1,833 research outputs found
Archaeological identification of fragmented nuts and fruits from key Asia-Pacific economic tree species using anatomical criteria: comparative analysis of Canarium, Pandanus and Terminalia
The fats, protein and carbohydrates afforded by tree nuts and fruits are key resources for communities from Southeast Asia, through Melanesia, Australia and across Oceania. They are important in long-distance marine trade networks, large-scale ceremonial gatherings, and are core resources in a wide range of subsistence economies, including foraging systems, horticulture and swidden agriculture. Recent archaeobotanical evidence has also shown their deep-time importance, being amongst the earliest foods used in the colonisation of novel environments in Australia and New Guinea, as well as the later colonisation of Near and Remote Oceania. The archaeobotanical methods used to identify fruit and nut-derived plant macrofossils have been largely limited to use of morphological characters of near whole or exceptionally preserved remains, most commonly endocarps, the hard, nutshell-like interior layer of the fruit protecting the seed. Here we detail how anatomical characteristics of endocarps, visible in light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), can be used with surviving morphological features to identify confidently the use of key Asia-Pacific economic trees, in this case, Canarium, Pandanus and Terminalia. Systematic anatomical description allows the identification of these important economic taxa, and separation from the remains of others such as Aleurites and Cocos, when found in a range of archaeological assemblages. This includes the often highly fragmented charred assemblages that can be recovered routinely from most sites with appropriate fine-sieving and flotation methods. These methods provide the basis for a more representative and nuanced understanding of ancient plant use, economy and social systems operating in the region and, being particularly useful in tropical regions, will broaden the archaeobotanical database on ancient foods globally.Introduction Background - Definition of tree fruits and nuts - Structure and use of Canarium - Structure and use of Pandanus - Structure and use of Terminalia - Archaeological visibility Methods - Archaeobotanical analysis of modern comparative material - Archaeobotanical analysis of archaeological material Results - Canarium - Pandanus - Terminalia Discussion Conclusio
Quantitative three-dimensional cardiovascular magnetic resonance myocardial perfusion imaging in systole and diastole
BACKGROUND: Two-dimensional (2D) perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) remains limited by a lack of complete myocardial coverage. Three-dimensional (3D) perfusion CMR addresses this limitation and has recently been shown to be clinically feasible. However, the feasibility and potential clinical utility of quantitative 3D perfusion measurements, as already shown with 2D-perfusion CMR and positron emission tomography, has yet to be evaluated. The influence of systolic or diastolic acquisition on myocardial blood flow (MBF) estimates, diagnostic accuracy and image quality is also unknown for 3D-perfusion CMR. The purpose of this study was to establish the feasibility of quantitative 3D-perfusion CMR for the detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) and to compare systolic and diastolic estimates of MBF.
METHODS: Thirty-five patients underwent 3D-perfusion CMR with data acquired at both end-systole and mid-diastole. MBF and myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) were estimated on a per patient and per territory basis by Fermi-constrained deconvolution. Significant CAD was defined as stenosis ≥70% on quantitative coronary angiography.
RESULTS: Twenty patients had significant CAD (involving 38 out of 105 territories). Stress MBF and MPR had a high diagnostic accuracy for the detection of CAD in both systole (area under curve [AUC]: 0.95 and 0.92, respectively) and diastole (AUC: 0.95 and 0.94). There were no significant differences in the AUCs between systole and diastole (p values >0.05). At stress, diastolic MBF estimates were significantly greater than systolic estimates (no CAD: 3.21 ± 0.50 vs. 2.75 ± 0.42 ml/g/min, p 0.05). Image quality was higher in systole than diastole (median score 3 vs. 2, p = 0.002).
CONCLUSIONS: Quantitative 3D-perfusion CMR is feasible. Estimates of MBF are significantly different for systole and diastole at stress but diagnostic accuracy to detect CAD is high for both cardiac phases. Better image quality suggests that systolic data acquisition may be preferable
3d Spinfoam Quantum Gravity: Matter as a Phase of the Group Field Theory
An effective field theory for matter coupled to three-dimensional quantum
gravity was recently derived in the context of spinfoam models in
hep-th/0512113. In this paper, we show how this relates to group field theories
and generalized matrix models. In the first part, we realize that the effective
field theory can be recasted as a matrix model where couplings between matrices
of different sizes can occur. In a second part, we provide a family of
classical solutions to the three-dimensional group field theory. By studying
perturbations around these solutions, we generate the dynamics of the effective
field theory. We identify a particular case which leads to the action of
hep-th/0512113 for a massive field living in a flat non-commutative space-time.
The most general solutions lead to field theories with non-linear redefinitions
of the momentum which we propose to interpret as living on curved space-times.
