912 research outputs found
Study of star formation in RCW 106 using far infrared observations
High resolution far-infrared observations of a large area of the star forming
complex RCW 106 obtained using the TIFR 1-metre balloon-borne telescope are
presented. Intensity maps have been obtained simultaneously in two bands
centred around 150 & 210 micron. Intensity maps have also been obtained at the
4 IRAS bands using HIRES processed IRAS data. From the 150 & 210 micron maps,
reliable maps of dust temperature and optical depth have been generated. The
star formation in this complex has occured in five linear subclumps. Using the
map at 210 micron, which has a spatial resolution superior to that of the IRAS
at 100 micron, 23 sources have been identified. The SED and luminosity of these
sources have been determined using the associations wit hthe IRAS maps.
Luminosity distribution of these sources has been obtained. Assuming these
embedded sources to be ZAMS stars and using the mass-luminosity relation, the
power law slope of the Initial Mass Function is found to be -1.73+-0.5. This
index for this very young complex is about the same as that for more evolved
complexes and clusters. Radiation transfer calculations in spherical geometry
have been undertaken to fit the SEDs of 13 sources with fluxes in both the TIFR
and IRAS bands. From this, the r^-2 density distribution in the envelopes is
ruled out. Finally, a correlation is seen between the luminosity of embedded
sources and the computed dust masses of the envelopes.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (21 pages, 8 figures & 3 tables
Extracting Br(omega->pi^+ pi^-) from the Time-like Pion Form-factor
We extract the G-parity-violating branching ratio Br(omega->pi^+ pi^-) from
the effective rho-omega mixing matrix element Pi_{rho omega}(s), determined
from e^+e^- -> pi^+ pi^- data. The omega->pi^+ pi^- partial width can be
determined either from the time-like pion form factor or through the constraint
that the mixed physical propagator D_{rho omega}^{mu nu}(s) possesses no poles.
The two procedures are inequivalent in practice, and we show why the first is
preferred, to find finally Br(omega->pi^+ pi^-) = 1.9 +/- 0.3%.Comment: 12 pages (published version
Singularly Perturbed Monotone Systems and an Application to Double Phosphorylation Cycles
The theory of monotone dynamical systems has been found very useful in the
modeling of some gene, protein, and signaling networks. In monotone systems,
every net feedback loop is positive. On the other hand, negative feedback loops
are important features of many systems, since they are required for adaptation
and precision. This paper shows that, provided that these negative loops act at
a comparatively fast time scale, the main dynamical property of (strongly)
monotone systems, convergence to steady states, is still valid. An application
is worked out to a double-phosphorylation ``futile cycle'' motif which plays a
central role in eukaryotic cell signaling.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, corrected typos, references remove
Nonequilibrium dynamics of random field Ising spin chains: exact results via real space RG
Non-equilibrium dynamics of classical random Ising spin chains are studied
using asymptotically exact real space renormalization group. Specifically the
random field Ising model with and without an applied field (and the Ising spin
glass (SG) in a field), in the universal regime of a large Imry Ma length so
that coarsening of domains after a quench occurs over large scales. Two types
of domain walls diffuse in opposite Sinai random potentials and mutually
annihilate. The domain walls converge rapidly to a set of system-specific
time-dependent positions {\it independent of the initial conditions}. We obtain
the time dependent energy, magnetization and domain size distribution
(statistically independent). The equilibrium limits agree with known exact
results. We obtain exact scaling forms for two-point equal time correlation and
two-time autocorrelations. We also compute the persistence properties of a
single spin, of local magnetization, and of domains. The analogous quantities
for the spin glass are obtained. We compute the two-point two-time correlation
which can be measured by experiments on spin-glass like systems. Thermal
fluctuations are found to be dominated by rare events; all moments of truncated
correlations are computed. The response to a small field applied after waiting
time , as measured in aging experiments, and the fluctuation-dissipation
ratio are computed. For ,
, it equals its equilibrium value X=1, though time
translational invariance fails. It exhibits for aging regime
with non-trivial , different from mean field.Comment: 55 pages, 9 figures, revte
Magnetic structure of CeRhIn_5 as a function of pressure and temperature
We report magnetic neutron-diffraction and electrical resistivity studies on
single crystals of the heavy-fermion antiferromagnet CeRhIn at pressures
up to 2.3 GPa. These experiments show that the staggered moment of Ce and the
incommensurate magnetic structure change weakly with applied pressure up to
1.63 GPa, where resistivity, specific heat and NQR measurements confirm the
