5,221 research outputs found
New Physics at the International Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) Next to GSI
The project of the international Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research
(FAIR), co-located to the GSI facility in Darmstadt, has been officially
started on November 7, 2007. The current plans of the facility and the planned
research program will be described. An investment of about 1 billion euro will
permit new physics programs in the areas of low and medium energy antiproton
research, heavy ion physics complementary to LHC, as well as in nuclear
structure and astrophysics. The facility will comprise about a dozen
accelerators and storage rings, which will enable simultaneous operations of up
to four different beams.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure. Invited Talk presented at the "Fourth
International Conference on Fission and Properties of Neutron-Rich nuclei",
held at Sanibel Island, Florida, November 11-17, 200
Observation of Feshbach-like resonances in collisions between ultracold molecules
We observe magnetically tuned collision resonances for ultracold Cs2
molecules stored in a CO2-laser trap. By magnetically levitating the molecules
against gravity, we precisely measure their magnetic moment. We find an avoided
level crossing which allows us to transfer the molecules into another state. In
the new state, two Feshbach-like collision resonances show up as strong
inelastic loss features. We interpret these resonances as being induced by Cs4
bound states near the molecular scattering continuum. The tunability of the
interactions between molecules opens up novel applications such as controlled
chemical reactions and synthesis of ultracold complex molecules
Long-term Retention of Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This paper examines the increasing trend of universities to pursue electronic thesis and dissertation (ETD) programs. Although the goal of most programs is similar, procedural variations impact a program’s long-term success. As primary research generators, responsibility for providing long-term access to unique materials must be borne by universities. However, this responsibility is in conflict with many ETD program goals, such as increased access and ease of production
Metastable Feshbach Molecules in High Rotational States
We experimentally demonstrate Cs2 Feshbach molecules well above the
dissociation threshold, which are stable against spontaneous decay on the
timescale of one second. An optically trapped sample of ultracold dimers is
prepared in an l-wave state and magnetically tuned into a region with negative
binding energy. The metastable character of these molecules arises from the
large centrifugal barrier in combination with negligible coupling to states
with low rotational angular momentum. A sharp onset of dissociation with
increasing magnetic field is mediated by a crossing with a g-wave dimer state
and facilitates dissociation on demand with a well defined energy.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Socio-economic factors explain differences in public health-related variables among women in Bangladesh: A cross-sectional study
Khan MH, Krämer A. Socio-economic factors explain differences in public health-related variables among women in Bangladesh: A cross-sectional study. BMC Public Health. 2008;8(1): 254.Background: Worldwide one billion people are living in slum communities and experts projected that this number would double by 2030. Slum populations, which are increasing at an alarming rate in Bangladesh mainly due to rural-urban migration, are often neglected and characterized by poverty, poor housing, overcrowding, poor environment, and high prevalence of communicable diseases. Unfortunately, comparisons between women living in slums and those not living in slums are very limited in Bangladesh. The objectives of the study were to examine the association of living in slums (dichotomized as slum versus non-slum) with selected public health-related variables among women, first without adjusting for the influence of other factors and then in the presence of socio-economic variables. Methods: Secondary data was used in this study. 120 women living in slums (as cases) and 480 age-matched women living in other areas (as controls) were extracted from the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2004. Many socio-economic and demographic variables were analysed. SPSS was used to perform simple as well as multiple analyses. P-values based on t-test and Wald test were also reported to show the significance level. Results: Unadjusted results indicated that a significantly higher percent of women living in slums came from country side, had a poorer status by household characteristics, had less access to mass media, and had less education than women not living in slums. Mean BMI, knowledge of AIDS indicated by ever heard about AIDS, knowledge of avoiding AIDS by condom use, receiving adequate antenatal visits (4 or more) during the last pregnancy, and safe delivery practices assisted by skilled sources were significantly lower among women living in slums than those women living in other areas. However, all the unadjusted significant associations with the variable slum were greatly attenuated and became insignificant (expect safe delivery practices) when some socio-economic variables namely childhood place of residence, a composite variable of household characteristics, a composite variable of mass media access, and education were inserted into the multiple regression models. Taken together, childhood place of residence, the composite variable of mass media access, and education were the strongest predictors for the health related outcomes. Conclusion: Reporting unadjusted findings of public health variables in women from slums versus non-slums can be misleading due to confounding factors. Our findings suggest that an association of childhood place of residence, mass media access and public health education should be considered before making any inference based on slum versus non-slum comparisons
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