4,233 research outputs found
Changes in trabecular bone, hematopoiesis and bone marrow vessels in aplastic anemia, primary osteoporosis, and old age
Retrospective histologic analyses of bone biopsies and of post mortem samples from normal persons of different age groups, and of bone biopsies of age- and sex-matched groups of patients with primary osteoporosis and aplastic anemia show characteristic age dependent as well as pathologic changes including atrophy of osseous trabeculae and of hematopoiesis, and changes in the sinusoidal and arterial capillary compartments. These results indicate the possible role of a microvascular defect in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis and aplastic anemia
Ways to teach modelling—a 50 year study
This article describes a sequence of design research projects, some exploratory others more formal, on the teaching of modelling and the analysis of modelling skills. The initial motivation was the author’s observation that the teaching of applied mathematics in UK high schools and universities involved no active modelling by students, but was entirely focused on their learning standards models of a restricted range of phenomena, largely from Newtonian mechanics. This did not develop the numeracy/mathematical literacy that was so clearly important for future citizens. Early explorations started with modelling workshops with high school teachers and mathematics undergraduates, observed and analysed—in some case using video. The theoretical basis of this work has been essentially heuristic, though the Shell Centre studies included, for example, a detailed analysis of formulation processes that has not, as so often, been directly replicated. Recent work has focused on developing a formative assessment approach to teaching modelling that has proved both successful and popular. Finally, the system-level challenges in trying to establish modelling as an integral part of mathematics curricula are briefly discussed
A Correlation Between Inclination and Color in the Classical Kuiper Belt
We have measured broadband optical BVR photometry of 24 Classical and
Scattered Kuiper belt objects (KBOs), approximately doubling the published
sample of colors for these classes of objects. We find a statistically
significant correlation between object color and inclination in the Classical
Kuiper belt using our data. The color and inclination correlation increases in
significance after the inclusion of additional data points culled from all
published works. Apparently, this color and inclination correlation has not
been more widely reported because the Plutinos show no such correlation, and
thus have been a major contaminant in previous samples. The color and
inclination correlation excludes simple origins of color diversity, such as the
presence of a coloring agent without regard to dynamical effects.
Unfortunately, our current knowledge of the Kuiper belt precludes us from
understanding whether the color and inclination trend is due to environmental
factors, such as collisional resurfacing, or primordial population effects. A
perihelion and color correlation is also evident, although this appears to be a
spurious correlation induced by sampling bias, as perihelion and inclination
are correlated in the observed sample of KBOs.Comment: Accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letter
Studying the scale and q^2 dependence of K^+-->pi^+e^+e^- decay
We extract the K^+-->pi^+e^+e^- amplitude scale at q^2=0 from the recent
Brookhaven E865 high-statistics data. We find that the q^2=0 scale is fitted in
excellent agreement with the theoretical long-distance amplitude. Lastly, we
find that the observed q^2 shape is explained by the combined effect of the
pion and kaon form-factor vector-meson-dominance rho, omega and phi poles, and
a charged pion loop coupled to a virtual photon-->e^+e^- transition.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Partial survival and inelastic collapse for a randomly accelerated particle
We present an exact derivation of the survival probability of a randomly
accelerated particle subject to partial absorption at the origin. We determine
the persistence exponent and the amplitude associated to the decay of the
survival probability at large times. For the problem of inelastic reflection at
the origin, with coefficient of restitution , we give a new derivation of
the condition for inelastic collapse, , and determine
the persistence exponent exactly.Comment: 6 page
First-passage and extreme-value statistics of a particle subject to a constant force plus a random force
We consider a particle which moves on the x axis and is subject to a constant
force, such as gravity, plus a random force in the form of Gaussian white
noise. We analyze the statistics of first arrival at point of a particle
which starts at with velocity . The probability that the particle
has not yet arrived at after a time , the mean time of first arrival,
and the velocity distribution at first arrival are all considered. We also
study the statistics of the first return of the particle to its starting point.
Finally, we point out that the extreme-value statistics of the particle and the
first-passage statistics are closely related, and we derive the distribution of
the maximum displacement .Comment: Contains an analysis of the extreme-value statistics not included in
first versio
Beam-size effect and particle losses at Super factory (Italy)
In the colliders, the macroscopically large impact parameters give a
substantial contribution to the standard cross section of the process. These impact parameters may be much larger than the
transverse sizes of the colliding bunches. It means that the standard cross
section of this process has to be substantially modified. In the present paper
such a beam-size effect is calculated for bremsstrahlung at Super factory
developed in Italy. We find out that this effect reduces beam losses due to
bremsstrahlung by about 40%.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Fluctuations of a long, semiflexible polymer in a narrow channel
We consider an inextensible, semiflexible polymer or worm-like chain, with
persistence length and contour length , fluctuating in a cylindrical
channel of diameter . In the regime , corresponding to a long,
tightly confined polymer, the average length of the channel
occupied by the polymer and the mean square deviation from the average vary as
and , respectively, where
and are dimensionless amplitudes. In earlier work
we determined and the analogous amplitude for a
channel with a rectangular cross section from simulations of very long chains.
In this paper we estimate and from the simulations.
The estimates are compared with exact analytical results for a semiflexible
polymer confined in the transverse direction by a parabolic potential instead
of a channel and with a recent experiment. For the parabolic confining
potential we also obtain a simple analytic result for the distribution of
or radial distribution function, which is asymptotically exact
for large and has the skewed shape seen experimentally.Comment: 21 pages, including 4 figure
The semimartingale decomposition of one-dimensional quasidiffusions with natural scale
AbstractQuasidiffusions (with natural scale) are semimartingales obtained as time changed Wiener processes. Examples are diffusions and birth- and death-processes. In general, quasidiffusions are not continuous but they are skip-free. In this note we determine the continuous and the purely discontinuous martingale part of all such quasidiffusions
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