presence of bulk superconductivity. This work places new constraints on an
interpretation of the relationship between antiferromagnetism and
unconventional superconductivity in CeRhIn.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A terminal assessment of stages theory : introducing a dynamic states approach to entrepreneurship
Stages of Growth models were the most frequent theoretical approach to understanding entrepreneurial business growth from 1962 to 2006; they built on the growth imperative and developmental models of that time. An analysis of the universe of such models (N=104) published in the management literature shows no consensus on basic constructs of the approach, nor is there any empirical confirmations of stages theory. However, by changing two propositions of the stages models, a new dynamic states approach is derived. The dynamic states approach has far greater explanatory power than its precursor, and is compatible with leading edge research in entrepreneurship
Measurements of Six-Body Hadronic Decays of the D^0 Charmed Meson
Using data collected by the FOCUS experiment at Fermilab, we report the
discovery of the decay modes D^0 --> K- pi+ pi+ pi+ pi- pi- and D^0 --> pi+ pi+
pi+ pi- pi- pi-. With a sample of 48 +/- 10 reconstructed D^0 --> K- pi+ pi+
pi+ pi- pi- decays and 149 +/- 17 reconstructed D^0 --> pi+ pi+ pi+ pi- pi- pi-
decays, we measure the following relative branching ratios:
The first errors are statistical and the second are systematic. The branching
fraction of the Cabibbo suppressed six-body decay mode is measured to be a
factor of two higher than the branching fraction of the Cabibbo favored
six-body decay mode.Comment: To be submitted to Phys. Lett.
Measurement of the Ratio of the Vector to Pseudoscalar Charm Semileptonic Decay Rate \Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K*0 mu+ nu)/\Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K0 mu+ nu)
Using a high statistics sample of photo-produced charm particles from the
FOCUS experiment at Fermilab, we report on the measurement of the ratio of
semileptonic rates \Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K pi mu+ nu)/\Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K0 mu+ nu)=
0.625 +/- 0.045 +/- 0.034. Allowing for the K pi S-wave interference measured
previously by FOCUS, we extract the vector to pseudoscalar ratio \Gamma(D+ >
ANTI-K*0 mu+ nu)/\Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K0 mu+ nu)= 0.594 +/- 0.043 +/- 0.033 and the
ratio \Gamma(D+ > ANTI-K0 mu+ nu)/\Gamma(D+ > K- pi+ pi+)= 1.019 +/- 0.076 +/-
0.065. Our results show a lower ratio for \Gamma(D > K* \ell nu})/\Gamma(D > K
\ell nu) than has been reported recently and indicate the current world average
branching fractions for the decays D+ >ANTI-K0(mu+, e+) nu are low. Using the
PDG world average for B(D+ > K- pi+ pi+) we extract B(D+ > ANIT-K0 mu+
nu)=(9.27 +/- 0.69 +/- 0.59 +/- 0.61)%.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
Researcher as Artist/Artist as Researcher
This is a postmodern article that is nontraditional in its form, content, and mode of representation. Upon recognizing that we share interests and common experiences as artists, we decided to collect life history information from each other about our artistic experiences. Thus we have become, simultaneously, "the researched" and "the re searcher." In these conversations, we explore the ways in which we were each guided by our past, very strong aesthetic and artistic experiences. We also include the voices of other researchers and artists in our conversations as we explore the influences of art in the formation of our worldviews.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68774/2/10.1177_107780049500100107.pd
An Integrated TCGA Pan-Cancer Clinical Data Resource to Drive High-Quality Survival Outcome Analytics
For a decade, The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) program collected clinicopathologic annotation data along with multi-platform molecular profiles of more than 11,000 human tumors across 33 different cancer types. TCGA clinical data contain key features representing the democratized nature of the data collection process. To ensure proper use of this large clinical dataset associated with genomic features, we developed a standardized dataset named the TCGA Pan-Cancer Clinical Data Resource (TCGA-CDR), which includes four major clinical outcome endpoints. In addition to detailing major challenges and statistical limitations encountered during the effort of integrating the acquired clinical data, we present a summary that includes endpoint usage recommendations for each cancer type. These TCGA-CDR findings appear to be consistent with cancer genomics studies independent of the TCGA effort and provide opportunities for investigating cancer biology using clinical correlates at an unprecedented scale. Analysis of clinicopathologic annotations for over 11,000 cancer patients in the TCGA program leads to the generation of TCGA Clinical Data Resource, which provides recommendations of clinical outcome endpoint usage for 33 cancer types
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