3,628 research outputs found
Generalized Random Phase Approximation and Gauge Theories
Mean-field treatments of Yang-Mills theory face the problem of how to treat
the Gauss law constraint. In this paper we try to face this problem by studying
the excited states instead of the ground state. For this purpose we extend the
operator approach to the Random Phase Approximation (RPA) well-known from
nuclear physics and recently also employed in pion physics to general bosonic
theories with a standard kinetic term. We focus especially on conservation
laws, and how they are translated from the full to the approximated theories,
demonstrate that the operator approach has the same spectrum as the RPA derived
from the time-dependent variational principle, and give - for Yang-Mills theory
- a discussion of the moment of inertia connected to the energy contribution of
the zero modes to the RPA ground state energy. We also indicate a line of
thought that might be useful to improve the results of the Random Phase
Approximation.Comment: 66 pages, REVTeX4, uses amsfonts and package longtabl
Geochemistry of As-, F- and B-bearing waters in and around San Antonio de los Cobres, Argentina, and implications for drinking and irrigation water quality
Spring, stream and tap waters from in and around San Antonio de los Cobres, Salta, Argentina, were sampled to characterize their geochemical signatures, and to determine whether they pose a threat to human health and crops. The spring waters are typical of geothermal areas world-wide, in that they are Na-Cl waters with high concentrations of Astot, As(III), Li, B, HCO3, F and SiO2 (up to 9.49, 8.92, 13.1, 56.6, 1250, 7.30 and 57.2 mg L-1, respectively), and result from mixing of deep Na-Cl brines and meteoric HCO3-rich waters. Springs close to the town of San Antonio have higher concentrations of all elements, and are generally cooler, than springs in the Baños de Agua Caliente. Spring water chemistry is a result of mixing of deep Na-Cl brines and meteoric HCO3 waters. Stream waters are also Na-Cl type, and receive large inputs of all elements from the springs near San Antonio, but concentrations decrease downstream through the town of San Antonio due to mineral precipitation. The spring that is used as a drinking water source, and other springs in the area, have As, F and B concentrations in excess of WHO and Argentinian drinking water guidelines. Evaluation of the waters for irrigation purposes suggests that their high salinities and B concentrations may adversely affect crops. The waters may be improved for drinking and irrigation by dilution with cleaner meteoric waters, mineral precipitation or by use of commercial filters. Such recommendations could also be followed by other settlements that draw drinking and irrigation waters from geothermal sources
Photometric variability of the T Tauri star TW Hya on time scales of hours to years
MOST (Microvariability & Oscillations of STars) and ASAS (All Sky Automated
Survey) observations have been used to characterize photometric variability of
TW Hya on time scales from a fraction of a day to 7.5 weeks and from a few days
to 8 years, respectively. The two data sets have very different uncertainties
and temporal coverage properties and cannot be directly combined, nevertheless,
they suggests a global variability spectrum with "flicker noise" properties,
i.e. with amplitudes a ~ 1/sqrt(f), over >4 decades in frequency, in the range
f = 0.0003 to 10 cycles per day (c/d). A 3.7 d period is clearly present in the
continuous 11 day, 0.07 d time resolution, observations by MOST in 2007.
Brightness extrema coincide with zero-velocity crossings in periodic (3.56 d)
radial velocity variability detected in contemporaneous spectroscopic
observations of Setiawan et al. (2008) and interpreted as caused by a planet.
