3,988 research outputs found
NERVA irradiation program, GTR test 21. Volume 4 - Effect of radiation on structural materials tested at cryogenic and elevated temperatures
Effect of radiation on structural materials for NERVA engine tested at cryogenic and elevated temperatures - Vol.
U.S. Economic Activity during the Early Weeks of the SARS-Cov-2 Outbreak
This paper describes a weekly economic index (WEI) developed to track the rapid economic
developments associated with the response to the novel Coronavirus in the United States. The WEI
index shows a strong and sudden decline in economic activity starting in the week ending March 21,
2020. In the most recent week ending March 28, the WEI indicates economic activity has fallen further
to -6.19% scaled to 4 quarter growth in GDP
A Brachistochrone Approach to Reconstruct the Inflaton Potential
We propose a new way to implement an inflationary prior to a cosmological
dataset that incorporates the inflationary observables at arbitrary order. This
approach employs an exponential form for the Hubble parameter without
taking the slow-roll approximation. At lowest non-trivial order, this
has the unique property that it is the solution to the brachistochrone problem
for inflation.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, version matches published versio
Sex differences in plasma clozapine and norclozapine concentrations in clinical practice and in relation to body mass index and plasma glucose concentrations: a retrospective survey
Background
Clozapine is widely prescribed and, although effective, can cause weight gain and dysglycemia. The dysmetabolic effects of clozapine are thought to be more prevalent in women with this gender on average attaining 17Â % higher plasma clozapine concentrations than men.
Methods
We investigated the relationship between dose, body mass index (BMI), plasma glucose concentration, and plasma clozapine and N-desmethylclozapine (norclozapine) concentrations in 100 individuals with a severe enduring mental illness.
Results
Mean (10th/90th percentile) plasma clozapine concentrations were higher for women [0.49 (0.27–0.79) mg/L] compared with men [0.44 (0.26–0.70) mg/L] (F = 2.2; p = 0.035). There was no significant gender difference in the prescribed clozapine dose. BMI was significantly higher in women [mean (95 % CI) = 34.5 (26.0–45.3)] for females compared with 32.5 (25.2–41.0) for males. Overall, BMI increased by 0.7 kg/m 2 over a mean follow-up period of 210 days. A lower proportion, 41 % of women had a fasting blood glucose ≤6.0 mmol/L (<6.0 mmol/L is defined by the International Diabetes Federation as normal glucose handling), compared with 88 % of men (χ2  = 18.6, p < 0.0001).
Conclusions
We have shown that mean BMI and blood glucose concentrations are higher in women prescribed clozapine than in men. Women also tended to attain higher plasma clozapine concentrations than men. The higher BMI and blood glucose in women may relate to higher tissue exposure to clozapine, as a consequence of sex differences in drug metabolism
High-Frequency Data and a Weekly Economic Index during the Pandemic
This paper describes a weekly economic index (WEI) developed to track the rapid economic developments associated with the onset of and policy response to the novel coronavirus in the United States. The WEI, with its ten component series, tracks the overall economy. Comparing the contributions of the WEI's components in the 2008 and 2020 recessions reveals differences in how the two events played out at a high frequency. During the 2020 collapse and recovery, it provides a benchmark to interpret similarities and differences of novel indicators with shorter samples and/or nonstationary coverage, such as mobility indexes or credit card spending
HAR Inference: Recommendations for Practice
The classic papers by Newey and West (1987) and Andrews (1991) spurred a large body of work on how to improve heteroscedasticity- and autocorrelation-robust (HAR) inference in time series regression. This literature finds that using a larger-than-usual truncation parameter to estimate the long-run variance, combined with Kiefer-Vogelsang (2002, 2005) fixed-b critical values, can substantially reduce size distortions, at only a modest cost in (size-adjusted) power. Empirical practice, however, has not kept up. This article therefore draws on the post-Newey West/Andrews literature to make concrete recommendations for HAR inference. We derive truncation parameter rules that choose a point on the size-power tradeoff to minimize a loss function. If Newey-West tests are used, we recommend the truncation parameter rule S = 1.3T 1/2 and (nonstandard) fixed-b critical values. For tests of a single restriction, we find advantages to using the equal-weighted cosine (EWC) test, where the long run variance is estimated by projections onto Type II cosines, using ν = 0.4T 2/3 cosine terms; for this test, fixed-b critical values are, conveniently, tν or F. We assess these rules using first an ARMA/GARCH Monte Carlo design, then a dynamic factor model design estimated using a 207 quarterly U.S. macroeconomic time series
Interplay between magnetism and short-range order in medium- and high-entropy alloys: CrCoNi, CrFeCoNi, and CrMnFeCoNi
The impact of magnetism on predicted atomic short-range order in three
medium- and high-entropy alloys is studied using a first-principles,
all-electron, Landau-type linear response theory, coupled with lattice-based
atomistic modelling. We perform two sets of linear-response calculations: one
in which the paramagnetic state is modelled within the disordered local moment
picture, and one in which systems are modelled in a magnetically ordered state,
which is ferrimagnetic for the alloys considered in this work. We show that the
treatment of magnetism can have significant impact both on the predicted
temperature of atomic ordering and also the nature of atomic order itself. In
CrCoNi, we find that the nature of atomic order changes from being
-like when modelled in the paramagnetic state to MoPt-like
when modelled assuming the system has magnetically ordered. In CrFeCoNi, atomic
correlations between Fe and the other elements present are dramatically
strengthened when we switch from treating the system as magnetically disordered
to magnetically ordered. Our results show it is necessary to consider the
magnetic state when modelling multicomponent alloys containing mid- to
late- elements. Further, we suggest that there may be high-entropy alloy
compositions containing transition metals that will exhibit specific
atomic short-range order when thermally treated in an applied magnetic field.
This has the potential to provide a route for tuning physical and mechanical
properties in this class of materials.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
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