95 research outputs found
On amplitude oscillation of vibrations of strongly anisotropic high-temperature superconductors of BiPbSrCaCuO system
Effect of oscillations of the vibration amplitude of cylindrical sample
suspended by a thin elastic thread and vibrating in a transverse magnetic field
and containing 2D quasi-two-dimensional vortices (pancakes), was observed in
the strongly anisotropic high- superconductor of
system.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Heavy Quark Effective Theory at Large Orders in
The existing derivations of a heavy quark effective theory (HQET) are
analyzed beyond the next-to-leading order in . With one exception they are
found to be incorrect. The problem is a wrong normalization of the heavy quark
field in the effective theory. We argue that the correct effective theory
should be given by a Foldy--Wouthuysen type field transformation to all orders
in . The renormalization of the resulting Lagrangian to order is
performed allowing for inclusion of effects arising through vacuum
polarization. Our results for the anomalous dimensions disagree with the
existing ones. Some applications are considered.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, MZ-TH/93-13 (revised). Major change
Classical Simulation of Relativistic Quantum Mechanics in Periodic Optical Structures
Spatial and/or temporal propagation of light waves in periodic optical
structures offers a rather unique possibility to realize in a purely classical
setting the optical analogues of a wide variety of quantum phenomena rooted in
relativistic wave equations. In this work a brief overview of a few optical
analogues of relativistic quantum phenomena, based on either spatial light
transport in engineered photonic lattices or on temporal pulse propagation in
Bragg grating structures, is presented. Examples include spatial and temporal
photonic analogues of the Zitterbewegung of a relativistic electron, Klein
tunneling, vacuum decay and pair-production, the Dirac oscillator, the
relativistic Kronig-Penney model, and optical realizations of non-Hermitian
extensions of relativistic wave equations.Comment: review article (invited), 14 pages, 7 figures, 105 reference
Dijet production in √s = 7 TeV pp collisions with large rapidity gaps at the ATLAS experiment
A 6.8 nb−¹ sample of pp collision data collected under low-luminosity conditions at √s = 7 TeV by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is used to study diffractive dijet production. Events containing at least two jets with pT > 20 GeV are selected and analysed in terms of variables which discriminate between diffractive and non-diffractive processes. Cross sections are measured differentially in ΔηF, the size of the observable forward region of pseudorapidity which is devoid of hadronic activity, and in an estimator, ξ˜, of the fractional momentum loss of the proton assuming single diffractive dissociation (pp → p X). Model comparisons indicate a dominant non-diffractive contribution up to moderately large ηF and small ξ˜, with a diffractive contribution which is significant at the highest ΔηF and the lowest ξ˜. The rapidity-gap survival probability is estimated from comparisons of the data in this latter region with predictions based on diffractive parton distribution functions
Efficacy and Safety of Three Antiretroviral Regimens for Initial Treatment of HIV-1: A Randomized Clinical Trial in Diverse Multinational Settings
Background:Antiretroviral regimens with simplified dosing and better safety are needed to maximize the efficiency of antiretroviral delivery in resource-limited settings. We investigated the efficacy and safety of antiretroviral regimens with once-daily compared to twice-daily dosing in diverse areas of the world.Methods and Findings:1,571 HIV-1-infected persons (47% women) from nine countries in four continents were assigned with equal probability to open-label antiretroviral therapy with efavirenz plus lamivudine-zidovudine (EFV+3TC-ZDV), atazanavir plus didanosine-EC plus emtricitabine (ATV+DDI+FTC), or efavirenz plus emtricitabine-tenofovir-disoproxil fumarate (DF) (EFV+FTC-TDF). ATV+DDI+FTC and EFV+FTC-TDF were hypothesized to be non-inferior to EFV+3TC-ZDV if the upper one-sided 95% confidence bound for the hazard ratio (HR) was ≤1.35 when 30% of participants had treatment failure.An independent monitoring board recommended stopping study follow-up prior to accumulation of 472 treatment failures. Comparing EFV+FTC-TDF to EFV+3TC-ZDV, during a median 184 wk of follow-up there were 95 treatment failures (18%) among 526 participants versus 98 failures among 519 participants (19%; HR 0.95, 95% CI 0.72-1.27; p = 0.74). Safety endpoints occurred in 243 (46%) participants assigned to EFV+FTC-TDF versus 313 (60%) assigned to EFV+3TC-ZDV (HR 0.64, CI 0.54-0.76; p<0.001) and there was a significant interaction between sex and regimen safety (HR 0.50, CI 0.39-0.64 for women; HR 0.79, CI 0.62-1.00 for men; p = 0.01). Comparing ATV+DDI+FTC to EFV+3TC-ZDV, during a median follow-up of 81 wk there were 108 failures (21%) among 526 participants assigned to ATV+DDI+FTC and 76 (15%) among 519 participants assigned to EFV+3TC-ZDV (HR 1.51, CI 1.12-2.04; p = 0.007).Conclusion: EFV+FTC-TDF had similar high efficacy compared to EFV+3TC-ZDV in this trial population, recruited in diverse multinational settings. Superior safety, especially in HIV-1-infected women, and once-daily dosing of EFV+FTC-TDF are advantageous for use of this regimen for initial treatment of HIV-1 infection in resource-limited countries. ATV+DDI+FTC had inferior efficacy and is not recommended as an initial antiretroviral regimen.Trial Registration:http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00084136
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Radioactive ion beams at the Bevalac: Greatly enhanced fragment separation for high energy beams
Radioactive beams are routinely produced at the Bevalac by the fragmentation process. High energy beams (energies {approximately} 800 MeV/u) produce fragments with nearly the original beam momentum, forming a radioactive ion beam. A new beamline is being constructed which will provide resolution for ions approaching the mass 100 region, compared to the present mass 20 capability, by strongly increasing the dispersion and also increasing the beam size for easier tuning and more effective collimation. In addition, the angular acceptance has been more than doubled. Details of the design will be presented. 6 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab
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