1,269 research outputs found

    Glueball plus pion production in hadron collisions

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    Using a non--relativistic gluon bound--state model for glueballs (G), we compute the subprocess qqˉGπq\,\bar q\, \to\, G\,\pi, and we therefrom derive the yield of the overall reaction ppˉGπXp\,\bar p\, \to\, G\,\pi X, assuming the glueball and the pion to be emitted with their transverse momenta large, opposite and approximately equal. Numerical results are presented in the form of pTp_T spectra for various glueball candidates and their possible quantum states, assuming those particles to be produced, in the type of reactions here considered, at high--energy ppˉp\,\bar p colliders such as the CERN Sp\=pS.Comment: 14 pages + 8 figures, REVTeX 3.0, figures appended as uuencoded, compressed postscript file. To appear in Zeit. Phys.

    Michael Tomasello on Language Development: The Puzzle of Human Linguistic Uniqueness

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    Michael Tomasello\u27s account of language development, and hence of human linguistic uniqueness, differs strongly from the Chomksyan version that is currently dominant in the field of linguistics. Tomasello claims that human language is not due to a genetic endowment unique to the species Homo sapiens, but rather, that humans have certain non-language-specific cognitive and interpersonal capacities that lead them to become full participants in the social use of language. In his current theory, individuals of any species would require the general capacities of intention-reading, relevance assumptions, role reversal imitation, and pattern-finding in order to develop a language. Because these capacities are not conceived of as specifically and autonomously linguistic – but rather as social and cognitive in nature – their presence or absence in prelinguistic human infants and nonhuman apes can be tested for using the experimental methods of developmental psychology and cognitive science. Based on such tests, Tomasello has concluded that whereas human children possess all of the capacities that he deems necessary for language acquisition, there is limited or negative evidence for chimpanzees\u27 capacities to act helpfully, assume helpfulness in others, form joint goals, and construct and conform to group expectations. This thesis raises a degree of skepticism towards Tomasello\u27s claims, citing the growing body of evidence against his specific research findings involving both apes and humans. It further suggests that his overall account of the necessary capacities for language development is both unverified and unverifiable, and that therefore the issue of human linguistic uniqueness is still an open question

    Brinell Limit Testing Machine - Final Design Report

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    In keeping with the California Polytechnic State University motto of “Learn by Doing”, this project was performed by Mechanical Engineering students Joe Cloutier, Josh Kessler, and Mike Jaskulsky II as their senior project. Starting in the Fall 2009 quarter and reaching completion with the end of the Spring 2010 quarter, this project provided these students with experience in application of a formal engineering design process in the solving of an open-ended engineering design problem, in developing and maintaining an engineering project schedule, as well as providing further experience working on an engineering team. As the engineers of Parker Aerospace seek to use different metals in their high performance bearing applications than have traditionally been used in the past, often the data does not exist for them to be able to accurately design against brinelling. To provide their engineers with this data, Parker Aerospace proposed the following as a senior project to Cal Poly’s seniors. They requested that a team of engineering students would design, fabricate, assemble, and validate through testing a machine that would determine the loads at the onset of brinelling for different metals and would allow for multiple measurements to be taken from each set of sample materials tested. Some of the secondary design requirements were for the test fixture to be portable, small enough to be used as a desktop unit, be able to accommodate a thermal chamber around the test area, and also provide measurements of the total deformation of the sample materials when under load. Also, time allowing, Parker Aerospace requested that the senior project team devote the last part of the last quarter to using the machine to provide data for a number of materials that they will provide. The loads that the test machine would need to deliver to test all material samples to the onset of brinelling were determined through hertzian contact stress analysis. These calculated loads were then used to determine the deflection of the sample materials, allowing for the sizing of structural components and selection of necessary sensors. The design for the fixture was developed around the initial design concept displayed in the Project Proposal by Parker Aerospace. After developing a number of different designs and variations of specific components of the fixture, the best of these design variations were presented to a panel of Parker Aerospace’s engineers during a Preliminary Design Review. From these designs, a final design was selected and various modifications were made as suggested by Parker. A final design was decided on and the rest of the project was completed by the end of the Spring quarter

    Symplectic geometry on moduli spaces of J-holomorphic curves

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    Let (M,\omega) be a symplectic manifold, and Sigma a compact Riemann surface. We define a 2-form on the space of immersed symplectic surfaces in M, and show that the form is closed and non-degenerate, up to reparametrizations. Then we give conditions on a compatible almost complex structure J on (M,\omega) that ensure that the restriction of the form to the moduli space of simple immersed J-holomorphic Sigma-curves in a homology class A in H_2(M,\Z) is a symplectic form, and show applications and examples. In particular, we deduce sufficient conditions for the existence of J-holomorphic Sigma-curves in a given homology class for a generic J.Comment: 16 page

    Erasmus Darwin, Henry Fuseli, and 'The Temple of Nature': Religion, Poetry, and Art in Enlightenment Natural History

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    Using methodologies developed by current practitioners in religion-science studies, this thesis attempts a new reading of Erasmus Darwin's didactic poem 'The Temple of Nature' (1803). Through a combined analysis of the volume's four engravings (designed by Henry Fuseli) and written verse, the thesis makes a broad argument for the book's place as an indicator of forgotten Enlightenment epistemologies, specifically as they impact philosophical and scientific speculations on the meaning and origin of human culture and the natural world. The thesis is an attempted reinterpretation of Darwin and Fuseli's Enlightenment positioning, seeing in them an un-preferred line of thought concerning both methodologies of natural historical study and theoretic speculations about human social origins.Master of Art

