6,559 research outputs found

    pH-triggered phase inversion and separation of hydrophobised bacterial cellulose stabilised Pickering emulsions

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    The pH-triggered transitional phase behaviour of Pickering emulsions stabilised by hydrophobised bacterial cellulose (BC) is reported in this work. Neat BC was esterified with acetic (C2–), hexanoic (C6–) and dodecanoic (C12–) acids, respectively. We observed that C6– and C12–BC stabilised emulsions exhibited a pH-triggered reversible transitional phase separation. Water-in-toluene emulsions containing of 60 vol.% dispersed phase stabilised by C6– and C12–BC were produced at pH 5. Lowering the pH of the aqueous phase to 1 did not affect the emulsion type. Increasing the pH to 14, however, caused the emulsions to phase separate. This phase separation was caused by electrostatic repulsion between modified BC due to dissociable acidic surface groups at high pH, which lowered the surface coverage of the water droplets by modified BC. When the pH was re-adjusted to 1 again, w/o emulsions re-formed for C6– and C12–BC stabilised emulsions. C2–BC stabilised emulsions, on the other hand, underwent an irreversible pH-triggered transitional phase separation and inversion. This difference in phase behaviour between C2–BC and C6–/C12–BC was attributed to the hydrolysis of the ester bonds of C2–BC at high pH. This hypothesis is in good agreement with the measured degree of surface substitution (DSS) of modified BC after the pH-triggered experiments. The DSS of C2–BC decreased by 20% whilst the DSS remained constant for C6– and C12–BC

    Study of Λb→Λ(ϕ,η(′))\Lambda_b\to \Lambda (\phi,\eta^{(\prime)}) and Λb→ΛK+K−\Lambda_b\to \Lambda K^+K^- decays

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    We study the charmless two-body Λb→Λ(ϕ,η(′))\Lambda_b\to \Lambda (\phi,\eta^{(\prime)}) and three-body Λb→ΛK+K−\Lambda_b\to \Lambda K^+K^- decays. We obtain B(Λb→Λϕ)=(3.53±0.24)×10−6{\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to \Lambda\phi)=(3.53\pm 0.24)\times 10^{-6} to agree with the recent LHCb measurement. However, we find that B(Λb→Λ(ϕ→)K+K−)=(1.71±0.12)×10−6{\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to \Lambda(\phi\to)K^+ K^-)=(1.71\pm 0.12)\times 10^{-6} is unable to explain the LHCb observation of B(Λb→ΛK+K−)=(15.9±1.2±1.2±2.0)×10−6{\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to\Lambda K^+ K^-)=(15.9\pm 1.2\pm 1.2\pm 2.0)\times 10^{-6}, which implies the possibility for other contributions, such as that from the resonant Λb→K−N∗, N∗→ΛK+\Lambda_b\to K^- N^*,\,N^*\to\Lambda K^+ decay with N∗N^* as a higher-wave baryon state. For Λb→Λη(′)\Lambda_b\to \Lambda \eta^{(\prime)}, we show that B(Λb→Λη, Λη′)=(1.47±0.35,1.83±0.58)×10−6{\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to \Lambda\eta,\,\Lambda\eta^\prime)= (1.47\pm 0.35,1.83\pm 0.58)\times 10^{-6}, which are consistent with the current data of (9.3−5.3+7.3,<3.1)×10−6(9.3^{+7.3}_{-5.3},<3.1)\times 10^{-6}, respectively. Our results also support the relation of B(Λb→Λη)≃B(Λb→Λη′){\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to \Lambda\eta) \simeq {\cal B}(\Lambda_b\to\Lambda\eta^\prime), given by the previous study.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, revised version accepted by EPJ

    Non-leptonic two-body weak decays of Λc(2286)\Lambda_c(2286)

