18,683 research outputs found
Bubbles created from vacuum fluctuation
We show that the bubbles can be created from vacuum
fluctuation in certain De Sitter universe, so the space-time foam-like
structure might really be constructed from bubbles of in the
very early inflating phase of our universe. But whether such foam-like
structure persisted during the later evolution of the universe is a problem
unsolved now.Comment: 6 page
An exact solution of spherical mean-field plus orbit-dependent non-separable pairing model with two non-degenerate j-orbits
An exact solution of nuclear spherical mean-field plus orbit-dependent
non-separable pairing model with two non-degenerate j-orbits is presented. The
extended one-variable Heine-Stieltjes polynomials associated to the Bethe
ansatz equations of the solution are determined, of which the sets of the zeros
give the solution of the model, and can be determined relatively easily. A
comparison of the solution to that of the standard pairing interaction with
constant interaction strength among pairs in any orbit is made. It is shown
that the overlaps of eigenstates of the model with those of the standard
pairing model are always large, especially for the ground and the first excited
state. However, the quantum phase crossover in the non-separable pairing model
cannot be accounted for by the standard pairing interaction.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, LaTe
Nutrition in cardiovascular disease: salt in hypertension and heart failure
There is much evidence for a causal relationship between salt intake and blood pressure (BP). The current salt intake in many countries is between 9 and 12 g/day. A reduction in salt intake to the recommended level of 5-6 g/day lowers BP in both hypertensive and normotensive individuals. A further reduction to 3-4 g/day has a much greater effect. Prospective studies and outcome trials have demonstrated that a lower salt intake is associated with a decreased risk of cardiovascular disease. Increasing evidence also suggests that a high salt intake is directly related to left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) independent of BP. Both raised BP and LVH are important risk factors for heart failure. It is therefore possible that a lower salt intake could prevent the development of heart failure. In patients who already have heart failure, a high salt intake aggravates the retention of salt and water, thereby exacerbating heart failure symptoms and progression of the disease. A lower salt intake plays an important role in the management of heart failure. Despite this, currently there is no clear evidence on how far salt intake should be reduced in heart failure. Our personal view is that these patients should reduce their salt intake to <5 g/day, i.e. the maximum intake recommended by the World Health Organisation for all adults. If salt intake is successfully reduced, there may well be a need for a reduction in diuretic dosag
Excitation of nonlinear ion acoustic waves in CH plasmas
Excitation of nonlinear ion acoustic wave (IAW) by an external electric field
is demonstrated by Vlasov simulation. The frequency calculated by the
dispersion relation with no damping is verified much closer to the resonance
frequency of the small-amplitude nonlinear IAW than that calculated by the
linear dispersion relation. When the wave number increases,
the linear Landau damping of the fast mode (its phase velocity is greater than
any ion's thermal velocity) increases obviously in the region of in which the fast mode is weakly damped mode. As a result, the deviation
between the frequency calculated by the linear dispersion relation and that by
the dispersion relation with no damping becomes larger with
increasing. When is not large, such as , the nonlinear IAW can be excited by the driver with the linear frequency
of the modes. However, when is large, such as
, the linear frequency can not be applied to exciting the
nonlinear IAW, while the frequency calculated by the dispersion relation with
no damping can be applied to exciting the nonlinear IAW.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, Accepted by POP, Publication in August 1
Photosynthetic characterization of a rolled leaf mutant of rice (Oryza sativa L.)
A new rolling leaf rice mutant was identified which showed an apparently straighter longitudinal shape normal transverse rolling characters at all developing stages. The chlorophyll contents per fresh weight of this mutant leaves were lower than those of wild-type. The electron transfer rate (ETR) and photochemical quenching (qP) were a little higher than those of wild-type. However, because of significant increase of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), the maximal photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry (Fv/Fm) and the efficiency of excitation energy trapping by open PSII reaction centers in the light–adapted state (Fv’/Fm’) were lower than those of wild-type. Low temperature fluorescence analysis showed that rolling leaf mutant assigned more excited energy to photosystem I (PSI) than to PSII. The superoxide dismutase (SOD) content, soluble sugar content, proline content and malonaldehyde (MDA) content of the rolling leaf mutant were nearly 39.4, 91.2, 96.7 and 143.7% of those of wild-type, respectively. The great increase of MDA content suggests that membrane lipid system was damaged in rolling leaf mutant leaves. These results indicate that rolling leaf mutant decrease the efficiency of light utilization compared to the wild-type. This was because of the reduction of leaf area and chlorophyll contents, and the dissipation of more excitation energy as NPQ as a result of avoiding potential damage of membrane structure.Key words: Malonaldehyde (MDA), photosynthetic characterization, rice, rolling leaf mutant
Mastering the Master Space
Supersymmetric gauge theories have an important but perhaps under-appreciated
notion of a master space, which controls the full moduli space. For
world-volume theories of D-branes probing a Calabi-Yau singularity X the
situation is particularly illustrative. In the case of one physical brane, the
master space F is the space of F-terms and a particular quotient thereof is X
itself. We study various properties of F which encode such physical quantities
as Higgsing, BPS spectra, hidden global symmetries, etc. Using the plethystic
program we also discuss what happens at higher number N of branes. This letter
is a summary and some extensions of the key points of a longer companion paper
arXiv:0801.1585.Comment: 10 pages, 1 Figur
Adaptive Vibration Control for an Active Mass Damper of a High-rise Building
As a kind of large flexible structure, high-rise buildings
need to consider wind-resistant and anti-seismic problems
for the safety of occupants and properties, especially in coastal
areas. This paper proposes an infinite dimensional model and an
adaptive boundary control law for an active mass damper(AMD)
on this question. The dynamic model of the high-rise building is
a combination of some storeys which have flexible walls and rigid
floors under a series of physical conditions. Then the adaptive
boundary controller is acted on an AMD which is equipped on
the top floor, in order to suppress the vibration of every floor
and guarantee the comfort of residents. Moreover, simulations
and experiments are carried out on a two-floor flexible building
to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed control strategy
New Luttinger liquid physics from photoemission on LiMoO
Temperature dependent high resolution photoemission spectra of quasi-1
dimensional LiMoO evince a strong renormalization of its
Luttinger liquid density-of-states anomalous exponent. We trace this new effect
to interacting charge neutral critical modes that emerge naturally from the
two-band nature of the material. LiMoO is shown thereby to
be a paradigm material that is capable of revealing new Luttinger physics.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication by Phys. Rev. Let
Convergence of energy-dependent incommensurate antiferromagnetic neutron scattering peaks to commensurate resonance in underdoped bilayer cuprates
The recently discovered coexistence of incommensurate antiferromagnetic
neutron scattering peaks and commensurate resonance in underdoped
YBaCuO is calling for an explanation. Within the t-J model, the
doping and energy dependence of the spin dynamics of the underdoped bilayer
cuprates in the normal state is studied based on the fermion-spin theory by
considering the bilayer interactions. Incommensurate peaks are found at
and at low energies with
initially increasing with doping at low dopings and then saturating at
higher dopings. These incommensurate peaks are suppressed, and the parameter
is reduced with increasing energy. Eventually it converges to the
resonance peak. Thus the recently observed coexistence is
interpreted in terms of bilayer interactions.Comment: 15 pages, Revtex, five figures are included, accepted for publication
in Phys. Rev.
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