976 research outputs found
Relativistic fine structure oscillator strengths for Li-like ions: C IV - Si XII, S XIV, Ar XVI, Ca XVIII, Ti XX, Cr XXII, and Ni XXVI
Ab initio calculations including relativistic effects employing the
Breit-Pauli R-matrix (BPRM) method are reported for fine structure energy
levels and oscillator strengths upto n = 10 and 0.leq. l .leq.9 for 15 Li-like
ions: C IV, N V, O VI, F VII, Ne VIII, Na IX, Mg X, Al XI, Si XII, S XIV, Ar
XVI, Ca XIII, Ti XX, Cr XXII, and Ni XXVI. About one hundred bound fine
structure energy levels of total angular momenta, 1/2 .leq. J .leq. 17/2 of
even and odd parities, total orbital angular momentum, 0 .leq L .leq. 9 and
spin multiplicity (2S+1) = 2, 4 are considered for each ion. The levels provide
almost 900 dipole allowed and intercombination bound-bound transitions. The
BPRM method enables consideration of large set of transitions with uniform
accuracy compared to the best available theoretical methods. The CC
eigenfunction expansion for each ion includes the lowest 17 fine structure
energy levels of the core configurations 1s^2, 1s2s, 1s2p, 1s3s, 1s3p, and
1s3d. The calculated energies of the ions agree with the measured values to
within 1% for most levels. The transition probabilities show good agreement
with the best available calculated values. The results provide the largest sets
of energy levels and transition rates for the ions and are expected to be
useful in the analysis of X-ray and EUV spectra from astrophysical sources.Comment: 16 pgs., to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Risks and risk mitigation in waste-work: A qualitative study of informal waste workers in Nepal
Objectives
To explore how informal waste workers (IWWs) working in Kathmandu Valley perceive risks associated with waste work and what they do to mitigate them.
Study design
Qualitative Study Design.
Methods
A mix of one-to-one semi-structured interviews (n ​= ​18) and focus group discussions (n ​= ​4) with IWWs were undertaken. Participants were recruited purposively using snowball sampling. All interviews and discussions were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, translated and subsequently analysed thematically.
Results
The IWWs perceived discrimination and health risks as the main risks associated with waste work. IWWs reported considerable stigma and discrimination not only from the wider society but also from family members and within their own profession. Similarly, the occupational risks most frequently recognized were physical injuries and cuts from working with waste. However, the potential risks from hazardous chemicals present in or generated from waste were not articulated by participants. Mitigation strategies to combat the risks included avoidance, greater care and the use of informal means of “protection”. Awareness of the importance of personal protective equipment (PPE) was limited. The key barriers to the use of PPE identified included costs, the lack of easy availability of PPE and the inconvenience of working with PPE.
Conclusions
The vulnerability of informal waste workers in Nepal is multifaceted. A range of policy and regulatory measures, along with interventions that promote greater social inclusion and occupational support are needed to promote IWW’s health and safety
Hamiltonian systems of Calogero type and two dimensional Yang-Mills theory
We obtain integral representations for the wave functions of Calogero-type
systems,corresponding to the finite-dimentional Lie algebras,using exact
evaluation of path integral.We generalize these systems to the case of the
Kac-Moody algebras and observe the connection of them with the two dimensional
Yang-Mills theory.We point out that Calogero-Moser model and the models of
Calogero type like Sutherland one can be obtained either classically by some
reduction from two dimensional Yang-Mills theory with appropriate sources or
even at quantum level by taking some scaling limit.We investigate large k limit
and observe a relation with Generalized Kontsevich Model.Comment: 34 pages,UUITP-6/93 and ITEP-20/9
Homogeneity, Flatness and "Large" Extra Dimensions
We consider a model in which the universe is the direct product of a
(3+1)-dimensional Friedmann, Robertson-Walker (FRW) space and a compact
hyperbolic manifold (CHM). Standard Model fields are confined to a point in the
CHM (i.e. to a brane). In such a space, the decay of massive Kaluza-Klein modes
leads to the injection of any initial bulk entropy into the observable (FRW)
universe. Both Kolmogoro-Sinai mixing due to the non-integrability of flows on
CHMs and the large statistical averaging inherent in the collapse of the
initial entropy onto the brane smooth out any initial inhomogeneities in the
distribution of matter and of 3-curvature on any slice of constant 3-position.
If, as we assume, the initial densities and curvatures in each fundamental
correlation volume are drawn from some universal underlying distributions
independent of location within the space, then these smoothing mechanisms
effectively reduce the density and curvature inhomogeneities projected onto the
FRW. This smoothing is sufficient to account for the current homogeneity and
flatness of the universe. The fundamental scale of physics can be \gsim 1TeV.
All relevant mass and length scales can have natural values in fundamental
units. All large dimensionless numbers, such as the entropy of the universe,
are understood as consequences of the topology of spacetime which is not
explained. No model for the origin of structure is proffered.Comment: minor changes, matches version published in Phys. Rev. Let
Anisotropy and inflation in Bianchi I brane worlds
After a more general assumption on the influence of the bulk on the brane, we
extend some conclusions by Maartens et al. and Santos et al. on the asymptotic
behavior of Bianchi I brane worlds. As a consequence of the nonlocal
anisotropic stresses induced by the bulk, in most of our models, the brane does
not isotropize and the nonlocal energy does not vanish in the limit in which
the mean radius goes to infinity. We have also found the intriguing possibility
that the inflation due to the cosmological constant might be prevented by the
interaction with the bulk. We show that the problem for the mean radius can be
completely solved in our models, which include as particular cases those in the
references above.Comment: 10 pages, improved discussion on the likeliness of
non-isotropization, completed list of references, matches version to appear
in Class. Quantum Gra
CMB Anisotropy of Spherical Spaces
The first-year WMAP data taken at their face value hint that the Universe
might be slightly positively curved and therefore necessarily finite, since all
spherical (Clifford-Klein) space forms M^3 = S^3/Gamma, given by the quotient
of S^3 by a group Gamma of covering transformations, possess this property. We
examine the anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) for all typical
groups Gamma corresponding to homogeneous universes. The CMB angular power
spectrum and the temperature correlation function are computed for the
homogeneous spaces as a function of the total energy density parameter
Omega_tot in the large range [1.01, 1.20] and are compared with the WMAP data.
We find that out of the infinitely many homogeneous spaces only the three
corresponding to the binary dihedral group T*, the binary octahedral group O*,
and the binary icosahedral group I* are in agreement with the WMAP
observations. Furthermore, if Omega_tot is restricted to the interval [1.00,
1.04], the space described by T* is excluded since it requires a value of
Omega_tot which is probably too large being in the range [1.06, 1.07]. We thus
conclude that there remain only the two homogeneous spherical spaces S^3/O* and
S^3/I* with Omega_tot of about 1.038 and 1.018, respectively, as possible
topologies for our Universe.Comment: A version with high resolution sky maps can be obtained at
http://www.physik.uni-ulm.de/theo/qc
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