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    We study the non-leptonic two-body weak decays of Λc+(2286)→BnM\Lambda_c^+(2286)\to {\bf B}_n M with Bn{\bf B}_n (MM) representing as the baryon (meson) states. Based on the SU(3)SU(3) flavor symmetry, we can describe most of the data reexamined by the BESIII Collaboration with higher precisions. However, our result of B(Λc+→pπ0)=(5.6±1.5)×10−4{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+ \to p\pi^0)=(5.6\pm 1.5)\times 10^{-4} is larger than the current experimental limit of 3×10−43\times10^{-4} (90\% C.L.) by BESIII. In addition, we find that B(Λc+→Σ+K0)=(8.0±1.6)×10−4{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+ \to \Sigma^+ K^0)=(8.0\pm 1.6)\times 10^{-4}, B(Λc+→Σ+η′)=(1.0−0.8+1.6)×10−2{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+ \to \Sigma^+ \eta^\prime)=(1.0^{+1.6}_{-0.8})\times 10^{-2}, and B(Λc+→pη′)=(12.2−   8.7+14.3)×10−4{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+ \to p \eta^\prime)=(12.2^{+14.3}_{-\,\,\,8.7})\times 10^{-4}, which are accessible to the BESIII experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, revised version accepted by PL

    A generalized bayesian inference method for constraining the interiors of super Earths and sub-Neptunes

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    We aim to present a generalized Bayesian inference method for constraining interiors of super Earths and sub-Neptunes. Our methodology succeeds in quantifying the degeneracy and correlation of structural parameters for high dimensional parameter spaces. Specifically, we identify what constraints can be placed on composition and thickness of core, mantle, ice, ocean, and atmospheric layers given observations of mass, radius, and bulk refractory abundance constraints (Fe, Mg, Si) from observations of the host star's photospheric composition. We employed a full probabilistic Bayesian inference analysis that formally accounts for observational and model uncertainties. Using a Markov chain Monte Carlo technique, we computed joint and marginal posterior probability distributions for all structural parameters of interest. We included state-of-the-art structural models based on self-consistent thermodynamics of core, mantle, high-pressure ice, and liquid water. Furthermore, we tested and compared two different atmospheric models that are tailored for modeling thick and thin atmospheres, respectively. First, we validate our method against Neptune. Second, we apply it to synthetic exoplanets of fixed mass and determine the effect on interior structure and composition when (1) radius, (2) atmospheric model, (3) data uncertainties, (4) semi-major axes, (5) atmospheric composition (i.e., a priori assumption of enriched envelopes versus pure H/He envelopes), and (6) prior distributions are varied. Our main conclusions are: [...]Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, 597, A37, 17 pages, 11 figure

    Generalized thermo vacuum state derived by the partial trace method

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    By virtue of the technique of integration within an ordered product (IWOP) of operators we present a new approach for deriving generalized thermo vacuum state which is simpler in form that the result by using the Umezawa-Takahashi approach, in this way the thermo field dynamics can be developed. Applications of the new state are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, no figure, revtex

    Existence of black holes in Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe dominated by dark energy

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    We study the existence of black holes in a homogeneous and isotropic expanding Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) universe dominated by dark energy. We show that black holes can exist in such a universe by considering some specific McVittie solutions. Although these solutions violate all three energy conditions, the FRW background does satisfy the weak energy condition.Comment: revetex format, 2 figures adde

    Study of Non-Standard Neutrino Interactions with Atmospheric Neutrino Data in Super-Kamiokande I and II

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    In this paper we study non-standard neutrino interactions as an example of physics beyond the standard model using atmospheric neutrino data collected during the Super-Kamiokande I(1996-2001) and II(2003-2005) periods. We focus on flavor-changing-neutral-currents (FCNC), which allow neutrino flavor transitions via neutral current interactions, and effects which violate lepton non-universality (NU) and give rise to different neutral-current interaction-amplitudes for different neutrino flavors. We obtain a limit on the FCNC coupling parameter, varepsilon_{mu tau}, |varepsilon_{mu tau}|<1.1 x 10^{-2} at 90%C.L. and various constraints on other FCNC parameters as a function of the NU coupling, varepsilon_{e e}. We find no evidence of non-standard neutrino interactions in the Super-Kamiokande atmospheric data.Comment: 12 Pages, 14 figures. To be submitted to Phys. Rev.
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