution of recurrence times turns out to be invariant under such
transformations, for which the role of the correlations between the magnitudes
and the recurrence times are fundamental. A general form for the distribution
is derived imposing only the self-similarity of the process, which also yields
a scaling relation between the Gutenberg-Richter b-value, the exponent
characterizing the correlations, and the recurrence-time exponent. This
approach puts the study of the structure of seismicity in the context of
critical phenomena.Comment: Short paper. I'll be grateful to get some feedbac
Hawking Radiation for Non-minimally Coupled Matter from Generalized 2D Black Hole Models
It is well known that spherically symmetric reduction of General Relativity
(SSG) leads to non-minimally coupled scalar matter. We generalize (and correct)
recent results to Hawking radiation for a class of dilaton models which share
with the Schwarzschild black hole non-minimal coupling of scalar fields and the
basic global structure. An inherent ambiguity of such models (if they differ
from SSG) is discussed. However, for SSG we obtain the rather disquieting
result of a negative Hawking flux at infinity, if the usual recipe for such
calculations is applied.Comment: 8 page
Power filtration of CMB observational data
We propose a power filter Gp for linear reconstruction of the CMB signal from
observational maps. This Gp filter preserves the power spectrum of the CMB
signal in contrast to the Wiener filter which diminishes the power spectrum of
the reconstructed CMB signal. We demonstrate how peak statistics and a cluster
analysis can be used to estimate the probability of the presence of a CMB
signal in observational records. The efficiency of the Gp filter is
demonstrated on a toy model of an observational record consisting of a CMB
signal and noise in the form of foreground point sources.Comment: 17 pages; 4 figures; submitted to International Journal of Modern
Physic
Mode analysis of numerical geodynamo models
It has been suggested in Hoyng (2009) that dynamo action can be analysed by
expansion of the magnetic field into dynamo modes and statistical evaluation of
the mode coefficients. We here validate this method by analysing a numerical
geodynamo model and comparing the numerically derived mean mode coefficients
with the theoretical predictions. The model belongs to the class of
kinematically stable dynamos with a dominating axisymmetric, antisymmetric with
respect to the equator and non-periodic fundamental dynamo mode. The analysis
requires a number of steps: the computation of the so-called dynamo
coefficients, the derivation of the temporally and azimuthally averaged dynamo
eigenmodes and the decomposition of the magnetic field of the numerical
geodynamo model into the eigenmodes. For the determination of the theoretical
mode excitation levels the turbulent velocity field needs to be projected on
the dynamo eigenmodes. We compare the theoretically and numerically derived
mean mode coefficients and find reasonably good agreement for most of the
modes. Some deviation might be attributable to the approximation involved in
the theory. Since the dynamo eigenmodes are not self-adjoint a spectral
interpretation of the eigenmodes is not possible
Evidence for ultramafic lavas on Syrtis Major
Pyroxene compositions from ISM data compared with pyroxene compositions of Apollo 12 pigeonite basalt, Shergotite meteorite, and pyroxenitic komatiite show that the Syrtis Major volcanic materials are consistent with pyroxenitic komatiite. Pyroxenitic komatiite is significant for the earth because it contains a large amount of MgO, implying generation under unique circumstances compared to typical basaltic compositions
High-precision abundances of elements in Kepler LEGACY stars. Verification of trends with stellar age
HARPS-N spectra with S/N > 250 and MARCS model atmospheres were used to
derive abundances of C, O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Fe, Ni, Zn, and Y in ten
stars from the Kepler LEGACY sample (including the binary pair 16 Cyg A and B)
selected to have metallicities in the range -0.15 < [Fe/H] < +0.15 and ages
between 1 and 7 Gyr. Stellar gravities were obtained from seismic data and
effective temperatures were determined by comparing non-LTE iron abundances
derived from FeI and FeII lines. Available non-LTE corrections were also
applied when deriving abundances of the other elements. The results support the
[X/Fe]-age relations previously found for solar twins. [Mg/Fe], [Al/Fe], and
[Zn/Fe] decrease by ~0.1 dex over the lifetime of the Galactic thin disk due to
delayed contribution of iron from Type Ia supernovae relative to prompt
production of Mg, Al, and Zn in Type II supernovae. [Y/Mg] and [Y/Al], on the
other hand, increase by ~0.3 dex, which can be explained by an increasing
contribution of s-process elements from low-mass AGB stars as time goes on. The
trends of [C/Fe] and [O/Fe] are more complicated due to variations of the ratio
between refractory and volatile elements among stars of similar age. Two stars
with about the same age as the Sun show very different trends of [X/H] as a
function of elemental condensation temperature Tc and for 16 Cyg, the two
components have an abundance difference, which increases with Tc. These
anomalies may be connected to planet-star interactions.Comment: 13 pages with 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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