4,591 research outputs found
A priori mixing of mesons and the |Delta I|=1/2 rule in K\to\pi\pi
We consider the hypothesis of a priori mixings in the mass eigenstates of
mesons to obtain the |Delta I|=1/2 rule in K\to\pi\pi. The Hamiltonian
responsible for the transition is the strong interacting one. The experimental
data are described using the isospin symmetry relations between the strong
coupling constants
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies of non-stoichiometric superconducting NbB2+x
Polycrystalline samples of NbB2+x with nominal composition (B/Nb) = 2.0, 2.1,
2.2, 2.3, 2.4 and 2.5 were studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS).
The spectra revealed Nb and B oxides on the surface of the samples, mainly B2O3
and Nb2O5. After Ar ion etching the intensity of Nb and B oxides decreased. The
Nb 3d5/2 and B 1s core levels associated with the chemical states (B/Nb) were
identified and they do not change with etching time. The Binding Energy of the
Nb 3d5/2 and B 1s core levels increase as boron content increases, suggesting a
positive chemical shift in the core levels. On the other hand, analysis of
Valence Band spectra showed that the contribution of the Nb 4d states slightly
decreased while the contribution of the B 2p(pi) states increased as the boron
content increased. As a consequence, the electronic and superconducting
properties were substantially modified, in good agreement with band-structure
calculations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Perception Of Cultural Competence in Nurse Practitioners
Purpose: Nurse practitioners are at the forefront in providing quality care to diverse populations and must become cognizant of the importance of cultural competence in caring for diverse patients. The purpose of this study was to examine perceptions of cultural competence and its integration in the delivery of health care in nurse practitioners practicing in a Mexican-American region of South Texas.
Methodology: A descriptive, qualitative design using grounded theory and purposive sampling was utilized for this study. Sixteen nurse practitioners, fourteen females and two males, participated in the study. Qualitative data collection was elicited through individual interviews and a focus group. The selected participants included nurse practitioners who were employed for at least eight hours per week in a primary or acute care setting. The study included a demographic questionnaire and a nine-item interview guide created by the researchers to elicit thoughtful reflection on the participantsâ perceptions of cultural competence and how cultural competence is integrated in their practice.
Main findings: Data analysis involved grouping of response similarities until no new categories emerged. Affinity among the categories resulted in linkage into four distinct core categories or emerging themes. These themes provided a summary of what the nurse practitioners working with a Mexican-American population perceived as cultural competence and its integration in the delivery of health care. The four emerging themes include: 1) Culture as multifaceted; 2) Communication as empowerment; 3) Cultural dissonance; 4) Influence of myths, traditions, and complementary modalities.
Principle conclusions: The study findings highlight the importance of advanced practice nursesâ efforts to continue to learn and increase their knowledge base and sensitivities to the culture of their clients in all dimensions of health care. The findings also support previous research and strengthen the understanding of the importance of cultural competency in the delivery of care to minority populations
Entanglement and alpha entropies for a massive scalar field in two dimensions
We find the analytic expression of the trace of powers of the reduced density
matrix on an interval of length L, for a massive boson field in 1+1 dimensions.
This is given exactly (except for a non universal factor) in terms of a finite
sum of solutions of non linear differential equations of the Painlev\'e V type.
Our method is a generalization of one introduced by Myers and is based on the
explicit calculation of quantities related to the Green function on a plane,
where boundary conditions are imposed on a finite cut. It is shown that the
associated partition function is related to correlators of exponential
operators in the Sine-Gordon model in agreement with a result by Delfino et al.
We also compute the short and long distance leading terms of the entanglement
entropy. We find that the bosonic entropic c-function interpolates between the
Dirac and Majorana fermion ones given in a previous paper. Finally, we study
some universal terms for the entanglement entropy in arbitrary dimensions
which, in the case of free fields, can be expressed in terms of the two
dimensional entropy functions.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
Vibration-induced granular segregation: a phenomenon driven by three mechanisms
The segregation of large spheres in a granular bed under vertical vibrations
is studied. In our experiments we systematically measure rise times as a
function of density, diameter and depth; for two different sinusoidal
excitations. The measurements reveal that: at low frequencies, inertia and
convection are the only mechanisms behind segregation. Inertia (convection)
dominates when the relative density is greater (less) than one. At high
frequencies, where convection is suppressed, fluidization of the granular bed
causes either buoyancy or sinkage and segregation occurs.Comment: 4 pages. 3 figures, revtex4, to appear in PRL (in press
Optical Properties of a \theta-Vacuum
Chern-Simons (CS) forms generalize the minimal coupling between gauge
potentials and point charges, to sources represented by charged extended
objects (branes). The simplest example of such a CS-brane coupling is a domain
wall coupled to the electromagnetic CS three-form. This describes a
topologically charged interface where the CS form AdA is supported, separating
two three-dimensional spatial regions in 3+1 spacetime. Electrodynamics at
either side of the brane is described by the same Maxwell's equations, but
those two regions have different vacua, characterized by a different value of
the \theta-parameter multiplying the Pontryagin form F ^ F. The \theta-term is
the abelian version of the concept introduced by 't Hooft for the resolution of
the U(1) problem in QCD. We point out that CS-generalized classical
electrodynamics shows new phenomena when two neighboring regions with different
\theta-vacua are present. These topological effects result from surface effects
induced by the boundary and we explore the consequences of such boundary
effects for the propagation of the electromagnetic field in Maxwell theory.