We conclude by discussing the possible extension to four-dimensional spinfoam
models.Comment: 17 pages, revtex4, 1 figur
Dark Matter Capture in the First Stars: a Power Source and Limit on Stellar Mass
The annihilation of weakly interacting massive particles can provide an
important heat source for the first (Pop. III) stars, potentially leading to a
new phase of stellar evolution known as a "Dark Star". When dark matter (DM)
capture via scattering off of baryons is included, the luminosity from DM
annihilation may dominate over the luminosity due to fusion, depending on the
DM density and scattering cross-section. The influx of DM due to capture may
thus prolong the lifetime of the Dark Stars. Comparison of DM luminosity with
the Eddington luminosity for the star may constrain the stellar mass of zero
metallicity stars; in this case DM will uniquely determine the mass of the
first stars. Alternatively, if sufficiently massive Pop. III stars are found,
they might be used to bound dark matter properties.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 3 Tables updated captions and graphs, corrected
grammer, and added citations revised for submission to JCA
Limit on the mass of a long-lived or stable gluino
We reinterpret the generic CDF charged massive particle limit to obtain a
limit on the mass of a stable or long-lived gluino. Various sources of
uncertainty are examined. The -hadron spectrum and scattering cross sections
are modeled based on known low-energy hadron physics and the resultant
uncertainties are quantified and found to be small compared to uncertainties
from the scale dependence of the NLO pQCD production cross sections. The
largest uncertainty in the limit comes from the unknown squark mass: when the
squark -- gluino mass splitting is small, we obtain a gluino mass limit of 407
GeV, while in the limit of heavy squarks the gluino mass limit is 397 GeV. For
arbitrary (degenerate) squark masses, we obtain a lower limit of 322 GeV on the
gluino mass. These limits apply for any gluino lifetime longer than
ns, and are the most stringent limits for such a long-lived or stable gluino.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in JHE
Trigger and reconstruction for heavy long-lived charged particles with the ATLAS detector
Long lived charged particles are predicted by many models of physics beyond the standard model (SM). The common signature of such models is a heavy long-lived charged particle with velocity smaller than the speed of light, β<1. This unique signature makes the search for it model independent. This paper presents methods we developed as part of the ATLAS trigger and reconstruction chain for identifying slow particles and measuring their mass. The efficacy of these methods is demonstrated using two models that are different in every aspect except for the existence of long lived charged particles; a GMSB model that includes sleptons with a mass of 100 GeV, and R-Hadrons with a mass of 300 GeV produced in a split SUSY model
Expansion history and f(R) modified gravity
We attempt to fit cosmological data using modified Lagrangians
containing inverse powers of the Ricci scalar varied with respect to the
metric. While we can fit the supernova data well, we confirm the behaviour at medium to high redshifts reported elsewhere and argue
that the easiest way to show that this class of models are inconsistent with
the data is by considering the thickness of the last scattering surface. For
the best fit parameters to the supernova data, the simplest 1/R model gives
rise to a last scattering surface of thickness , inconsistent
with observations.Comment: accepted in JCAP, presentation clarified, results and conclusions
unchange
Searching for energetic cosmic axions in a laboratory experiment: testing the PVLAS anomaly
Astrophysical sources of energetic gamma rays provide the right conditions
for maximal mixing between (pseudo)scalar (axion-like) particles and photons if
their coupling is as strong as suggested by the PVLAS claim. This is
independent of whether or not the axion interaction is standard at all energies
or becomes supressed in the extreme conditions of the stellar interior. The
flux of such particles through the Earth could be observed using a metre long,
Tesla strength superconducting solenoid thus testing the axion interpretation
of the PVLAS anomaly. The rate of events in CAST caused by axions from the Crab
pulsar is also estimated for the PVLAS-favoured parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figur
Some Aspects of Virtual Black Holes
In this paper we shall consistently third quantize modified gravity. Then we
shall analyse certain aspects of virtual black holes in this third quantized
modified gravity. We will see how a statistical mechanical origin for the
Bekenstein-Hawking entropy naturally arises in this model. Furthermore, in this
model the area and thus the entropy of a real macroscopic black hole is
quantized. Virtual black holes cause loss of quantum coherence and this gives
an intrinsic entropy to all physical systems which can be used to define a
direction of time and hence provide a solution to the problem of time.Comment: 11 pages, 0 figures, accepted for publication in JET
Tachyon warm inflationary universe model in the weak dissipative regime
Warm inflationary universe model in a tachyon field theory is studied in the
weak dissipative regime. We develop our model for an exponential potential and
the dissipation parameter =constant. We describe scalar and
tensor perturbations for this scenario.Comment: 9 pages, accepted by European Physical Journal
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