10,836 research outputs found
Relationships between different nutritional anthropometric statuses and health-related fitness of South African primary school children
Background A double burden of both under- and over-nutrition exists among South African children. Aim Describe associations between nutritional statuses and health-related fitness test performances. Subjects and methods Height and weight of 10 285 children (6-13 years; n=5604 boys and 4681 girls) were measured and used to calculate: body mass index (BMI), and prevalence of overweight and obesity, stunting, wasting, and underweight. Physical fitness scores for standing long jump, shuttle run, sit-and-reach, sit-up (EUROFIT) and cricket ball throw were assessed. Age and gender specific z-scores were calculated for these variables. Physical fitness for each nutritional status group was compared to children of normal weight. Results Compared to normal weight children, overweight and obese children scored lower on all fitness tests (p<.001), except cricket ball throw (p=.235) and sit-and-reach (p=.015). Stunted and underweight children performed poorer than normal weight children on most fitness tests (p<.001), except sit-and-reach (stunted: p=.829; underweight: p=.538) and shuttle run (underweight: p=.017). Performance of wasted children was not as highly compromised as other undernourished groups, but they performed poorer on the cricket ball throw (p<.001). Conclusions When compared to normal weight children, both under- and over-nourished children performed poorer on some, but not all, health-related fitness tests
Particularities of the bucco-pharyngeal apparatus in <i>Zenarchopterus kampeni</i> (Pisces: Hemiramphida) and their probable significance in feeding
The present study shows several new anatomical particularities of the buccal and pharyngeal parts of the halfbeak Zenarchopterus kampeni. The upper buccal jaw consists of premaxillaries and maxillaries tightly joined by ligaments. A 10° lowering of the mandible leads to a 30° elevation of the upper jaw. The adductor mandibulae is reduced to bundles A²and A omega. As in the Labridae, the lower pharyngeal jaw articulates with the scapular girdle. The upper pharyngeal jaw consists of distinct second pharyngobranchials followed by the third pharyngobranchials fused into a powerful posterior component. This part fits into and slides along a longitudinal ventral gutter of the neuroranium, thanks not only to the dorsal retractor muscles but also to specific retractors of the second pharyngobranchials. The power and dentition of the pharyngeal parts contrasts with the fragility of the buccal elements
An Inherited Eye Defect in the Guinea Pig
The data presented in this paper were obtained from the descendants of one defective-eyed male guinea pig that appeared in our colony several years ago. Notation was made of the defective eye, but as the male was being used in another experiment no matings were made at that time to determine whether the condition was genetic. However, when the same type of defect was later observed in the inbred descendants of this male, some matings were made to determine, if possible, the manner of inheritance of the condition
Validation of a food frequency questionnaire in older South Africans
The International Society for Burns Injuries (ISBI) has published guidelines for the management of multiple or mass burns casualties, and recommends that 'each country has or should have a disaster planning system that addresses its own particular needs.' The need for a national burns disaster plan integrated with national and provincial disaster planning was discussed at the South African Burns Society Congress in 2009, but there was no real involvement in the disaster planning prior to the 2010 World Cup; the country would have been poorly prepared had there been a burns disaster during the event. This article identifies some of the lessons learnt and strategies derived from major burns disasters and burns disaster planning from other regions. Members of the South African Burns Society are undertaking an audit of burns care in South Africa to investigate the feasibility of a national burns disaster plan. This audit (which is still under way) also aims to identify weaknesses of burns care in South Africa and implement improvements where necessary
Aging in the Relaxor Ferroelectric PMN/PT
The relaxor ferroelectric
(PbMnNbO)(PbTiO), ,
(PMN/PT(90/10)) is found to exhibit several regimes of complicated aging
behavior. Just below the susceptibility peak there is a regime exhibiting
rejuvenation but little memory. At lower temperature, there is a regime with
mainly cumulative aging, expected for simple domain-growth. At still lower
temperature, there is a regime with both rejuvenation and memory, reminiscent
of spin glasses. PMN/PT (88/12) is also found to exhibit some of these aging
regimes. This qualitative aging behavior is reminiscent of that seen in
reentrant ferromagnets, which exhibit a crossover from a domain-growth
ferromagnetic regime into a reentrant spin glass regime at lower temperatures.