The 3.56/3.7 d periodicity was entirely absent in the second, four times longer
MOST run in 2008, casting doubt on the planetary explanation. Instead, a
spectrum of unstable single periods within the range of 2 - 9 days was
observed; the tendency of the periods to progressively shorten was well traced
using the wavelet analysis. The evolving periodicities and the overall
flicker-noise characteristics of the TW Hya variability suggest a combination
of several mechanisms, with the dominant ones probably related to the accretion
processes from the disk around the star.Comment: MNRAS submitte
'Colour and communion': Exploring the influences of visual art-making as a leisure activity on older women's subjective well-being
This is the post-print version of the final paper published in Journal of Aging Studies. The published article is available from the link below. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. Copyright @ 2009 Elsevier B.V.Research into the subjective experience of art-making for older people is limited, and has focused mostly on professional artists rather than amateurs. This study examined older women's motives for visual art-making. Thirty-two participants aged 60-86 years old were interviewed. Twelve lived with chronic illness; twenty reported good health. Nearly all had taken up art after retirement; two had since become professional artists. Participants described their art-making as enriching their mental life, promoting enjoyment of the sensuality of colour and texture, presenting new challenges, playful experimentation, and fresh ambitions. Art also afforded participants valued connections with the world outside the home and immediate family. It encouraged attention to the aesthetics of the physical environment, preserved equal status relationships, and created opportunities for validation. Art-making protected the women's identities, helping them to resist the stereotypes and exclusions which are commonly encountered in later life.AHR
Adult attachment style across individuals and role-relationships: Avoidance is relationship-specific, but anxiety shows greater generalizability
A generalisability study examined the hypotheses that avoidant attachment, reflecting the representation of others, should be more relationship-specific (vary across relationships more than across individuals), while attachment anxiety, reflecting self-representation, should be more generalisable across a person’s relationships. College students responded to 6-item questionnaire measures of these variables for 5 relationships (mother, father, best same-gender friend, romantic partner or best opposite-gender friend, other close person), on 3 (N = 120) or 2 (N = 77) occasions separated by a few weeks. Results supported the hypotheses, with the person variance component being larger than the relationship-specific component for anxiety, and the opposite happening for avoidance. Anxiety therefore seems not to be as relationship-specific as previous research suggested. Possible reasons for discrepancies between the current and previous studies are discussed
Why do women not use antenatal services in low and middle income countries? A metasynthesis of qualitative studies
Background:
Almost 50% of women in low & middle income countries (LMIC’s) don’t receive adequate antenatal care. Women’s views can offer important insights into this problem. Qualitative studies exploring inadequate use of antenatal services have been undertaken in a range of countries, but the findings are not easily transferable. We aimed to inform the development of future antenatal care programmes through a synthesis of findings in all relevant qualitative studies.
Methods and Findings:
Using a pre-determined search strategy, we identified robust qualitative studies reporting on the views and experiences of women in LMIC’s who received inadequate antenatal care. We used meta-ethnographic techniques to generate themes and a line of argument synthesis. We derived policy relevant hypotheses from the findings.
We included 21 papers representing the views of more than 1230 women from 15 countries. Three key themes were identified: ‘Pregnancy as socially risky and physiologically healthy’; ‘Resource use and survival in conditions of extreme poverty’and ‘Not getting it right first time’. The line of argument synthesis describes a dissonance between programme design and cultural contexts that may restrict access and discourage return visits. We hypothesize that centralized, risk-focused antenatal care programmes may be at odds with the resources, beliefs and experiences of pregnant women who underuse antenatal services.
Conclusions:
Our findings suggest that there may be a mis-alignment between current antenatal provision and the social and cultural context of some women in LMIC’s. Antenatal care provision that is theoretically and contextually at odds with local contextual beliefs and experiences are likely to be underused, especially when attendance generates increased personal risks of lost family resource or physical danger during travel; when the promised care is not delivered due to resource constraints; and when women experience covert or overt abuse in care settings
WR 110: A Single Wolf-Rayet Star With Corotating Interaction Regions In Its Wind?
A 30-day contiguous photometric run with the MOST satellite on the WN5-6b
star WR 110 (HD 165688) reveals a fundamental periodicity of P = 4.08 +/- 0.55
days along with a number of harmonics at periods P/n, with n ~ 2,3,4,5 and 6,
and a few other possible stray periodicities and/or stochastic variability on
timescales longer than about a day. Spectroscopic RV studies fail to reveal any
plausible companion with a period in this range. Therefore, we conjecture that
the observed light-curve cusps of amplitude ~ 0.01 mag that recur at a 4.08 day
timescale may arise in the inner parts, or at the base of, a corotating
interaction region (CIR) seen in emission as it rotates around with the star at
constant angular velocity. The hard X-ray component seen in WR 110 could then
be a result of a high velocity component of the CIR shock interacting with the
ambient wind at several stellar radii. Given that most hot, luminous stars
showing CIRs have two CIR arms, it is possible that either the fundamental
period is 8.2 days or, more likely in the case of WR 110, there is indeed a
second weaker CIR arm for P = 4.08 days, that occurs ~ two thirds of a rotation
period after the main CIR. If this interpretation is correct, WR 110 therefore
joins the ranks with three other single WR stars, all WN, with confirmed CIR
rotation periods (WR 1, WR 6, and WR 134), albeit with WR 110 having by far the
lowest amplitude photometric modulation. This illustrates the power of being
able to secure intense, continuous high-precision photometry from space-based
platforms such as MOST. It also opens the door to revealing low-amplitude
photometric variations in other WN stars, where previous attempts have failed.
