409 research outputs found
Hydrodynamic modes of a 1D trapped Bose gas
We consider two regimes where a trapped Bose gas behaves as a one-dimensional
system. In the first one the Bose gas is microscopically described by 3D mean
field theory, but the trap is so elongated that it behaves as a 1D gas with
respect to low frequency collective modes. In the second regime we assume that
the 1D gas is truly 1D and that it is properly described by the Lieb-Liniger
model. In both regimes we find the frequency of the lowest compressional mode
by solving the hydrodynamic equations. This is done by making use of a method
which allows to find analytical or quasi-analytical solutions of these
equations for a large class of models approaching very closely the actual
equation of state of the Bose gas. We find an excellent agreement with the
recent results of Menotti and Stringari obtained from a sum rule approach.Comment: 15 pages, revtex, 1 figure
A Simple Analytic Solution for Tachyon Condensation
In this paper we present a new and simple analytic solution for tachyon
condensation in open bosonic string field theory. Unlike the B_0 gauge
solution, which requires a carefully regulated discrete sum of wedge states
subtracted against a mysterious "phantom" counter term, this new solution
involves a continuous integral of wedge states, and no regularization or
phantom term is necessary. Moreover, we can evaluate the action and prove Sen's
conjecture in a mere few lines of calculation.Comment: 44 pages
Species of Bursaphelenchus Fuchs, 1937 (Nematoda: Parasitaphelenchidae) and other nematode genera associated with insects from Pinus pinaster in Portugal
Insects associated with maritime pine, Pinus pinaster, in Portugal were collected
and screened for the presence of Bursaphelenchus species. Nematodes were
identified using Internal Transcribed Spacers-Restriction Fragment Length
Polymorphism (ITS-RFLP) analysis of dauer juveniles and morphological
identification of adults that developed from dauer juveniles on fungal cultures
or on cultures in pine wood segments at 26 C. Several associations are
described: Bursaphelenchus teratospicularis and Bursaphelenchus sexdentati are
associated with Orthotomicus erosus; Bursaphelenchus tusciae, B. sexdentati and/or
Bursaphelenchus pinophilus with Hylurgus ligniperda and Bursaphelenchus hellenicus
with Tomicus piniperda, Ips sexdentatus and H. ligniperda. An unidentified
Bursaphelenchus species is vectored by Hylobius sp. The previously reported
association of Bursaphelenchus xylophilus with Monochamus galloprovincialis
was confirmed. The association of Bursaphelenchus leoni with Pityogenes sp. is
not definitively established and needs further studies for clarification.
Other nematode genera besides Bursaphelenchus were found to be associated
with the insects sampled, including two different species of Ektaphelenchus, Parasitorhabditis
sp., Parasitaphelenchus sp., Contortylenchus sp. and other unidentified
nematodes. The Ektaphelenchus species found in O. erosus is morphologically
similar to B. teratospicularis found in the same insect; adults of both the species
are found in cocoon-like structures under the elytra of the insects.
Introduction
Approximately one third of the nematodes belonging to
the order Aphelenchida Siddiqi, 1980 are associated with
insects (Poinar, 1983). These nematodes establish a variety
of associations with the insects, which may be
described as commensalism, e.g. phoresy (to the benefit
of the nematode but not affecting the insect), mutualism
(both the organisms benefit) or parasitism (nematodes
benefit at the expense of the insect) (Giblin-Davis,
2004).
Most Bursaphelenchus Fuchs, 1937 species are mycetophagous,
feeding on fungi in the galleries of bark beetles
and thu
The Tachyon Potential in the Sliver Frame
We evaluate the tachyon potential in the Schnabl gauge through off-shell
computations in the sliver frame. As an application of the results of our
computations, we provide a strong evidence that Schnabl's analytic solution for
tachyon condensation in open string field theory represents a saddle point
configuration of the full tachyon potential. Additionally we verify that
Schnabl's analytic solution lies on the minimum of the effective tachyon
potential.Comment: v1: 19 pages, 1 figure, 1 table; v2: 20 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, 1
reference added, comments added; v3: 21 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, 4
references added, comments adde
Vortex Lattice Melting into Disentangled Liquid Followed by the 3D-2D Decoupling Transition in YBa_2Cu_4O_8 Single Crystals
A sharp resistance drop associated with vortex lattice melting was observed
in high quality YBa_2Cu_4O_8 single crystals. The melting line is well
described well by the anisotropic GL theory. Two thermally activated flux flow
regions, which were separated by a crossover line B_cr=1406.5(1-T/T_c)/T
(T_c=79.0 K, B_cr in T), were observed in the vortex liquid phase. Activation
energy for each region was obtained and the corresponding dissipation mechanism
was discussed. Our results suggest that the vortex lattice in YBa_2Cu_4O_8
single crystal melts into disentangled liquid, which then undergoes a 3D-2D
decoupling transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, RevTex (Latex2.09
Generation of Stable, Low-Divergence Electron Beams by Laser-Wakefield Acceleration in a Steady-State-Flow Gas Cell
