1,108 research outputs found
New Results in the Analysis of the O+Si Elastic Scattering by Modifying the Optical Potential
The elastic scattering of the O+Si system has been analyzed
with a modified potential within the framework of the optical model over a wide
energy range in the laboratory system from 29.0 to 142.5 MeV. This system has
been extensively studied over the years and a number of serious problems has
remained unsolved: The explanation of the anomalous large angle scattering
data; the out-of-phase problem between theoretical predictions and experimental
data; the reproduction of the oscillatory structure near the Coulomb barrier;
the consistent description of angular distributions together with the
excitation functions data are just some of these problems. We propose the use
of a modified potential method to explain these problems over this wide energy
range. This new method consistently improves the agreement with the
experimental data and achieves a major improvement on all the previous Optical
model calculations for this system.Comment: 19 pages with 8 figure
Constructing 3D crystal templates for photonic band gap materials using holographic optical tweezers
A simple and robust method is presented for the construction of 3-dimensional crystals from silica and polystyrene microspheres. The crystals are suitable for use as templates in the production of three-dimensional photonic band gap (PBG) materials. Manipulation of the microspheres was achieved using a dynamic holographic assembler (DHA) consisting of computer controlled holographic optical tweezers. Attachment of the microspheres was achieved by adjusting their colloidal interactions during assembly. The method is demonstrated by constructing a variety of 3-dimensional crystals using spheres ranging in size from 3 µm down to 800 nm. A major advantage of the technique is that it may be used to build structures that cannot be made using self-assembly. This is illustrated through the construction of crystals in which line defects have been deliberately included, and by building simple cubic structures
Coboson formalism for Cooper pairs used to derive Richardson's equations
We propose a many-body formalism for Cooper pairs which has similarities to
the one we recently developed for composite boson excitons (coboson in short).
Its Shiva diagram representation evidences that Cooper pairs differ from
single pairs through electron exchange only: no direct coupling exists due
to the very peculiar form of the BCS potential. As a first application, we here
use this formalism to derive Richardson's equations for the exact eigenstates
of Cooper pairs. This gives hints on why the dependence of the
-pair ground state energy we recently obtained by solving Richardson's
equations analytically in the low density limit, stays valid up to the dense
regime, no higher order dependence exists even under large overlap, a
surprising result hard to accept at first. We also briefly question the BCS
wave function ansatz compared to Richardson's exact form, in the light of our
understanding of coboson many-body effects
Generic Finite Size Enhancement of Pairing in Mesoscopic Fermi Systems
The finite size dependent enhancement of pairing in mesoscopic Fermi systems
is studied under the assumption that the BCS approach is valid and that the two
body force is size independent. Different systems are investigated such as
superconducting metallic grains and films as well atomic nuclei. It is shown
that the finite size enhancement of pairing in these systems is in part due to
the presence of a surface which accounts quite well for the data of nuclei and
explains a good fraction of the enhancement in Al grains.Comment: Updated version 17/02/0
Signatures of Thermal Dilepton Radiation at RHIC
The properties of thermal dilepton production from heavy-ion collisions in
the RHIC energy regime are evaluated for invariant masses ranging from 0.5 to 3
GeV. Using an expanding thermal fireball to model the evolution through both
quark-gluon and hadronic phases various features of the spectra are addressed.
In the low-mass region, due to an expected large background, the focus is on
possible medium modifications of the narrow resonance structures from
and mesons, whereas in the intermediate-mass region the old idea of
identifying QGP radiation is reiterated including effects of chemical
under-saturation in the early stages of central Au+Au collisions.Comment: 17 pages ReVTeX including 16 figure
Flux Stabilization in 6 Dimensions: D-terms and Loop Corrections
We analyse D-terms induced by gauge theory fluxes in the context of
6-dimensional supergravity models. On the one hand, this is arguably the
simplest concrete setting in which the controversial idea of `D-term uplifts'
can be investigated. On the other hand, it is a very plausible intermediate
step on the way from a 10d string theory model to 4d phenomenology. Our
specific results include the flux-induced one-loop correction to the scalar
potential coming from charged hypermultiplets. Furthermore, we comment on the
interplay of gauge theory fluxes and gaugino condensation in the present
context, demonstrate explicitly how the D-term arises from the gauging of one
of the compactification moduli, and briefly discuss further ingredients that
may be required for the construction of a phenomenologically viable model. In
particular, we show how the 6d dilaton and volume moduli can be simultaneously
stabilized, in the spirit of KKLT, by the combination of an R symmetry twist, a
gaugino condensate, and a flux-induced D-term.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure v2:minor correction
Nuclear effects in the Drell-Yan process at very high energies
We study Drell-Yan (DY) dilepton production in proton(deuterium)-nucleus and
in nucleus-nucleus collisions within the light-cone color dipole formalism.
