588 research outputs found
Domain Wall Dynamics of Phase Interfaces
The statics and dynamics of a surface separating two phases of a relativistic
quantum field theory at or near the critical temperature typically make use of
a free energy as a functional of an order parameter. This free energy
functional also affords an economical description of states away from
equilibrium. The similarities and differences between using a scalar field as
the order parameter versus the energy density are examined, and a peculiarity
is noted. We also point out several conceptual errors in the literature dealing
with the dynamical prefactor in the nucleation rate.Comment: 12 pages plus 5 figure
Critical Exponents for Nuclear Multifragmentation: dynamical lattice model
We present a dynamical and dissipative lattice model, designed to mimic
nuclear multifragmentation. Monte-Carlo simulations with this model show clear
signature of critical behaviour and reproduce experimentally observed
correlations. In particular, using techniques devised for finite systems, we
could obtain two of its critical exponents, whose values are in agreement with
those of the universality class to which nuclear multifragmentation is supposed
to belong.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Nuclear Physics
Tumor Necrosis Factor-Alpha Signaling May Contribute to Chronic West Nile Virus Post-Infectious Proinflammatory State
Background: West Nile virus (WNV) causes a spectrum of human disease ranging from a febrile illness (WNV fever) to severe neuroinvasive disease (meningitis, encephalitis, acute flaccid paralysis). Since WNV gained entry into North America in 1999, clinicians caring for WNV survivors have observed persistent neurological symptoms occurring long-after the production of neutralizing antibodies and clearance of the virus. Accordingly, alternative pathogeneses other than direct viral invasion have been hypothesized to explain these post-infectious symptoms. The dominant hypothesis is that antiviral inflammatory responses triggered initially to clear WNV may persist to promote a post-infectious proinflammatory state.
Methods: In 4 serologically-confirmed WNV patients with persistent post-infectious symptoms (3 WNV fever, 1 neuroinvasive disease), we ordered a comprehensive cytokine panel at weeks 8, 10, 12, and 36 months post-onset of illness, respectively, to better understand the pathophysiology of the protracted symptoms.
Results: All patients had abnormally elevated tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), a major molecule triggering antiviral cytokines and chronic inflammation in many human autoimmune diseases, but heretofore not reported to be upregulated in human WNV infection. Three patients also had elevations of other proinflammatory proteins. Major symptoms included fatigue, arthralgias, myalgias, generalized or multifocal pain or weakness, imbalance, headaches, cognitive problems, and symptoms of dysautonomia.
Conclusion: The findings provide support for an extended post-infectious proinflammatory state that may contribute to chronic inflammation and long-term morbidity in some WNV survivors and further suggest that TNF-α may play a pathogenic role in initiating this inflammatory environment. Clinical trials may be warranted to determine if TNF-α inhibitors or other immunosuppressive agents can improve patient outcomes
Spin Transfer Measurements for (p,n) Reactions at Intermediate Energy
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 87-1440
Measurements of Gamow-Teller Strength Distributions in Masses 13 and 15
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 87-1440
Homogeneous nucleation of quark-gluon plasma, finite size effects and long-lived metastable objects
The general formalism of homogeneous nucleation theory is applied to study
the hadronization pattern of the ultra-relativistic quark-gluon plasma (QGP)
undergoing a first order phase transition. A coalescence model is proposed to
describe the evolution dynamics of hadronic clusters produced in the nucleation
process. The size distribution of the nucleated clusters is important for the
description of the plasma conversion. The model is most sensitive to the
initial conditions of the QGP thermalization, time evolution of the energy
density, and the interfacial energy of the plasma-hadronic matter interface.
The rapidly expanding QGP is first supercooled by about . Then it reheats again up to the critical temperature T_c. Finally it
breaks up into hadronic clusters and small droplets of plasma. This fast
dynamics occurs within the first . The finite size effects and
fluctuations near the critical temperature are studied. It is shown that a drop
of longitudinally expanding QGP of the transverse radius below 4.5 fm can
display a long-lived metastability. However, both in the rapid and in the
delayed hadronization scenario, the bulk pion yield is emitted by sources as
large as 3-4.5 fm. This may be detected experimentally both by a HBT
interferometry signal and by the analysis of the rapidity distributions of
particles in narrow p_T-intervals at small p_T on an event-by-event basis.Comment: 29 pages, incl. 12 figures and 1 table; to be published in Phys. Rev.
The structure of oppositionality: Response disposition and situational aspects
Background: The Amsterdam Scale of Oppositionality (ASO) is a recently developed self-report instrument to measure the full range of oppositionality. It was used to test the assumption that oppositionality can best be conceptualized as a combination of emotions and behaviors varying across contexts, i.e., with parents, peers and authority figures. Method: The sample consisted of 560 boys and 598 girls, aged 8 to 12 years. The thirty items of the ASO, grouped in item parcels, were analyzed using confirmatory factor analyses. Results: Results confirmed the main hypothesis. The best fitting models contained strongly related emotional and behavioral factors and three mutually related situational factors. Oppositionality appeared to be to a large extent situation-specific. Girls are more affected by the situation than boys and show less oppositionality only outside the family context. Conclusions: Results are discussed with respect to the concept of oppositionality, varying expectations for interpersonal consequences, and implications for clinical assessment and studies of inter-informant reliability
Spin Transfer Measurements for (p,n) Reactions at Intermediate Energy
This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY 87-1440
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