1,309 research outputs found
Massive Stars in the Range : Evolution and Nucleosynthesis. II. the Solar Metallicity Models
We present the evolutionary properties of a set of massive stellar models
(namely 13, 15, 20 and 25 ) from the main sequence phase up to the
onset of the iron core collapse. All these models have initial solar chemical
composition, i.e. Y=0.285 and Z=0.02. A 179 isotope network, extending from
neutron up to and fully coupled to the evolutionary code has been
adopted from the Carbon burning onward. Our results are compared, whenever
possible, to similar computations available in literature.Comment: 42 pages, 18 figures, 26 tables, accepted for publicatin in ApJ
Contribution of the massive photon decay channel to neutrino cooling of neutron stars
We consider massive photon decay reactions via intermediate states of
electron-electron-holes and proton-proton-holes into neutrino-antineutrino
pairs in the course of neutron star cooling. These reactions may become
operative in hot neutron stars in the region of proton pairing where the photon
due to the Higgs-Meissner effect acquires an effective mass that
is small compared to the corresponding plasma frequency. The contribution of
these reactions to neutrino emissivity is calculated; it varies with the
temperature and the photon mass as
for . Estimates show that these processes appear as extra
efficient cooling channels of neutron stars at temperatures K.Comment: accepted to publication in Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz. (JETP
IN OPERATED FALLOT IS RV TELEDIASTOLIC VOLUME > 170 ML/M2 A VALID CUT-OFF FOR INDICATION TO PULMONARY VALVE REPLACEMENT?
Patients with tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) repaired by means a transannular patch, suffer of residual pulmonary regurgitation leading to right ventricle (RV) dilatation. Several groups have recently demonstrated that if these pts are re-operated for pulmonary valve implant (PVR) since RV tele-diastolic volume (RVtd Vol) exceeds 170 mL/m2, the RV volumes do not decrease to normal values. However the beneficial hemodynamic effects of PVR still have to be weighted against the need for re-operation for valve failure.-
Relation of C-reactive protein to body fat distribution and features of the metabolic syndrome in Europeans and South Asians.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between circulating C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations and indices of body fat distribution and the insulin resistance syndrome in South Asians and Europeans. DESIGN: : Cross-sectional study. SUBJECTS: A total of 113 healthy South Asian and European men and women in West London (age 40-55 y, body mass index (BMI) 17-34 kg/m(2)). MEASUREMENTS: Fatness and fat distribution parameters (by anthropometry, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and abdominal CT scan); oral glucose tolerance test with insulin response; modified fat tolerance test; and CRP concentration by sensitive ELISA. RESULTS: Median CRP level in South Asian women was nearly double that in European women (1.35 vs 0.70 mg/1, P=0.05). Measures of obesity and CRP concentration were significantly associated in both ethnic groups. The correlation to CRP was especially strong among South Asians (P0.15). CONCLUSION: We suggest that adiposity and in particular visceral adipose tissue is a key promoter of low-grade chronic inflammation. This observation may in part account for the association of CRP with markers of the metabolic syndrome. Future studies should confirm whether CRP concentrations are elevated in South Asians and whether losing weight by exercise or diet, or reduction in visceral fat mass, is associated with reduction in plasma CRP concentrations
Effect of strain on surface diffusion in semiconductor heteroepitaxy
We present a first-principles analysis of the strain renormalization of the
cation diffusivity on the GaAs(001) surface. For the example of
In/GaAs(001)-c(4x4) it is shown that the binding of In is increased when the
substrate lattice is expanded. The diffusion barrier \Delta E(e) has a
non-monotonic strain dependence with a maximum at compressive strain values (e
0) studied.
We discuss the consequences of spatial variations of both the binding energy
and the diffusion barrier of an adatom caused by the strain field around a
heteroepitaxial island. For a simplified geometry, we evaluate the speed of
growth of two coherently strained islands on the GaAs(001) surface and identify
a growth regime where island sizes tend to equalize during growth due to the
strain dependence of surface diffusion.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, LaTeX2e, to appear in Phys. Rev. B (2001). Other
related publications can be found at
http://www.rz-berlin.mpg.de/th/paper.htm
A semi-lagrangian scheme for hamilton-jacobi-bellman equations on networks
We present a semi-Lagrangian scheme for the approximation of a class of Hamilton- Jacobi-Bellman (HJB) equations on networks. The scheme is explicit, consistent, and stable for large time steps. We prove a convergence result and two error estimates. For an HJB equation with space-independent Hamiltonian, we obtain a first order error estimate. In the general case, we provide, under a hyperbolic CFL condition, a convergence estimate of order one half. The theoretical results are discussed and validated in a numerical tests section
Neutrino emission from dense matter, and neutron star thermal evolution
A brief review is given of neutrino emission processes in dense matter, with particular emphasis on recent developments. These include direct Urca processes for nucleons and hyperons, which can give rise to rapid energy loss from the stellar core without exotic matter, and the effect of band structure on neutrino bremsstrahlung from electrons in the crust, which results in much lower energy losses by this process than had previously been estimated
Metal-macrofauna interactions determine microbial community structure and function in copper contaminated sediments
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Sentinel-1 P-SBAS data for the update of the state of activity of national landslide inventory maps
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