802 research outputs found
High-resolution VUV spectroscopy of Xe Hyperfine splittings, Isotope shifts and isotope dependent Ionization energies.
Tunable narrow-band VUV pulses near 105 nm wavelength were used to study transitions from the ground state to four excited states 5d′[3/2]1, 8d[1/2]1, 8d[3/2]1 and 7s′[1/2]1 by two-step ionization spectroscopy. Isotope shifts and hyperfine splittings were measured. Using King plots, field shift and mass shift contributions were separated
Calogero-Sutherland Approach to Defect Blocks
Extended objects such as line or surface operators, interfaces or boundaries
play an important role in conformal field theory. Here we propose a systematic
approach to the relevant conformal blocks which are argued to coincide with the
wave functions of an integrable multi-particle Calogero-Sutherland problem.
This generalizes a recent observation in 1602.01858 and makes extensive
mathematical results from the modern theory of multi-variable hypergeometric
functions available for studies of conformal defects. Applications range from
several new relations with scalar four-point blocks to a Euclidean inversion
formula for defect correlators.Comment: v2: changes for clarit
Magneto-optical trap for metastable helium at 389 nm
We have constructed a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for metastable triplet
helium atoms utilizing the 2 3S1 -> 3 3P2 line at 389 nm as the trapping and
cooling transition. The far-red-detuned MOT (detuning Delta = -41 MHz)
typically contains few times 10^7 atoms at a relatively high (~10^9 cm^-3)
density, which is a consequence of the large momentum transfer per photon at
389 nm and a small two-body loss rate coefficient (2 * 10^-10 cm^3/s < beta <
1.0 * 10^-9 cm^3/s). The two-body loss rate is more than five times smaller
than in a MOT on the commonly used 2 3S1 -> 2 3P2 line at 1083 nm. Furthermore,
we measure a temperature of 0.46(1) mK, a factor 2.5 lower as compared to the
1083 nm case. Decreasing the detuning to Delta= -9 MHz results in a cloud
temperature as low as 0.25(1) mK, at small number of trapped atoms. The 389 nm
MOT exhibits small losses due to two-photon ionization, which have been
investigated as well.Comment: 11 page
Dietary Acrylamide Intake and the Risk of Lymphatic Malignancies: The Netherlands Cohort Study on Diet and Cancer
BACKGROUND: Acrylamide, a probable human carcinogen, is present in many everyday foods. Since the finding of its presence in foods in 2002, epidemiological studies have found some suggestive associations between dietary acrylamide exposure and the risk of various cancers. The aim of this prospective study is to investigate for the first time the association between dietary acrylamide intake and the risk of several histological subtypes of lymphatic malignancies. METHODS: The Netherlands Cohort Study on diet and cancer includes 120,852 men and women followed-up since September 1986. The number of person years at risk was estimated by using a random sample of participants from the total cohort that was chosen at baseline (n =5,000). Acrylamide intake was estimated from a food frequency questionnaire combined with acrylamide data for Dutch foods. Hazard ratios (HRs) were calculated for acrylamide intake as a continuous variable as well as in categories (quintiles and tertiles), for men and women separately and for never-smokers, using multivariable-adjusted Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: After 16.3 years of follow-up, 1,233 microscopically confirmed cases of lymphatic malignancies were available for multivariable-adjusted analysis. For multiple myeloma and follicular lymphoma, HRs for men were 1.14 (95% CI: 1.01, 1.27) and 1.28 (95% CI: 1.03, 1.61) per 10 µg acrylamide/day increment, respectively. For never-smoking men, the HR for multiple myeloma was 1.98 (95% CI: 1.38, 2.85). No associations were observed for women. CONCLUSION: We found indications that acrylamide may increase the risk of multiple myeloma and follicular lymphoma in men. This is the first epidemiological study to investigate the association between dietary acrylamide intake and the risk of lymphatic malignancies, and more research into these observed associations is warranted
Effect of atomic transfer on the decay of a Bose-Einstein condensate
We present a model describing the decay of a Bose-Einstein condensate, which
assumes the system to remain in thermal equilibrium during the decay. We show
that under this assumption transfer of atoms occurs from the condensate to the
thermal cloud enhancing the condensate decay rate
