7,205 research outputs found
Force traction microscopy: An inverse problem with pointwise observations
Force Traction Microscopy is an inversion method that allows to obtain the stress field applied by a living cell on the environment on the basis of a pointwise knowledge of the displacement produced by the cell itself. This classical biophysical problem, usually addressed in terms of Green functions, can be alternatively tackled using a variational framework and then a finite elements discretization. In such a case, a variation of the error functional under suitable regularization is operated in view of its minimization. This setting naturally suggests the introduction of a new equation, based on the adjoint operator of the elasticity problem. In this paper we illustrate the rigorous theory of the two-dimensional and three dimensional problem, involving in the former case a distributed control and in the latter case a surface control. The pointwise observations require to exploit the theory of elasticity extended to forcing terms that are Borel measure
Demanda cognitiva en estándares educativos y evaluación en álgebra
El presente trabajo plantea el interés por analizar la concordancia o alineamiento que existe, a nivel de demanda cognitiva, entre los estándares curriculares en Matemáticas y los Ãtems empleados en las pruebas finales de evaluación del tercer ciclo (7mo, 8vo y 9no grado) de la educación básica de Honduras. El estudio se hizo usando el criterio de alineamiento de demanda cognitiva, o Depth-Of-Knowledge (DOK), propuesto por Norman Webb
New Production Mechanism of Neutral Higgs Bosons with Right scalar tau neutrino as the LSP
Motived by the neutrino oscillation data, we consider the lightest tau
sneutrino (which is mostly the right tau sneutrino) to be
the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) in the framework of the minimal
supersymmetric Standard Model. Both the standard and the non-standard trilinear
scalar coupling terms are included for the right tau sneutrino interactions.
The decay branching ratio of
can become so large that the production rate of the lightest neutral Higgs
boson () can be largely enhanced at electron or hadron colliders, either
from the direct production of or from the decay of
charginos, neutralinos, sleptons, and the cascade decay of squarks and gluinos,
etc. Furthermore, because of the small LSP annihilation rate, can be a good candidate for cold dark matter.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex, 3 eps figures. We clarify the theoretical framework
of this study, with a note added in the end, and correct an equation, with
updated figure
Higgs Inflation as a Mirage
We discuss a simple unitarization of Higgs inflation that is genuinely weakly
coupled up to Planckian energies. A large non-minimal coupling between the
Higgs and the Ricci curvature is induced dynamically at intermediate energies,
as a simple ratio of mass scales. Despite not being dominated by the Higgs
field, inflationary dynamics simulates the `Higgs inflation' one would get by
blind extrapolation of the low-energy effective Lagrangian, at least
qualitatively. Hence, Higgs inflation arises as an approximate `mirage' picture
of the true dynamics. We further speculate on the generality of this phenomenon
and show that, if Higgs-inflation arises as an effective description, the
details of the UV completion are necessary to extract robust quantitative
predictions.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figure
Bayesian approach and Naturalness in MSSM analyses for the LHC
The start of LHC has motivated an effort to determine the relative
probability of the different regions of the MSSM parameter space, taking into
account the present, theoretical and experimental, wisdom about the model.
Since the present experimental data are not powerful enough to select a small
region of the MSSM parameter space, the choice of a judicious prior probability
for the parameters becomes most relevant. Previous studies have proposed
theoretical priors that incorporate some (conventional) measure of the
fine-tuning, to penalize unnatural possibilities. However, we show that such
penalization arises from the Bayesian analysis itself (with no ad hoc
assumptions), upon the marginalization of the mu-parameter. Furthermore the
resulting effective prior contains precisely the Barbieri-Giudice measure,
which is very satisfactory. On the other hand we carry on a rigorous treatment
of the Yukawa couplings, showing in particular that the usual practice of
taking the Yukawas "as required", approximately corresponds to taking
logarithmically flat priors in the Yukawa couplings. Finally, we use an
efficient set of variables to scan the MSSM parameter space, trading in
particular B by tan beta, giving the effective prior in the new parameters.
