3,362 research outputs found
Isolating CP-violating \gamma ZZ coupling in e+e- \to \gamma Z with transverse beam polarizations
We revisit the process at the ILC with transverse beam
polarization in the presence of anomalous CP-violating coupling
and coupling . We point out that if
the final-state spins are resolved, then it becomes possible to fingerprint the
anomalous coupling {\rm Re}.90% confidence level limit on {\rm
Re} achievable at ILC with center-of-mass energy of 500 GeV or 800
GeV with realistic initial beam polarization and integrated luminosity is of
the order of few times of when the helicity of is used and
when the helicity of is used. The resulting corrections at
quadratic order to the cross section and its influence on these limits are also
evaluated and are shown to be small. The benefits of such polarization
programmes at the ILC are compared and contrasted for the process at hand. We
also discuss possible methods by which one can isolate events with a definite
helicity for one of the final-state particles.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, using RevTex; v2 is a significantly revised
version of v1, and corresponds to the version that has been published in
Physical Review
F and D Values with Explicit Flavor Symmetry Breaking and \Delta s Contents of Nucleons
We propose a new model for describing baryon semi-leptonic decays for
estimating and values with explicit breaking effects of both SU(3) and
SU(2) flavor symmetry, where all possible SU(3) and SU(2) breaking effects are
induced from an effective interaction. An overall fit including the weak
magnetism form factor yields and with
d.o.f. with and . The spin content of strange quarks is estimated from the
obtained values and , and the nucleon spin problem is re-examined.
Furthermore, the unmeasured values of and for other hyperon
semi-leptonic decays are predicted from this new formula.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, final version to appear in PR
Needle stick injuries among dental students: risk factors and recommendations for prevention
Aim: To evaluate the risk factors of needle stick injuries (NSIs) sustained by undergraduate dental students and nurse students at the King’s College London (KCL) Dental Institute.Materials and methods: A retrospective study evaluated the incident reports relating to NSIs reported over a period of 2 years. Factors including the dental department, study year, and when the injury took place during administration of local anaesthesia (LA) and recapping conventional syringe or clearing work surface or during disposal.Results: This report showed that students are at the highest risk of NSIs at the fourth year of their 5-year BDS course. About one-third of injuries were reported among this group of students followed by year 5 students (25%). Oral surgery clinics were the major source of incident reporting when compared with other specialised dental clinics within the institute. The left hands of the students were the most frequently affected by such injuries and then the right hands of student dental nurses. The attempt of needle recapping of conventional syringes was the least reported mechanism of injuries and constituted only 15% of the total injuries and mainly occurred in third year students. The most frequent injuries among student nurses were during disposal of the needle.Conclusion: Less NSIs occur when using safety syringes. A non-recapping policy with immediate disposal of either the conventional or safety syringe systems after injection would prevent all clearance-related NSIs sustained by nurses. To avoid NSIs, education plays a vital role particularly with effective implementation of the change to safety syringes with appropriate training.Keywords: needle stick injuries; local anaesthetic syringes; safety syringes; dental students; occupational hazards; dental anaesthetic syringe
Key barriers to community cohesion: views from residents of 20 London deprived neighbourhoods
The notion of community has been central to the political project of renewal of New Labour in the UK. The paper explores how the discourses of community are framed within New Labour and discusses these in the light of the results from research which focuses on how people within urban deprived areas construct their community. It draws upon the results of one part of a larger research project (the ‘Well London’ programme) which aimed to capture the views of residents from 20 disadvantaged neighbourhoods throughout London using an innovative qualitative method known as the ‘World Café’. Our results show the centrality of young people to the development of cohesive communities, the importance of building informal relationships between residents alongside encouraging greater participation to policy making, and the need to see these places as fragile and temporary locations but with considerable social strengths. Government policies are only partially addressing these issues. They pay greater attention to formally encouraging citizens to become more involved in policy making, largely ignore the contribution young people could make to the community cohesion agenda, and weakly define the shared norms and values that are crucial in building cohesive communities. Thus, the conclusion is that whilst an emphasis of the government on ‘community’ is to be welcome, more needs to be done in terms of considering the ‘voices’ of the community as well as enabling communities to determine and act upon their priorities
Beyond Patient Reported Pain: Perfusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging Demonstrates Reproducible Cerebral Representation of Ongoing Post-Surgical Pain
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
A multi-centre randomised controlled trial comparing radiofrequency and mechanical occlusion chemically assisted ablation of varicose veins - final results of the Venefit versus Clarivein for varicose veins trial
BACKGROUND: Endovenous thermal ablation has revolutionised varicose vein treatment. New non-thermal techniques such as mechanical occlusion chemically assisted endovenous ablation (MOCA) allow treatment of entire trunks with single anaesthetic injections. Previous non-randomised work has shown reduced pain post-operatively with MOCA. This study presents a multi-centre randomised controlled trial assessing the difference in pain during truncal ablation using MOCA and radiofrequency endovenous ablation (RFA) with six months' follow-up. METHODS: Patients undergoing local anaesthetic endovenous ablation for primary varicose veins were randomised to either MOCA or RFA. Pain scores using Visual Analogue Scale and number scale (0-10) during truncal ablation were recorded. Adjunctive procedures were completed subsequently. Pain after phlebectomy was not assessed. Patients were reviewed at one and six months with clinical scores, quality of life scores and duplex ultrasound assessment of the treated leg. RESULTS: A total of 170 patients were recruited over a 21-month period from 240 screened. Patients in the MOCA group experienced significantly less maximum pain during the procedure by Visual Analogue Scale (MOCA median 15 mm (interquartile range 7-36 mm) versus RFA 34 mm (interquartile range 16-53 mm), p = 0.003) and number scale (MOCA median 3 (interquartile range 1-5) versus RFA 4 mm (interquartile range 3-6.5), p = 0.002). 'Average' pain scores were also significantly less in the MOCA group; 74% underwent simultaneous phlebectomy. Occlusion rates, clinical severity scores, disease specific and generic quality of life scores were similar between groups at one and six months. There were two deep vein thromboses, one in each group. CONCLUSION: Pain secondary to truncal ablation is less painful with MOCA than RFA with similar short-term technical, quality of life and safety outcomes
Stiffest Elastic Networks
The rigidity of a network of elastic beams crucially depends on the specific
details of its structure. We show both numerically and theoretically that there
is a class of isotropic networks which are stiffer than any other isotropic
network with same density. The elastic moduli of these \textit{stiffest elastic
networks} are explicitly given. They constitute upper-bounds which compete or
improve the well-known Hashin-Shtrikman bounds. We provide a convenient set of
criteria (necessary and sufficient conditions) to identify these networks, and
show that their displacement field under uniform loading conditions is affine
down to the microscopic scale. Finally, examples of such networks with periodic
arrangement are presented, in both two and three dimensions
Solutions to the R_b, R_c and alpha_s puzzles by Vector Fermions
We propose two minimal extensions of Standard Model, both of which can easily
accommodate the recent puzzling observations about the excess in , the
deficit in and the discrepancy in the low energy and high energy
determinations of . Each model requires three additional heavy
vectorial fermions in order to resolve the puzzles. The current
phenomenological constraints and the new potential phenomena are also
discussed.Comment: 12 pages, in LaTeX, postscript file also appear
http://www.uic.edu/~keung/pub/rbrc.p
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