A shift from papillary to reticular fibroblasts enables tumour-stroma interaction and invasion
Dermatology-oncolog
Therapeutic and educational objectives in robot assisted play for children with autism
“This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder." “Copyright IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.” DOI: 10.1109/ROMAN.2009.5326251This article is a methodological paper that describes the therapeutic and educational objectives that were identified during the design process of a robot aimed at robot assisted play. The work described in this paper is part of the IROMEC project (Interactive Robotic Social Mediators as Companions) that recognizes the important role of play in child development and targets children who are prevented from or inhibited in playing. The project investigates the role of an interactive, autonomous robotic toy in therapy and education for children with special needs. This paper specifically addresses the therapeutic and educational objectives related to children with autism. In recent years, robots have already been used to teach basic social interaction skills to children with autism. The added value of the IROMEC robot is that play scenarios have been developed taking children's specific strengths and needs into consideration and covering a wide range of objectives in children's development areas (sensory, communicational and interaction, motor, cognitive and social and emotional). The paper describes children's developmental areas and illustrates how different experiences and interactions with the IROMEC robot are designed to target objectives in these areas.Final Published versio
A Bright, Slow Cryogenic Molecular Beam Source for Free Radicals
We demonstrate and characterize a cryogenic buffer gas-cooled molecular beam
source capable of producing bright beams of free radicals and refractory
species. Details of the beam properties (brightness, forward velocity
distribution, transverse velocity spread, rotational and vibrational
temperatures) are measured under varying conditions for the molecular species
SrF. Under typical conditions we produce a beam of brightness 1.2 x 10^11
molecules/sr/pulse in the rovibrational ground state, with 140 m/s forward
velocity and a rotational temperature of approximately 1 K. This source
compares favorably to other methods for producing beams of free radicals and
refractory species for many types of experiments. We provide details of
construction that may be helpful for others attempting to use this method.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure
Bounds on OPE coefficients in 4D Conformal Field Theories
We numerically study the crossing symmetry constraints in 4D CFTs, using previously introduced algorithms based on semidefinite programming. We study bounds on OPE coefficients of tensor operators as a function of their scaling dimension and extend previous studies of bounds on OPE coefficients of conserved vector currents to the product groups SO(N)
7SO(M). We also analyze the bounds on the OPE coefficients of the conserved vector currents associated with the groups SO(N), SU(N) and SO(N)
7SO(M) under the assumption that in the singlet channel no scalar operator has dimension less than four, namely that the CFT has no relevant deformations. This is motivated by applications in the context of composite Higgs models, where the strongly coupled sector is assumed to be a spontaneously broken CFT with a global symmetry. \ua9 The Authors
Seed conformal blocks in 4D CFT
We compute in closed analytical form the minimal set of \u201cseed\u201d conformal blocks associated to the exchange of generic mixed symmetry spinor/tensor operators in an arbitrary representation (\u2113, \u2113) of the Lorentz group in four dimensional conformal field theories. These blocks arise from 4-point functions involving two scalars, one (0, |\u2113 12 \u2113|) and one (|\u2113 12 \u2113|, 0) spinors or tensors. We directly solve the set of Casimir equations, that can elegantly be written in a compact form for any (\u2113, \u2113), by using an educated ansatz and reducing the problem to an algebraic linear system. Various details on the form of the ansatz have been deduced by using the so called shadow formalism. The complexity of the conformal blocks depends on the value of p = |\u2113 12 \u2113| and grows with p, in analogy to what happens to scalar conformal blocks in d even space-time dimensions as d increases. These results open the way to bootstrap 4-point functions involving arbitrary spinor/tensor operators in four dimensional conformal field theories
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