11,861 research outputs found
Balance Functions, Correlations, Charge Fluctuations and Interferometry
Connections between charge balance functions, charge fluctuations and
correlations are presented. It is shown that charge fluctuations can be
directly expressed in terms of a balance functions under certain assumptions.
The distortion of charge balance functions due to experimental acceptance is
discussed and the effects of identical boson interference is illustrated with a
simple model.Comment: 1 eps figure included. 5 pages in revtex
Quantum and frustration effects on fluctuations of the inverse compressibility in two-dimensional Coulomb glasses
We consider interacting electrons in a two-dimensional quantum Coulomb glass
and investigate by means of the Hartree-Fock approximation the combined effects
of the electron-electron interaction and the transverse magnetic field on
fluctuations of the inverse compressibility. Preceding systematic study of the
system in the absence of the magnetic field identifies the source of the
fluctuations, interplay of disorder and interaction, and effects of hopping.
Revealed in sufficiently clean samples with strong interactions is an unusual
right-biased distribution of the inverse compressibility, which is neither of
the Gaussian nor of the Wigner-Dyson type. While in most cases weak magnetic
fields tend to suppress fluctuations, in relatively clean samples with weak
interactions fluctuations are found to grow with the magnetic field. This is
attributed to the localization properties of the electron states, which may be
measured by the participation ratio and the inverse participation number. It is
also observed that at the frustration where the Fermi level is degenerate,
localization or modulation of electrons is enhanced, raising fluctuations.
Strong frustration in general suppresses effects of the interaction on the
inverse compressibility and on the configuration of electrons.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, To appear in Phys. Rev.
The association of statin use after cancer diagnosis with survival in pancreatic cancer patients: a SEER-medicare analysis.
BackgroundPancreatic cancer has poor prognosis and existing interventions provide a modest benefit. Statin has anti-cancer properties that might enhance survival in pancreatic cancer patients. We sought to determine whether statin treatment after cancer diagnosis is associated with longer survival in those with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC).MethodsWe analyzed data on 7813 elderly patients with PDAC using the linked Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) - Medicare claims files. Information on the type, intensity and duration of statin use after cancer diagnosis was extracted from Medicare Part D. We treated statin as a time-dependent variable in a Cox regression model to determine the association with overall survival adjusting for follow-up, age, sex, race, neighborhood income, stage, grade, tumor size, pancreatectomy, chemotherapy, radiation, obesity, dyslipidemia, diabetes, chronic pancreatitis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).ResultsOverall, statin use after cancer diagnosis was not significantly associated with survival when all PDAC patients were considered (HR = 0.94, 95%CI 0.89, 1.01). However, statin use after cancer diagnosis was associated with a 21% reduced hazard of death (Hazard ratio = 0.79, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.67, 0.93) in those with grade I or II PDAC and to a similar extent in those who had undergone a pancreatectomy, in those with chronic pancreatitis and in those who had not been treated with statin prior to cancer diagnosis.ConclusionsWe found that statin treatment after cancer diagnosis is associated with enhanced survival in patients with low-grade, resectable PDAC
Antimony-doped graphene nanoplatelets
Heteroatom doping into the graphitic frameworks have been intensively studied for the development of metal-free electrocatalysts. However, the choice of heteroatoms is limited to non-metallic elements and heteroatom-doped graphitic materials do not satisfy commercial demands in terms of cost and stability. Here we realize doping semimetal antimony (Sb) at the edges of graphene nanoplatelets (GnPs) via a simple mechanochemical reaction between pristine graphite and solid Sb. The covalent bonding of the metalloid Sb with the graphitic carbon is visualized using atomic-resolution transmission electron microscopy. The Sb-doped GnPs display zero loss of electrocatalytic activity for oxygen reduction reaction even after 100,000 cycles. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the multiple oxidation states (Sb3+ and Sb5+) of Sb are responsible for the unusual electrochemical stability. Sb-doped GnPs may provide new insights and practical methods for designing stable carbon-based electrocatalystsclose0
Energy Loss of Leading Hadrons and Direct Photon production in Evolving Quark-Gluon Plasma
We calculate the nuclear modification factor of neutral pions and the photon
yield at high p_T in central Au-Au collisions at RHIC (\sqrt{s}=200 GeV) and
Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC (\sqrt{s}=5500 GeV). A leading-order accurate
treatment of jet energy loss in the medium has been convolved with a physical
description of the initial spatial distribution of jets and a (1+1) dimensional
expansion. We reproduce the nuclear modification factor of pion R_{AA} at RHIC,
assuming an initial temperature T_i=370 MeV and a formation time \tau_i=0.26
fm/c, corresponding to dN/dy=1260. The resulting suppression depends on the
particle rapidity density dN/dy but weakly on the initial temperature. The jet
energy loss treatment is also included in the calculation of high p_T photons.
