160 research outputs found

    Quasiparticle-rotor model description of carbon isotopes

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    In this work we perform quasiparticle-rotor coupling model calculations within the usual BCS and the projected BCS for the carbon isotopes 15C, 17C and 19C using 13C as the building block. Owing to the pairing correlation, we find that 13C as well as the cores of the other isotopes, namely 14C, 16C and 18C acquire strong and varied deformations. The deformation parameter is large and negative for 12C, very small (or zero) for 14C and large and positive for 16C and 18C. This finding casts a doubt about the purity of the supposed simple one-neutron halo nature of 19C.Instituto de Física La PlataFacultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísica

    Quasiparticle-rotor model description of carbon isotopes

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    In this work we perform quasiparticle-rotor coupling model calculations within the usual BCS and the projected BCS for the carbon isotopes 15C, 17C and 19C using 13C as the building block. Owing to the pairing correlation, we find that 13C as well as the cores of the other isotopes, namely 14C, 16C and 18C acquire strong and varied deformations. The deformation parameter is large and negative for 12C, very small (or zero) for 14C and large and positive for 16C and 18C. This finding casts a doubt about the purity of the supposed simple one-neutron halo nature of 19C.Instituto de Física La PlataFacultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísica

    Short-range correlations and neutrinoless double beta decay

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    In this work we report on the effects of short-range correlations upon the matrix elements of neutrinoless double beta decay. We focus on the calculation of the matrix elements of the neutrino-mass mode of neutrinoless double beta decays of 48Ca and 76Ge. The nuclear-structure components of the calculation, that is the participant nuclear wave functions, have been calculated in the shell-model scheme for 48Ca and in the proton-neutron quasiparticle random-phase approximation (pnQRPA) scheme for 76Ge. We compare the traditional approach of using the Jastrow correlation function with the more complete scheme of the unitary correlation operator method (UCOM). Our results indicate that the Jastrow method vastly exaggerates the effects of short-range correlations on the neutrinoless double beta decay nuclear matrix elements.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Physics Letters B (2007

    Charged majoron emission in neutrinoless double beta decay

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    Abstract We examine in detail the predictions of the charged majoron model, introduced recently by Burgess and Cline, for 0 + → 0 + ββ transitions. The relevant nuclear matrix elements are evaluated, within the quasiparticle random phase approximation, for 76Ge, 82Se, 100Mo, 128Te and 150Nd nuclei. The calculated transition rates turn out to be much smaller than the experimental upper limits on possible majoron emission, except in a small region of the model's parameter space.Facultad de Ciencias Exacta

    Internal Morphology of Osteoderms of Extinct Armadillos and Its Relationship with Environmental Conditions

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    The most complete and continuous fossil record of armadillos is composed mostly by isolated osteoderms, frequently found in paleontological and archaeological sites that bear continental South American mammals. Their external morphology has been used to define several species. In the last decade, many authors have focused on the internal structure of vertebrate osteoderms using histological and paleohistological studies. These studies allowed identification of useful features in systematic and phylogenetic contexts. In armadillos, osteoderms are constituted by compact bone tissue (primary and secondary osteons, and concentric layers or lamellae) that delimits cavities, which could contain different soft tissues (adipose tissue, hair follicles, bone marrow, and sweat and sebaceous glands). Traditional paleohistological techniques have allowed the recognition of homologous cavities to those found in osteoderms of current species and from comparison deduce which kind of tissue could had occupied them.We have recently utilized 3D reconstructions in osteoderms of extant species of armadillos to analyze the micromorphology, disposition, and the relationship of different cavities and understand them in depth. Here, we present the results of the application of paleohistology and microtomography in osteoderms of representatives of diferent taxa of extinct Dasypodidae (Astegotheriini, Stegotheriini, "Utaetini", Euphractini, Eutatini), which allowed us to compare homologous structures based on their three-dimensional reconstruction. The results, added to the previous external morphology studies, have allowed us to define morphological patterns (consistent within each linage). The variation of the volume and extension of cavities associated with different tissues could be strongly associated with changes in the climate and environmental conditions of the species distribution areas.Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Muse

    Global regulatory developments for clinical stem cell research: diversification and challenges to collaborations

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    In this article, we explore regulatory developments in stem cell medicine in seven jurisdictions: Japan, China, India, Argentina, Brazil, the USA and the EU. We will show that the research methods, ethical standards and approval procedures for the market use of clinical stem cell interventions are undergoing an important process of global diversification. We will discuss the implications of this process for international harmonization and the conduct of multicountry clinical research collaborations. It will become clear that the increasing heterogeneity of research standards and regulations in the stem cell field presents a significant challenge to international clinical trial partnerships, especially with countries that diverge from the regulatory models that have been developed in the USA and the EU