    Use of smartphones, mobile apps and wearables for health promotion by people with anxiety or depression:An analysis of a nationally representative survey data

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    People with mental illness have increased cardiovascular risk factors, which contributes significantly to mortality in this population. Digital interventions have emerged as promising models to promote physical health, although their potential for use in mental health populations is relatively unexplored. We examined the potential for using digital tools for health promotion by people with common mental disorders like anxiety or depression. Using data from the 2019 edition of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS 5), we evaluated differences between individuals with self-reported history of diagnosed depression/anxiety and the general population with respect to ownership, usage, and perceived usefulness of digital tools for managing their health. Overall, individuals with anxiety or depression were as likely as the general population to use digital devices for their care. Those with anxiety or depression who had health apps were more likely to report intentions to lose weight than those without health apps. Significant sociodemographic predictors of digital tools usage included gender, age, income, and education level. People with anxiety or depression own and use digital health tools at similarly high rates to the general population, suggesting that these tools present a novel opportunity for health promotion among people with these disorders

    SNANA: A Public Software Package for Supernova Analysis

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    We describe a general analysis package for supernova (SN) light curves, called SNANA, that contains a simulation, light curve fitter, and cosmology fitter. The software is designed with the primary goal of using SNe Ia as distance indicators for the determination of cosmological parameters, but it can also be used to study efficiencies for analyses of SN rates, estimate contamination from non-Ia SNe, and optimize future surveys. Several SN models are available within the same software architecture, allowing technical features such as K-corrections to be consistently used among multiple models, and thus making it easier to make detailed comparisons between models. New and improved light-curve models can be easily added. The software works with arbitrary surveys and telescopes and has already been used by several collaborations, leading to more robust and easy-to-use code. This software is not intended as a final product release, but rather it is designed to undergo continual improvements from the community as more is learned about SNe. Below we give an overview of the SNANA capabilities, as well as some of its limitations. Interested users can find software downloads and more detailed information from the manuals at http://www.sdss.org/supernova/SNANA.html .Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS

    Semi-supervised Learning for Photometric Supernova Classification

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    We present a semi-supervised method for photometric supernova typing. Our approach is to first use the nonlinear dimension reduction technique diffusion map to detect structure in a database of supernova light curves and subsequently employ random forest classification on a spectroscopically confirmed training set to learn a model that can predict the type of each newly observed supernova. We demonstrate that this is an effective method for supernova typing. As supernova numbers increase, our semi-supervised method efficiently utilizes this information to improve classification, a property not enjoyed by template based methods. Applied to supernova data simulated by Kessler et al. (2010b) to mimic those of the Dark Energy Survey, our methods achieve (cross-validated) 95% Type Ia purity and 87% Type Ia efficiency on the spectroscopic sample, but only 50% Type Ia purity and 50% efficiency on the photometric sample due to their spectroscopic follow-up strategy. To improve the performance on the photometric sample, we search for better spectroscopic follow-up procedures by studying the sensitivity of our machine learned supernova classification on the specific strategy used to obtain training sets. With a fixed amount of spectroscopic follow-up time, we find that deeper magnitude-limited spectroscopic surveys are better for producing training sets. For supernova Ia (II-P) typing, we obtain a 44% (1%) increase in purity to 72% (87%) and 30% (162%) increase in efficiency to 65% (84%) of the sample using a 25th (24.5th) magnitude-limited survey instead of the shallower spectroscopic sample used in the original simulations. When redshift information is available, we incorporate it into our analysis using a novel method of altering the diffusion map representation of the supernovae. Incorporating host redshifts leads to a 5% improvement in Type Ia purity and 13% improvement in Type Ia efficiency.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Residents\u27 Confidence Providing Primary Care With Behavioral Health Integration

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    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Behavioral health integration (BHI) entails integrated behavioral health clinicians (IBHCs) providing care-generally for mental health and substance abuse disorders and behavioral comorbidity- within the operational functioning of primary care. Because limited data exist regarding BHI in residency, we studied its impact on resident education by examining whether increased behavioral health (BH) co-management improved residents\u27 perceived ability to treat BH conditions. METHODS: We included residents from internal and family medicine training programs using BHI in residents\u27 continuity clinics and assessed the level of co-management between primary care and IBHCs and the following domains: (1) confidence in managing BH conditions, (2) barriers to BH provision, (3) perception of autonomy when working with IBHCs, (4) satisfaction with the clinic, and (5) perceived educational value of BH learning modes. RESULTS: Altogether, 117 residents participated in our survey (73.1% response rate). Residents who had co-managed \u3e /= five patients alongside IBHCs reported significantly higher confidence than those who had co-managed andlt; five patients with BH conditions. The association remained significant after adjustment for residents\u27 level of training and specialty. In rating BH learning modes, residents rated most highly active collaboration with IBHCs and observation with feedback from clinic preceptors. CONCLUSIONS: BHI training within residency enhances perceived learning and confidence in providing BH care
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