Several features, including optical and electrostatic/magnetostatic responses,
which may be observable in condensed matter systems, like topological
insulators, are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
Neuronal synchrony: peculiarity and generality
Synchronization in neuronal systems is a new and intriguing application of dynamical systems theory. Why are neuronal systems different as a subject for synchronization? (1) Neurons in themselves are multidimensional nonlinear systems that are able to exhibit a wide variety of different activity patterns. Their âdynamical repertoireâ includes regular or chaotic spiking, regular or chaotic bursting, multistability, and complex transient regimes. (2) Usually, neuronal oscillations are the result of the cooperative activity of many synaptically connected neurons (a neuronal circuit). Thus, it is necessary to consider synchronization between different neuronal circuits as well. (3) The synapses that implement the coupling between neurons are also dynamical elements and their intrinsic dynamics influences the process of synchronization or entrainment significantly. In this review we will focus on four new problems: (i) the synchronization in minimal neuronal networks with plastic synapses (synchronization with activity dependent coupling), (ii) synchronization of bursts that are generated by a group of nonsymmetrically coupled inhibitory neurons (heteroclinic synchronization), (iii) the coordination of activities of two coupled neuronal networks (partial synchronization of small composite structures), and (iv) coarse grained synchronization in larger systems (synchronization on a mesoscopic scale
A Survey for Young Spectroscopic Binary K7-M4 Stars in Ophiuchus
This paper describes a high-resolution, infrared spectroscopic survey of
young, low-mass stars designed to identify and characterize pre-main-sequence
spectroscopic binaries. This is the first large infrared radial velocity survey
of very young stars to date. The frequency and mass ratio distribution of the
closest, low-mass binaries bear directly on models of stellar, brown dwarf, and
planetary mass companion formation. Furthermore, spectroscopic binaries can
provide mass ratios and ultimately masses, independent of assumptions, needed
to calibrate models of young star evolution. I present the initial results from
observations of a uniform sample of 33 T Tauri M stars in the Ophiuchus
molecular cloud. The average mass of this sample is less than that of other
young star radial velocity surveys of similar scope by a factor of ~2. Almost
every star was observed at 3-4 epochs over 3 years with the 10 meter Keck II
telescope and the facility infrared spectrometer NIRSPEC. An internal precision
of 0.43 km/s was obtained with standard cross-correlation calibration
techniques. Four of the targets are newly discovered spectroscopic binaries,
one of which is located in a sub-arcsecond, hierarchical quadruple system.
Three other sub-arcsecond visual binaries were also serendipitously identified
during target acquisition. The spectroscopic multiplicity of the sample is
comparable to that of earlier type, pre-main-sequence objects. Therefore, there
is no dearth of young, low-mass spectroscopic binary stars, at least in the
Ophiuchus region.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures; accepted in Astrophysical Journa
Use of datasets derived from time-series AVHRR imagery as surrogates for land cover maps in predicting species' distributions
We hypothesized that NDVI time-series composite
imagery or clustered data derived from the NDVI time series could
serve as effective surrogates for land cover data in predictive
modeling of speciesâ ecological niches and potential geographic
distributions. Using two Mexican bird species, we examined our
hypothesis with GARP, the Genetic Algorithm for Rule-set
Prediction. Inputs included topographic and climate data, as well as
the NDVI and clustered NDVI datasets. We used a land cover map
previously derived from the NDVI dataset for comparison testing.
Considering only topographic factors, we found that the NDVI or
clustered NDVI data performed as well as or better than the land
cover data. When climate data were added, the land cover data
performed better than the NDVI data, but improvements were slight
Politicas agrarias y estrategias campesinas en la Cuenca del Canete : anexos 8 a 13
Ce document réunit plusieurs diagnostics établis à partir d'observations de terrain sur la géographie physique, l'organisation sociale, les pratiques paysannes dans la vallée de Canete et la vallée Pampas afin de déterminer les facteurs limitants de la production et des pratiques culturales , notamment en matiÚre d'irrigation
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