Beside the numerical results, we give accurate analytic expressions for the
effective priors in all cases. Whatever experimental information one may use in
the future, it is to be weighted by the Bayesian factors worked out here.Comment: LaTeX, 19 pages, 3 figure
Stability of Neutrino Mass Degeneracy
Two neutrinos of Majorana masses with mixing angle are
unstable against radiative corrections in the limit , but are stable
for (i.e. opposite CP eigenstates) with which
corresponds to an additional symmetry.Comment: 7 pages, no figure, one reference adde
Maternal grandsire, granddam, and sire breed effects on growth and carcass traits of crossbred cattle
Postweaning growth, feed efficiency, and carcass traits were analyzed on 1,422 animals obtained by mating F1 cows to F1 (Belgian Blue X British breeds) or Charolais sires. Cows were obtained from mating Hereford, Angus, and U.S. Meat Animal Research Center III ( ¼ Hereford, ¼ Angus, ¼ Pinzgauer, and ¼ Red Poll) dams to Hereford or Angus (British breeds), Tuli, Boran, Brahman, or Belgian Blue sires. Breed groups were fed in replicated pens and slaughtered serially in each of 2 yr. Postweaning average daily gain; live weight; hot carcass weight; fat depth; longissimus area; estimated kidney, pelvic, and heart fat (percentage); percentage Choice; marbling score; USDA yield grade; retail product yield (percentage); retail product weight; fat yield (percentage); fat weight; bone yield (percentage); and bone weight were analyzed in this population. Quadratic regressions of pen mean weight on days fed and of cumulative ME consumption on days fed were used to estimate gain, ME consumption and efficiency (Mcal of ME/kg of gain) over time (0 to 200 d on feed), and weight (300 to 550 kg) intervals. Maternal grandsire breed was significant (P \u3c 0.01) for all traits. Maternal granddam breed (Hereford, Angus, or U.S. Meat Animal Research Center III) was significant (P \u3c 0.05) only for fat depth, USDA yield grade, retail product yield, fat yield, fat weight, and bone yield. Sire breed was significant (P \u3c 0.05) for live weight, hot carcass weight, longissimus area, and bone weight. Sex class was a significant (P \u3c 0.001) source of variation for all traits except for percentage Choice, marbling score, retail product yield, and fat yield. Interactions between maternal grandsire and sire breed were nonexistent. Sire and grandsire breed effects can be optimized by selection and use of appropriate crossbreeding systems
Maternal grandsire, granddam, and sire breed effects on growth and carcass traits of crossbred cattle
Postweaning growth, feed efficiency, and carcass traits were analyzed on 1,422 animals obtained by mating F1 cows to F1 (Belgian Blue X British breeds) or Charolais sires. Cows were obtained from mating Hereford, Angus, and U.S. Meat Animal Research Center III ( ¼ Hereford, ¼ Angus, ¼ Pinzgauer, and ¼ Red Poll) dams to Hereford or Angus (British breeds), Tuli, Boran, Brahman, or Belgian Blue sires. Breed groups were fed in replicated pens and slaughtered serially in each of 2 yr. Postweaning average daily gain; live weight; hot carcass weight; fat depth; longissimus area; estimated kidney, pelvic, and heart fat (percentage); percentage Choice; marbling score; USDA yield grade; retail product yield (percentage); retail product weight; fat yield (percentage); fat weight; bone yield (percentage); and bone weight were analyzed in this population. Quadratic regressions of pen mean weight on days fed and of cumulative ME consumption on days fed were used to estimate gain, ME consumption and efficiency (Mcal of ME/kg of gain) over time (0 to 200 d on feed), and weight (300 to 550 kg) intervals. Maternal grandsire breed was significant (P \u3c 0.01) for all traits. Maternal granddam breed (Hereford, Angus, or U.S. Meat Animal Research Center III) was significant (P \u3c 0.05) only for fat depth, USDA yield grade, retail product yield, fat yield, fat weight, and bone yield. Sire breed was significant (P \u3c 0.05) for live weight, hot carcass weight, longissimus area, and bone weight. Sex class was a significant (P \u3c 0.001) source of variation for all traits except for percentage Choice, marbling score, retail product yield, and fat yield. Interactions between maternal grandsire and sire breed were nonexistent. Sire and grandsire breed effects can be optimized by selection and use of appropriate crossbreeding systems
- …