Photons coming from primordial hard N-N scattering are the dominant
contribution at RHIC for p_T > 5 GeV, while at the LHC, the range 8<p_T<14 GeV
is dominated by jet-photon conversion in the plasma.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures. Discussions and references added. New figure
includind photon dat
Theory of magnetic field-induced metaelectric critical end point in BiMnO
A recent experiment on the multiferroic BiMnO compound under a strong
applied magnetic field revealed a rich phase diagram driven by the coupling of
magnetic and charge (dipolar) degrees of freedom. Based on the
exchange-striction mechanism, we propose here a theoretical model with the
intent to capture the interplay of the spin and dipolar moments in the presence
of a magnetic field in BiMnO. Experimentally observed behavior of the
dielectric constants, magnetic susceptibility, and the polarization is, for the
most part, reproduced by our model. The critical behavior observed near the
polarization reversal point in the phase diagram is interpreted as
arising from the proximity to the critical end point.Comment: Theory; relevant experiment uploaded as arXiv:0810.190
Spontaneous phase oscillation induced by inertia and time delay
We consider a system of coupled oscillators with finite inertia and
time-delayed interaction, and investigate the interplay between inertia and
delay both analytically and numerically. The phase velocity of the system is
examined; revealed in numerical simulations is emergence of spontaneous phase
oscillation without external driving, which turns out to be in good agreement
with analytical results derived in the strong-coupling limit. Such
self-oscillation is found to suppress synchronization and its frequency is
observed to decrease with inertia and delay. We obtain the phase diagram, which
displays oscillatory and stationary phases in the appropriate regions of the
parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, to pe published in PR
Do changes in health reveal the possibility of undiagnosed pancreatic cancer? Development of a risk-prediction model based on healthcare claims data.
Background and objectiveEarly detection methods for pancreatic cancer are lacking. We aimed to develop a prediction model for pancreatic cancer based on changes in health captured by healthcare claims data.MethodsWe conducted a case-control study on 29,646 Medicare-enrolled patients aged 68 years and above with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) reported to the Surveillance Epidemiology an End Results (SEER) tumor registries program in 2004-2011 and 88,938 age and sex-matched controls. We developed a prediction model using multivariable logistic regression on Medicare claims for 16 risk factors and pre-diagnostic symptoms of PDAC present within 15 months prior to PDAC diagnosis. Claims within 3 months of PDAC diagnosis were excluded in sensitivity analyses. We evaluated the discriminatory power of the model with the area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) and performed cross-validation by bootstrapping.ResultsThe prediction model on all cases and controls reached AUC of 0.68. Excluding the final 3 months of claims lowered the AUC to 0.58. Among new-onset diabetes patients, the prediction model reached AUC of 0.73, which decreased to 0.63 when claims from the final 3 months were excluded. Performance measures of the prediction models was confirmed by internal validation using the bootstrap method.ConclusionModels based on healthcare claims for clinical risk factors, symptoms and signs of pancreatic cancer are limited in classifying those who go on to diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and those who do not, especially when excluding claims that immediately precede the diagnosis of PDAC
Thiol density dependent classical potential for methyl-thiol on a Au(111) surface
A new classical potential for methyl-thiol on a Au(111) surface has been
developed using density functional theory electronic structure calculations.
Energy surfaces between methyl-thiol and a gold surface were investigated in
terms of symmetry sites and thiol density. Geometrical optimization was
employed over all the configurations while minimum energy and thiol height were
determined. Finally, a new interatomic potential has been generated as a
function of thiol density, and applications to coarse-grained simulations are
presented
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