    Majoron emitting neutrinoless double beta decay in the electroweak chiral gauge extensions

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    Fundamental mechanisms for Majoron emitting neutrinoless double beta decay in SU(3)_C x G_W x U(1) models, for electroweak flavor chiral extensions, G_W = SU(3)_L and SU(4)_L are pointed out. Both kinds of known Majoron emitting processes, charged Majoron emitting where the massless Nambu-Goldstone boson itself carries lepton charge, L=2L=-2, and the ordinary Majoron emitting where the boson has a small mass are found possible. PACS numbers: 11.15.Ex, 12.60.Fr, 14.80.CpComment: 18 pages, Revtex, 3 Postscript figures. To be published in Phys.Rev.D(1 May 1998

    Nuclear pairing: new perspectives

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    Nuclear pairing correlations are known to play an important role in various single-particle and collective aspects of nuclear structure. After the first idea by A. Bohr, B. Mottelson and D. Pines on similarity of nuclear pairing to electron superconductivity, S.T. Belyaev gave a thorough analysis of the manifestations of pairing in complex nuclei. The current revival of interest in nuclear pairing is connected to the shift of modern nuclear physics towards nuclei far from stability; many loosely bound nuclei are particle-stable only due to the pairing. The theoretical methods borrowed from macroscopic superconductivity turn out to be insufficient for finite systems as nuclei, in particular for the cases of weak pairing and proximity of continuum states. We suggest a simple numerical procedure of exact solution of the nuclear pairing problem and discuss the physical features of this complete solution. We show also how the continuum states can be naturally included in the consideration bridging the gap between the structure and reactions. The path from coherent pairing to chaos and thermalization and perspectives of new theoretical approaches based on the full solution of pairing are discussed.Comment: 47 pages, 11 figure

    Histomorfología comparada del esófago de dos especies de Arctocephalus: A. australis y A. tropicalis (Mammalia, Carnivora, Pinnipedia, Otariidae).

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    La estructura del sistema digestivo de los pinnípedos se relaciona directamente con los hábitos alimenticios y la dieta de cada especie. Se estudiaron las características histomorfológicas del esófago de dos otáridos: Arctocephalus australis y Arctocephalus tropicalis, mediante técnicas histológicas convencionales. El esófago consta de cuatro túnicas: mucosa, submucosa, muscular y adventicia/serosa. La mucosa incluye: a) tejido epitelial plano estratificado paracornificado, que en A. tropicalis posee menor cantidad de capas en sus estratos; b) lámina propia de tejido conectivo; c) muscular de la mucosa, de tejido muscular liso, discontinua y de espesor creciente hacia caudal. Existen glándulas acinares en toda su extensión; hacia caudal alcanzan la submucosa. Son más abundantes en A. australis, mientras que forman pequeñas agrupaciones en A. tropicalis. Poseen secreción mucosa, pero en A. tropicalis algunas son mixtas. La submucosa posee tejido conectivo denso irregular. La túnica muscular posee dos capas de tejido muscular estriado esquelético (interna, oblicua/espiralada; externa, longitudinal); hacia caudal la capa interna cambia progresivamente a tejido muscular liso, y la externa continúa con tejido muscular estriado esquelético. Entre ambas existen abundantes vasos y un plexo nervioso mientérico bien desarrollados. La adventicia está muy vascularizada e inervada. Las especies consideradas se alimentan principalmente bajo el agua mientras nadan, mediante la captura de presas que degluten enteras. La musculatura estriada que predomina en casi toda la extensión del órgano, junto con el gran desarrollo glandular, podrían facilitar el pasaje hacia el estómago de un alimento que no es procesado en la cavidad oral. Esto se complementaría con los movimientos corporales multidireccionales (algunos antigravitacionales) que realizan mientras ingieren sus presas. Las diferencias histológicas encontradas podrían atribuirse al tipo de dieta, más generalista en A. tropicalis (cefalópodos, peces y krill), mientras que en A. australis está constituida principalmente por peces, cuyo transporte sería más dificultoso e involucraría mayor fricció

    Self-organization with traveling waves: A case for a convective torus

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    A traveling wave of BaSO4 in the chlorite-thiourea reaction has shown concentric precipitation patterns upon being triggered by the autocatalyst HOCl. The precipitation patterns show circular rings of alternate null and full precipitation regions. This self-organization appears to be the result of the formation of a convective torus. The formation of the convective torus can be described as a Benard-Marangoni instability with lateral heating
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