These striking parallels suggest a picture of competition in PMN/PT (90/10)
between ferroelectric correlations formed in the domain-growth regime with
glassy correlations formed in the spin glass regime. PMN/PT (90/10) is also
found to exhibit frequency-aging time scaling of the time-dependent part of the
out-of-phase susceptibility for temperatures 260 K and below. The stability of
aging effects to thermal cycles and field perturbations is also reported.Comment: 8 pages RevTeX4, 11 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
Quantum Interference in Single Molecule Electronic Systems
We present a general analytical formula and an ab initio study of quantum
interference in multi-branch molecules. Ab initio calculations are used to
investigate quantum interference in a benzene-1,2-dithiolate (BDT) molecule
sandwiched between gold electrodes and through oligoynes of various lengths. We
show that when a point charge is located in the plane of a BDT molecule and its
position varied, the electrical conductance exhibits a clear interference
effect, whereas when the charge approaches a BDT molecule along a line normal
to the plane of the molecule and passing through the centre of the phenyl ring,
interference effects are negligible. In the case of olygoynes, quantum
interference leads to the appearance of a critical energy , at which the
electron transmission coefficient of chains with even or odd numbers of
atoms is independent of length. To illustrate the underlying physics, we derive
a general analytical formula for electron transport through multi-branch
structures and demonstrate the versatility of the formula by comparing it with
the above ab-initio simulations. We also employ the analytical formula to
investigate the current inside the molecule and demonstrate that large counter
currents can occur within a ring-like molecule such as BDT, when the point
charge is located in the plane of the molecule. The formula can be used to
describe quantum interference and Fano resonances in structures with branches
containing arbitrary elastic scattering regions connected to nodal sites.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Femtosecond x rays from laser-plasma accelerators
Relativistic interaction of short-pulse lasers with underdense plasmas has
recently led to the emergence of a novel generation of femtosecond x-ray
sources. Based on radiation from electrons accelerated in plasma, these sources
have the common properties to be compact and to deliver collimated, incoherent
and femtosecond radiation. In this article we review, within a unified
formalism, the betatron radiation of trapped and accelerated electrons in the
so-called bubble regime, the synchrotron radiation of laser-accelerated
electrons in usual meter-scale undulators, the nonlinear Thomson scattering
from relativistic electrons oscillating in an intense laser field, and the
Thomson backscattered radiation of a laser beam by laser-accelerated electrons.
The underlying physics is presented using ideal models, the relevant parameters
are defined, and analytical expressions providing the features of the sources
are given. Numerical simulations and a summary of recent experimental results
on the different mechanisms are also presented. Each section ends with the
foreseen development of each scheme. Finally, one of the most promising
applications of laser-plasma accelerators is discussed: the realization of a
compact free-electron laser in the x-ray range of the spectrum. In the
conclusion, the relevant parameters characterizing each sources are summarized.
Considering typical laser-plasma interaction parameters obtained with currently
available lasers, examples of the source features are given. The sources are
then compared to each other in order to define their field of applications.Comment: 58 pages, 41 figure
Sub-gap conductance in ferromagnetic-superconducting mesoscopic structures
We study the sub-gap conductance of a ferromagnetic mesoscopic region
attached to a ferromagnetic and a superconducting electrode by means of tunnel
junctions. In the absence of the exchange field, the ratio of the two tunnel junction resistances determines the behaviour of
the sub-gap conductance which possesses a zero-bias peak for and for
a peak at finite voltage. We show that the inclusion of the exchange
field leads to a peak splitting for , while it shifts the zero-bias
anomaly to finite voltages for .Comment: 5 pages revte
Mass-Deformed BLG Theory in Light-Cone Superspace
Maximally supersymmetric mass deformation of the Bagger-Lambert-Gustavsson
(BLG) theory corresponds to a {non-central} extension of the d=3 N=8 Poincare
superalgebra (allowed in three dimensions). We obtain its light-cone superspace
formulation which has a novel feature of the dynamical supersymmetry generators
being {cubic} in the kinematical ones. The mass deformation picks a
quaternionic direction, which breaks the SO(8) R-symmetry down to SO(4)xSO(4).
The Hamiltonian of the theory is shown to be a quadratic form of the dynamical
supersymmetry transformations, to all orders in the mass parameter, M, and the
structure constants, f^{a b c d}.Comment: 23 page
- …