This approach is especially suitable for predicting nuclear effects in the DY
cross section for heavy ion collisions, as it provides the impact parameter
dependence of nuclear shadowing and transverse momentum broadening, quantities
that are not available from the standard parton model. For p(D)+A collisions we
calculate nuclear shadowing and investigate nuclear modification of the DY
transverse momentum distribution at RHIC and LHC for kinematics corresponding
to coherence length much longer than the nuclear size. Calculations are
performed separately for transversely and longitudinally polarized DY photons,
and predictions are presented for the dilepton angular distribution.
Furthermore, we calculate nuclear broadening of the mean transverse momentum
squared of DY dileptons as function of the nuclear mass number and energy. We
also predict nuclear effects for the cross section of the DY process in heavy
ion collisions. We found a substantial nuclear shadowing for valence quarks,
stronger than for the sea.Comment: 46 pages, 18 figures, title changed and some discussion added,
accepted for publication in PR
Quantum transport through STM-lifted single PTCDA molecules
Using a scanning tunneling microscope we have measured the quantum
conductance through a PTCDA molecule for different configurations of the
tip-molecule-surface junction. A peculiar conductance resonance arises at the
Fermi level for certain tip to surface distances. We have relaxed the molecular
junction coordinates and calculated transport by means of the Landauer/Keldysh
approach. The zero bias transmission calculated for fixed tip positions in
lateral dimensions but different tip substrate distances show a clear shift and
sharpening of the molecular chemisorption level on increasing the STM-surface
distance, in agreement with experiment.Comment: accepted for publication in Applied Physics
Generating carbon schwarzites via zeolite-templating
Zeolite-templated carbons (ZTCs) comprise a relatively recent material class synthesized via the chemical vapor deposition of a carbon-containing precursor on a zeolite template, followed by the removal of the template. We have developed a theoretical framework to generate a ZTC model from any given zeolite structure, which we show can successfully predict the structure of known ZTCs. We use our method to generate a library of ZTCs from all known zeolites, to establish criteria for which zeolites can produce experimentally accessible ZTCs, and to identify over 10 ZTCs that have never before been synthesized. We show that ZTCs partition space into two disjoint labyrinths that can be described by a pair of interpenetrating nets. Since such a pair of nets also describes a triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS), our results establish the relationship between ZTCs and schwarzites-carbon materials with negative Gaussian curvature that resemble TPMSs-linking the research topics and demonstrating that schwarzites should no longer be thought of as purely hypothetical materials
Use of Risk Assessment Tools to Guide Decision-Making in the Primary Prevention of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Special Report from the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology
Risk assessment is a critical step in the current approach to primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Knowledge of the 10-year risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease identifies patients in higher-risk groups who are likely to have greater net benefit and lower number needed to treat for both statins and antihypertensive therapy. Current US prevention guidelines for blood pressure and cholesterol management recommend use of the pooled cohort equations to start a process of shared decision-making between clinicians and patients in primary prevention. The pooled cohort equations have been widely validated and are broadly useful for the general US clinical population. But, they may systematically underestimate risk in patients from certain racial/ethnic groups, those with lower socioeconomic status or with chronic inflammatory diseases, and overestimate risk in patients with higher socioeconomic status or who have been closely engaged with preventive healthcare services. If uncertainty remains for patients at borderline or intermediate risk, or if the patient is undecided after a patient-clinician discussion with consideration of risk enhancing factors (eg, family history), additional testing with measurement of coronary artery calcium can be useful to reclassify risk estimates and improve selection of patients for use or avoidance of statin therapy. This special report summarizes the rationale and evidence base for quantitative risk assessment, reviews strengths and limitations of existing risk scores, discusses approaches for refining individual risk estimates for patients, and provides practical advice regarding implementation of risk assessment and decision-making strategies in clinical practice
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