If all WN stars have CIRs at some level, this could be important for revealing
sources of magnetism or pulsation in addition to rotation periods.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted in Ap
Random Numbers Certified by Bell's Theorem
Randomness is a fundamental feature in nature and a valuable resource for
applications ranging from cryptography and gambling to numerical simulation of
physical and biological systems. Random numbers, however, are difficult to
characterize mathematically, and their generation must rely on an unpredictable
physical process. Inaccuracies in the theoretical modelling of such processes
or failures of the devices, possibly due to adversarial attacks, limit the
reliability of random number generators in ways that are difficult to control
and detect. Here, inspired by earlier work on nonlocality based and device
independent quantum information processing, we show that the nonlocal
correlations of entangled quantum particles can be used to certify the presence
of genuine randomness. It is thereby possible to design of a new type of
cryptographically secure random number generator which does not require any
assumption on the internal working of the devices. This strong form of
randomness generation is impossible classically and possible in quantum systems
only if certified by a Bell inequality violation. We carry out a
proof-of-concept demonstration of this proposal in a system of two entangled
atoms separated by approximately 1 meter. The observed Bell inequality
violation, featuring near-perfect detection efficiency, guarantees that 42 new
random numbers are generated with 99% confidence. Our results lay the
groundwork for future device-independent quantum information experiments and
for addressing fundamental issues raised by the intrinsic randomness of quantum
theory.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 16 page appendix. Version as close as possible
to the published version following the terms of the journa
Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1976-2014.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has experienced the most outbreaks of Ebola virus disease since the virus' discovery in 1976. This article provides for the first time a description and a line list for all outbreaks in this country, comprising 996 cases. Compared to patients over 15 years old, the odds of dying were significantly lower in patients aged 5 to 15 and higher in children under five (with 100% mortality in those under 2 years old). The odds of dying increased by 11% per day that a patient was not hospitalised. Outbreaks with an initially high reproduction number, R (>3), were rapidly brought under control, whilst outbreaks with a lower initial R caused longer and generally larger outbreaks. These findings can inform the choice of target age groups for interventions and highlight the importance of both reducing the delay between symptom onset and hospitalisation and rapid national and international response
The Epstein-Barr Virus G-Protein-Coupled Receptor Contributes to Immune Evasion by Targeting MHC Class I Molecules for Degradation
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a human herpesvirus that persists as a largely subclinical infection in the vast majority of adults worldwide. Recent evidence indicates that an important component of the persistence strategy involves active interference with the MHC class I antigen processing pathway during the lytic replication cycle. We have now identified a novel role for the lytic cycle gene, BILF1, which encodes a glycoprotein with the properties of a constitutive signaling G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). BILF1 reduced the levels of MHC class I at the cell surface and inhibited CD8+ T cell recognition of
endogenous target antigens. The underlying mechanism involves physical association of BILF1 with MHC class I molecules, an increased turnover from the cell surface, and enhanced degradation via lysosomal proteases. The BILF1 protein of the closely related CeHV15 c1-herpesvirus of the Rhesus Old World primate (80% amino acid sequence identity) downregulated surface MHC class I similarly to EBV BILF1. Amongst the human herpesviruses, the GPCR encoded by the ORF74 of the KSHV c2-herpesvirus is most closely related to EBV BILF1 (15% amino acid sequence identity) but did not affect levels of surface MHC class I. An engineered mutant of BILF1 that was unable to activate G protein signaling pathways retained the ability to downregulate MHC class I, indicating that the immune-modulating and GPCR-signaling properties are two distinct functions of BILF1. These findings extend our understanding of the normal biology of an important human pathogen. The discovery of a third EBV lytic cycle gene that cooperates to interfere with MHC class I antigen processing underscores the importance of the need for EBV to be able to evade CD8+ T cell responses during the lytic replication cycle, at a time when such a large number of potential viral targets are expressed
- …
