5,714 research outputs found
Restriction on the energy and luminosity of e+e- storage rings due to beamstrahlung
The role of beamstrahlung in high-energy e+e- storage-ring colliders (SRCs)
is examined. Particle loss due to the emission of single energetic
beamstrahlung photons is shown to impose a fundamental limit on SRC
luminosities at energies 2E_0 >~ 140 GeV for head-on collisions and 2E_0 >~ 40
GeV for crab-waist collisions. With beamstrahlung taken into account, we
explore the viability of SRCs in the E_0=240-500 GeV range, which is of
interest in the precision study of the Higgs boson. At 2E_0=240 GeV, SRCs are
found to be competitive with linear colliders; however, at 2E_0=400-500 GeV,
the attainable SRC luminosity would be a factor 15-25 smaller than desired.Comment: Latex, 5 pages. v2 differs only by minor changes is abstract and
introduction, one reference is added. v3 corresponds to the paper published
in PR
Yukawa Textures, New Physics and Nondecoupling
We point out that New Physics can play an important r\^ ole in rescuing some
of the Yukawa texture zero ans\" atze which would otherwise be eliminated by
the recent, more precise measurements of . As an example, a detailed
analysis of a four texture zero ansatz is presented, showing how the presence
of an isosinglet vector-like quark which mixes with standard quarks, can render
viable this Yukawa texture. The crucial point is the nondecoupling of the
effects of the isosinglet quark, even for arbitrary large values of its mass.Comment: 13 pages, no figure
The Perception of Ageism, Generativity, and the Attainment of Developmental Tasks of Elderly Widowers and Widows in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia
In every stage of human lives as well as later adulthood (elderly), there are developmental tasks to be attained and demand the elderly to adapt to various changes both from the internal and external environment. The aim of this research was to analyze the influence of ageism and generativity on the developmental task of elderly widower and widow. The cross-sectional study was used as the design of this research. The research was conducted in Empang Village, South Bogor Sub-District and West Cilendek Village, West Bogor Sub-District, Bogor City. As many as 60 persons were involved as research sample, consisted of 30 elderly widowers and 30 elderly widows which were chosen by snow-ball techniques. The result showed that there was no significant difference in developmental task of elderly widower and widow. The category of ageism was low while generativity and developmental task were moderate. There were significant positive correlations and influences of the length of education and generativity on developmental tasks of elderly widower and widow
Numerical stability for finite difference approximations of Einstein's equations
We extend the notion of numerical stability of finite difference
approximations to include hyperbolic systems that are first order in time and
second order in space, such as those that appear in Numerical Relativity. By
analyzing the symbol of the second order system, we obtain necessary and
sufficient conditions for stability in a discrete norm containing one-sided
difference operators. We prove stability for certain toy models and the
linearized Nagy-Ortiz-Reula formulation of Einstein's equations.
We also find that, unlike in the fully first order case, standard
discretizations of some well-posed problems lead to unstable schemes and that
the Courant limits are not always simply related to the characteristic speeds
of the continuum problem. Finally, we propose methods for testing stability for
second order in space hyperbolic systems.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Long-Time Dynamics of Variable Coefficient mKdV Solitary Waves
We study the Korteweg-de Vries-type equation dt u=-dx(dx^2 u+f(u)-B(t,x)u),
where B is a small and bounded, slowly varying function and f is a
nonlinearity. Many variable coefficient KdV-type equations can be rescaled into
this equation. We study the long time behaviour of solutions with initial
conditions close to a stable, B=0 solitary wave. We prove that for long time
intervals, such solutions have the form of the solitary wave, whose centre and
scale evolve according to a certain dynamical law involving the function
B(t,x), plus an H^1-small fluctuation.Comment: 19 page
Type 2 myocardial infarction: a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge in contemporary cardiology
In the expanding world of cardiovascular diseases, rapidly reaching pandemic proportions, the main focus is still on coronary atherosclerosis and its clinical consequences. However, at least in the Western world, middle-aged male patients with acute myocardial infarction are no more the rule. Due to a higher life expectancy and major medical advances, physicians are to treat older and frailer individuals, usually with multiple comorbidities. In this context, myocardial ischaemia and infarction frequently result from an imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand\u2014i.e., type 2 myocardial infarction (T2MI), according to the current universal definition\u2014rather than coronary atherothrombosis. Moreover, the increasing use of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays has led to a heightened detection of T2MI\u2014often causing relatively little myocardial injury\u2014, which seems to have doubled its numbers in recent years. Nevertheless, owing to its multifaceted pathophysiology and clinical presentation, T2MI is still underdiagnosed. Perhaps more importantly, T2MI is also victim of undertreatment, as drugs that constitute the cornerstone of therapy in most cardiovascular diseases are much more unlikely to be prescribed in T2MI than in coronary atherothrombosis. In this paper, we review the recent literature on the classification, pathophysiology, epidemiology, and management of T2MI, trying to summarise the state-of-the-art knowledge about this increasingly important pathologic condition. Finally, based on the current scientific evidence, we also propose an algorithm that may be easily utilised in clinical practice, in order to improve T2MI diagnosis and risk stratification
Interacting Discovery Processes on Complex Networks
Innovation is the driving force of human progress. Recent urn models reproduce well the dynamics through which the discovery of a novelty may trigger further ones, in an expanding space of opportunities, but neglect the effects of social interactions. Here we focus on the mechanisms of collective exploration and we propose a model in which many urns, representing different explorers, are coupled through the links of a social network and exploit opportunities coming from their contacts. We study different network structures showing, both analytically and numerically, that the pace of discovery of an explorer depends on its centrality in the social network. Our model sheds light on the role that social structures play in discovery processes
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