Laser-driven, quasimonoenergetic electron beams of up to ~200 MeV in energy have been observed from steady-state-flow fas cells. These beams emitted within a low-divergence cone of 2.1 ± 0.5 mrad FWHM display unprecedented shot-to-shot stability in energy (2.5% rms), pointing (1.4 mrad rms), and charge (16% rms) owing to a highly reproducible gas-density profile within the interaction volume. Laser-wakefield acceleration in gas cells of this type provides a simple and reliable source of relativistic electrons suitable for applications such as the production of extreme-ultraviolet undulator radiation
Analytic and Asymptotic Methods for Nonlinear Singularity Analysis: a Review and Extensions of Tests for the Painlev\'e Property
The integrability (solvability via an associated single-valued linear
problem) of a differential equation is closely related to the singularity
structure of its solutions. In particular, there is strong evidence that all
integrable equations have the Painlev\'e property, that is, all solutions are
single-valued around all movable singularities. In this expository article, we
review methods for analysing such singularity structure. In particular, we
describe well known techniques of nonlinear regular-singular-type analysis,
i.e. the Painlev\'e tests for ordinary and partial differential equations. Then
we discuss methods of obtaining sufficiency conditions for the Painlev\'e
property. Recently, extensions of \textit{irregular} singularity analysis to
nonlinear equations have been achieved. Also, new asymptotic limits of
differential equations preserving the Painlev\'e property have been found. We
discuss these also.Comment: 40 pages in LaTeX2e. To appear in the Proceedings of the CIMPA Summer
School on "Nonlinear Systems," Pondicherry, India, January 1996, (eds) B.
Grammaticos and K. Tamizhman
Spin injection into a ballistic semiconductor microstructure
A theory of spin injection across a ballistic
ferromagnet-semiconductor-ferromagnet junction is developed for the Boltzmann
regime. Spin injection coefficient is suppressed by the Sharvin
resistance of the semiconductor , where is the
Fermi-surface cross-section. It competes with the diffusion resistances of the
ferromagnets , and in the absence of contact
barriers. Efficient spin injection can be ensured by contact barriers. Explicit
formulae for the junction resistance and the spin-valve effect are presented.Comment: 5 pages, 2 column REVTeX. Explicit prescription relating the results
of the ballistic and diffusive theories of spin injection is added. To this
end, some notations are changed. Three references added, typos correcte
Identifying and understanding cognitive profiles in multiple sclerosis: a role for visuospatial memory functioning
BackgroundThe heterogeneous nature of cognitive impairment in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) hampers understanding of the underlying mechanisms and developing patient-tailored interventions. We aim to identify and classify cognitive profiles in PwMS, comparing these to cognitive status (preserved versus impaired).MethodsWe included 1213 PwMS (72% female, age 45.4 ± 10.7 years, 83% relapsing–remitting MS). Cognitive test scores were converted to Z-scores compared to healthy controls for the functions: attention, inhibition, information processing speed (IPS), verbal fluency and verbal/visuospatial memory. Concerning cognitive status, impaired cognition (CI) was defined as performing at Z ≤ − 1.5 SD on ≥ 2 functions. Cognitive profiles were constructed using latent profile analysis on all cognitive functions. Cognitive profiles or status was classified using gradient boosting decision trees, providing the importance of each feature (demographics, clinical, cognitive and psychological functioning) for the overall classification.ResultsSix profiles were identified, showing variations in overall performance and specific deficits (attention, inhibition, IPS, verbal fluency, verbal memory and visuospatial memory). Across the profiles, IPS was the most impaired function (%CI most preserved profile, Profile 1 = 22.4%; %CI most impaired profile, Profile 6 = 76.6%). Cognitive impairment varied from 11.8% in Profile 1 to 95.3% in Profile 6. Of all cognitive functions, visuospatial memory was most important in classifying profiles and IPS the least (area under the curve (AUC) = 0.910). For cognitive status, IPS was the most important classifier (AUC = 0.997).ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that cognitive heterogeneity in MS reflects a continuum of cognitive severity, distinguishable by distinct cognitive profiles, primarily explained by variations in visuospatial memory functioning.Health and self-regulatio
Pion photoproduction on the nucleon in the quark model
We present a detailed quark-model study of pion photoproduction within the
effective Lagrangian approach. Cross sections and single-polarization
observables are investigated for the four charge channels, , , , and .
Leaving the coupling strength to be a free parameter, we obtain a
reasonably consistent description of these four channels from threshold to the
first resonance region. Within this effective Lagrangian approach, strongly
constrainted by the quark model, we consider the issue of double-counting which
may occur if additional {\it t}-channel contributions are included.Comment: Revtex, 35 pages, 16 eps figures; version to appear on PR
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