34,295 research outputs found
Studies of the meson with the KLOE detector
The paper presents status of three studies involving the meson using
data collected by the KLOE detector. The first two projects are feasibility
studies performed on simulated data concerning an upper limit measure ment of
BR() and the form factor measurement in the
dalitz decay. The third study shows the effect interference has in the Dalitz plot when
is produced through the channel.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures
String Effects on Fermi--Dirac Correlation Measurements
We investigate some recent measurements of Fermi--Dirac correlations by the
LEP collaborations indicating surprisingly small source radii for the
production of baryons in -annihilation at the peak. In the
hadronization models there are besides the Fermi--Dirac correlation effect also
a strong dynamical (anti-)correlation. We demonstrate that the extraction of
the pure FD effect is highly dependent on a realistic Monte Carlo event
generator, both for separation of those dynamical correlations which are not
related to Fermi--Dirac statistics, and for corrections of the data and
background subtractions. Although the model can be tuned to well reproduce
single particle distributions, there are large model-uncertainties when it
comes to correlations between identical baryons. We therefore, unfortunately,
have to conclude that it is at present not possible to make any firm conclusion
about the source radii relevant for baryon production at LEP
ToxTrac: a fast and robust software for tracking organisms
1. Behavioral analysis based on video recording is becoming increasingly
popular within research fields such as; ecology, medicine, ecotoxicology, and
toxicology. However, the programs available to analyze the data, which are;
free of cost, user-friendly, versatile, robust, fast and provide reliable
statistics for different organisms (invertebrates, vertebrates and mammals) are
significantly limited.
2. We present an automated open-source executable software (ToxTrac) for
image-based tracking that can simultaneously handle several organisms monitored
in a laboratory environment. We compare the performance of ToxTrac with current
accessible programs on the web.
3. The main advantages of ToxTrac are: i) no specific knowledge of the
geometry of the tracked bodies is needed; ii) processing speed, ToxTrac can
operate at a rate >25 frames per second in HD videos using modern desktop
computers; iii) simultaneous tracking of multiple organisms in multiple arenas;
iv) integrated distortion correction and camera calibration; v) robust against
false positives; vi) preservation of individual identification if crossing
occurs; vii) useful statistics and heat maps in real scale are exported in:
image, text and excel formats.
4. ToxTrac can be used for high speed tracking of insects, fish, rodents or
other species, and provides useful locomotor information. We suggest using
ToxTrac for future studies of animal behavior independent of research area.
Download ToxTrac here: https://toxtrac.sourceforge.ioComment: File contains supplementary materials (user guide
The nonlinear development of the relativistic two-stream instability
The two-stream instability has been mooted as an explanation for a range of
astrophysical applications from GRBs and pulsar glitches to cosmology. Using
the first nonlinear numerical simulations of relativistic multi-species
hydrodynamics we show that the onset and initial growth of the instability is
very well described by linear perturbation theory. In the later stages the
linear and nonlinear description match only qualitatively, and the instability
does not saturate even in the nonlinear case by purely ideal hydrodynamic
effects.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
A Strong Maximum Principle for Weak Solutions of Quasi-Linear Elliptic Equations with Applications to Lorentzian and Riemannian Geometry
The strong maximum principle is proved to hold for weak (in the sense of
support functions) sub- and super-solutions to a class of quasi-linear elliptic
equations that includes the mean curvature equation for spacelike
hypersurfaces in a Lorentzian manifold. As one application a Lorentzian warped
product splitting theorem is given.Comment: 37 pages, 1 figure, ams-latex using eepi
The time evolution of marginally trapped surfaces
In previous work we have shown the existence of a dynamical horizon or
marginally trapped tube (MOTT) containing a given strictly stable marginally
outer trapped surface (MOTS). In this paper we show some results on the global
behavior of MOTTs assuming the null energy condition. In particular we show
that MOTSs persist in the sense that every Cauchy surface in the future of a
given Cauchy surface containing a MOTS also must contain a MOTS. We describe a
situation where the evolving outermost MOTS must jump during the coalescence of
two seperate MOTSs. We furthermore characterize the behavior of MOTSs in the
case that the principal eigenvalue vanishes under a genericity assumption. This
leads to a regularity result for the tube of outermost MOTSs under the
genericity assumption. This tube is then smooth up to finitely many jump times.
Finally we discuss the relation of MOTSs to singularities of a space-time.Comment: 21 pages. This revision corrects some typos and contains more
detailed proofs than the original versio
The fifth most prevalent disease is being neglected by public health organisations
The progress towards reduction of global mortality has produced an epidemiological transition towards non-fatal diseases, which challenge the ability of the world’s population to live in full health. Although traumatic dental injuries are not lethal, their treatment is more expensive (US$2 000 000–5 000 000 per million inhabitants) and time-consuming than that of all the other bodily injuries, making dental rehabilitation less likely among disadvantaged individuals. Since untreated traumatic dental injuries have a negative social, functional, and emotional effect in children and adolescents, differences in treatment of these injuries between children from different countries and social classes produce disparities in their quality of life
Bouncing Palatini cosmologies and their perturbations
Nonsingular cosmologies are investigated in the framework of f(R) gravity
within the first order formalism. General conditions for bounces in isotropic
and homogeneous cosmology are presented. It is shown that only a quadratic
curvature correction is needed to predict a bounce in a flat or to describe
cyclic evolution in a curved dust-filled universe. Formalism for perturbations
in these models is set up. In the simplest cases, the perturbations diverge at
the turnover. Conditions to obtain smooth evolution are derived.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure. v2: added references
The dynamics of dissipative multi-fluid neutron star cores
We present a Newtonian multi-fluid formalism for superfluid neutron star
cores, focussing on the additional dissipative terms that arise when one takes
into account the individual dynamical degrees of freedom associated with the
coupled "fluids". The problem is of direct astrophysical interest as the nature
of the dissipative terms can have significant impact on the damping of the
various oscillation modes of the star and the associated gravitational-wave
signatures. A particularly interesting application concerns the
gravitational-wave driven instability of f- and r-modes. We apply the developed
formalism to two specific three-fluid systems: (i) a hyperon core in which both
Lambda and Sigma^- hyperons are present, and (ii) a core of deconfined quarks
in the colour-flavour-locked phase in which a population of neutral K^0 kaons
is present. The formalism is, however, general and can be applied to other
problems in neutron-star dynamics (such as the effect of thermal excitations
close to the superfluid transition temperature) as well as laboratory
multi-fluid systems.Comment: RevTex, no figure
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