949 research outputs found

    Comparison of Nuclear Suppression Effects on Meson Production at High p_T and p_L

    Full text link
    The medium effect on the pion distribution at high pTp_T in AAAA collisions is compared to that of the pion distribution at high pLp_L in pApA collisions. Both the suppression of the spectra and the energy losses of the measured pions are studied. Although the medium effect on pTp_T is larger than on pLp_L, the difference is found surprisingly to be not as big as one would naively expect.Comment: 8 RevTex pages with 5 figure

    Parton Distributions in the Valon Model

    Get PDF
    The parton distribution functions determined by CTEQ at low Q2Q^2 are used as inputs to test the validity of the valon model. The valon distributions in a nucleon are first found to be nearly QQ independent. The parton distribution in a valon are shown to be consistent with being universal, independent of the valon type. The momentum fractions of the partons in the valon add up separately to one. These properties affirm the validity of the valon model. The various distributions are parameterized for convenient application of the model.Comment: 9 pages + 9 figures in ep

    Influence of some abiotic factors on the acute toxicity of cadmium to Cyprinus carpio

    Get PDF
    Hardness of water had significant effect on the acute toxicity of cadmium to common carp, Cyprinus carpio. The 96h LC sub(50) and safe application rate increased from 43.17 and 22.77 mg 1 super(-1) in soft water (0.9 mM Ca super(2+) l super(-1)) to 310.48 and 177.66 mg l super(-1), respectively, in very hard water (6.0 mM Ca super(2+) l super(-1)). In medium hard and hard water, 96h LC sub(50) values were 48.39 and 116.45 mg l super(-1). When sediments were included in the medium hard, hard and very hard water treatments, the 96h LC sub(50) were 111.20, 133.71 and 334.47 mg l super(-1), respectively. Among these values, the one for medium hard water with sediment treatment was significantly higher than medium hard water treatment; values for the other two treatments were non-significant when compared with respective water treatments. Sediment was able to reduce the acute toxicity of cadmium mainly due to the complexation of cadmium with dissolved organic carbon (DOC). At the lower hardness level, cadmium complexed with DOC and the acute toxicity was reduced significantly. At higher hardness, most of the DOC sites were occupied by calcium and the acute toxicity of cadmium was not significantly reduced in hard water with sediment and very hard water with sediment experiments in comparison to respective water treatments

    Scaling Distributions of Quarks, Mesons and Proton for all pTp_T, Energy and Centrality

    Get PDF
    We present the evidences for the existence of a universal scaling behavior of the production of π0\pi^0 at all transverse momenta in heavy-ion collisions at all centralities and all collision energies. The corresponding scaling behavior of the quarks is then derived just before the quarks recombine with antiquarks to form the pions. The degradation effect of the dense medium on the quark pTp_T is derived from the scaling distribution. In the recombination model it is then possible to calculate the pTp_T distributions of the produced proton and kaon, which are scaling also. Experimentally verifiable predictions are made. Implications of the existence of the scaling behavior are discussed.Comment: 10 pages in RevTeX, including 14 figures in eps file

    Effect of some environmental factors on the acute toxicity of deltamethrin to common carp: a laboratory study under aerobic condition

    Get PDF
    The toxicity of xenobiotic in aquatic ecosystems is influenced by many factors such as ambient temperature, water hardness, pond soil type, etc. In the present study, it was observed that air temperature, water hardness and soil sediment have profound influence on the toxicity of deltamethrin to common carp fry (ay. length 3.5 ± 0.5 cm, ay. weight 0.58 ± 0.25 g); 96h LC(sub)50 values for common carp at 38.07 ± 2.20°C maximum and 27.86 ± 1.22°C minimum air temperature in soft and very hard water were 0.102 and 0.495 µg lˉ¹, respectively. This value had increased significantly to 2.37 and 3.02 µg at 30.55 ± 1.21°C maximum and 26.04 ± 0.61°C minimum air temperature, respectively. When sediment was included, 96h LC(sub)50 at 38.07°C maximum temperature in very hard water was 1.808 µg 1ˉ¹ and this had increased to 8.073 µg 1ˉ¹ when tested at 30.55°C maximum temperature. Due to the 7.5°C increase in maximum and 1.7°C in minimum temperature, toxicity increased significantly. Lower toxicity in very hard water in comparison to soft water may be due to the lower solubility of deltarnethrin and high level of calcium. Adsorption reaction of deltamethrin with clay, humus, FeOOH, MnOOH and particulate organic carbon, and complexation reaction with dissolved organic carbon were responsible for the lowered toxicity in the experiment with sediment. Exposure time had no significant effect on acute toxicity of deltamethrin

    Branes as Stable Holomorphic Line Bundles On the Non-Commutative Torus

    Full text link
    It was recently suggested by A. Kapustin that turning on a BB-field, and allowing some discrepancy between the left and and right-moving complex structures, must induce an identification of B-branes with holomorphic line bundles on a non-commutative complex torus. We translate the stability condition for the branes into this language and identify the stable topological branes with previously proposed non-commutative instanton equations. This involves certain topological identities whose derivation has become familiar in non-commutative field theory. It is crucial for these identities that the instantons are localized. We therefore explore the case of non-constant field strength, whose non-linearities are dealt with thanks to the rank-one Seiberg--Witten map.Comment: 12 pages, LaTe

    Psychiatric comorbidity in multiple sclerosis

    Get PDF
    Aim: To study the prevalence of psychiatric comorbidities in patients of multiple sclerosisand their association to the degree of disability. Method: Psychiatric symptoms were assessed in 90 patients of multiple sclerosis using GHQ-12, MMSE, HADS, Beck Depression Inventory and AUDIT. Neurological disability wasassessed using Expanded Disability Status Scale. Correlations were determined between EDSS scores and psychiatric scale scores. Result: 61% of patients had significant psychological distress. Depression was most common (38.8%) which was followed by anxiety symptoms (27.8%). Cognitive functioning was relatively intact in patients with mild to moderate neurological disability. Alcohol abusewas mostly restricted to male gender. Conclusion: Psychiatric illness is highly prevalent in patients of multiple sclerosis leading to poor quality of life and significant distress. Psychiatric disability was higher in patients who had greater deterioration in neurological function. All cases of MS should be assessed for psychiatric morbidities as can be alleviated by appropriate intervention
    • …
    corecore