274 research outputs found
An explicit form of the Mie phase matrix for multiple scattering calculations in the I, Q, U, and V representation
An explicit expression is obtained for the phase matrix in the I, Q, U, and V Stokes vector representation for a system containing a polydispersion of spherical particles. All of the symmetry relations derived by Hovenier using general arguments are established explicitly. Convenient algorithms are given for the computation of the phase matrix for a spherical polydispersion. Since this theory is so vitally important in radiative transfer, many researchers will need to compute these functions for realistic aerosols distributions. Therefore, results are presented for a haze L distribution so that other researchers will have a way of checking their programs which compute these quantities
Book Reviews
DISPASSIONATE JUSTICE. By Glendon Schubert.
THE TROUBLE WITH LAWYERS. By Murray Teigh Bloom.
LABOR AND THE LEGAL PROCESS. By Harry H. Wellington
Binding Effects in High-Energy Scattering Applied to K-Shell Ionization
Journals published by the American Physical Society can be found at http://publish.aps.org
The Rise of Cohabitation in the Southern Cone
This chapter analyses the increase in cohabitation in the Southern Cone (Argentina, Chile and Uruguay) and attempts to determine the extent to which consensual unions and marriages have similar traits or differ in the context of the cohabitation boom (Esteve et al. 2012). The first section of the chapter reviews the historical context of cohabitation in the Southern Cone. The second section uses census and survey data to analyse the trends in conjugal union formation in the three countries during the last 40 years. We analyse the patterns of both childbearing and union formation, as well as the differences between marriage and cohabitation based on educational attainment, labour market participation and household structure. The purpose of this analysis is to better understand whether the behaviour of married and cohabiting women with different characteristics are converging or diverging over time and tentatively, whether more egalitarian gender relationships are emerging in both types of conjugal unions
Soft two-meson-exchange nucleon-nucleon potentials. II. One-pair and two-pair diagrams
Two-meson-exchange nucleon-nucleon potentials are derived where either one or
both nucleons contains a pair vertex. Physically, the meson-pair vertices are
meant to describe in an effective way (part of) the effects of heavy-meson
exchange and meson-nucleon resonances. {}From the point of view of ``duality,''
these two kinds of contribution are roughly equivalent. The various
possibilities for meson pairs coupling to the nucleon are inspired by the
chiral-invariant phenomenological Lagrangians that have appeared in the
literature. The coupling constants are fixed using the linear model.
We show that the inclusion of these two-meson exchanges gives a significant
improvement over a potential model including only the standard one-boson
exchanges.Comment: 21 pages RevTeX, 7 postscript figures; revised version as to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Chiral two-pion exchange and proton-proton partial-wave analysis
The chiral two-pion exchange component of the long-range pp interaction is
studied in an energy-dependent partial-wave analysis. We demonstrate its
presence and importance, and determine the chiral parameters c_i (i=1,3,4). The
values agree well with those obtained from pion-nucleon amplitudes.Comment: 13 pages, no figure
Does self-monitoring reduce blood pressure? Meta-analysis with meta-regression of randomized controlled trials
Introduction. Self-monitoring of blood pressure (BP) is an increasingly common part of hypertension management. The objectives of this systematic review were to evaluate the systolic and diastolic BP reduction, and achievement of target BP, associated with self-monitoring.
Methods. MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane database of systematic reviews, database of abstracts of clinical effectiveness, the health technology assessment database, the NHS economic evaluation database, and the TRIP database were searched for studies where the intervention included self-monitoring of BP and the outcome was change in office/ambulatory BP or proportion with controlled BP. Two reviewers independently extracted data. Meta-analysis using a random effects model was combined with meta-regression to investigate heterogeneity in effect sizes.
Results. A total of 25 eligible randomized controlled trials (RCTs) (27 comparisons) were identified. Office systolic BP (20 RCTs, 21 comparisons, 5,898 patients) and diastolic BP (23 RCTs, 25 comparisons, 6,038 patients) were significantly reduced in those who self-monitored compared to usual care (weighted mean difference (WMD) systolic â3.82 mmHg (95% confidence interval â5.61 to â2.03), diastolic â1.45 mmHg (â1.95 to â0.94)). Self-monitoring increased the chance of meeting office BP targets (12 RCTs, 13 comparisons, 2,260 patients, relative risk = 1.09 (1.02 to 1.16)). There was significant heterogeneity between studies for all three comparisons, which could be partially accounted for by the use of additional co-interventions.
Conclusion. Self-monitoring reduces blood pressure by a small but significant amount. Meta-regression could only account for part of the observed heterogeneity
Centerscope
Centerscope, formerly Scope, was published by the Boston University Medical Center "to communicate the concern of the Medical Center for the development and maintenance of improved health care in contemporary society.
Fertility, Living Arrangements, Care and Mobility
There are four main interconnecting themes around which the contributions in this book are based. This introductory chapter aims to establish the broad context for the chapters that follow by discussing each of the themes. It does so by setting these themes within the overarching demographic challenge of the twenty-first century â demographic ageing. Each chapter is introduced in the context of the specific theme to which it primarily relates and there is a summary of the data sets used by the contributors to illustrate the wide range of cross-sectional and longitudinal data analysed
Soft-core hyperon-nucleon potentials
A new Nijmegen soft-core OBE potential model is presented for the low-energy
YN interactions. Besides the results for the fit to the scattering data, which
largely defines the model, we also present some applications to hypernuclear
systems using the G-matrix method. An important innovation with respect to the
original soft-core potential is the assignment of the cut-off masses for the
baryon-baryon-meson (BBM) vertices in accordance with broken SU(3), which
serves to connect the NN and the YN channels. As a novel feature, we allow for
medium strong breaking of the coupling constants, using the model with
a Gell-Mann--Okubo hypercharge breaking for the BBM coupling. We present six
hyperon-nucleon potentials which describe the available YN cross section data
equally well, but which exhibit some differences on a more detailed level. The
differences are constructed such that the models encompass a range of
scattering lengths in the and channels. For the
scalar-meson mixing angle we obtained values to 40 degrees, which
points to almost ideal mixing angles for the scalar states. The
G-matrix results indicate that the remarkably different spin-spin terms of the
six potentials appear specifically in the energy spectra of
hypernuclei.Comment: 37 pages, 4 figure
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