13,574 research outputs found

    Novel Spin and Statistical Properties of Nonabelian Vortices

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    We study the statistics of vortices which appear in (2+1)--dimensional spontaneously broken gauge theories, where a compact group G breaks to a finite nonabelian subgroup H. Two simple models are presented. In the first, a quantum state which is symmetric under the interchange of a pair of indistinguishable vortices can be transformed into an antisymmetric state after the passage through the system of a third vortex with an appropriate HH-flux element. Further, there exist states containing two indistinguishable spinless vortices which obey Fermi statistics. These results generalize to loops of nonabelian cosmic string in 3+1 dimensions. In the second model, fractional analogues of the above behaviors occur. Also, composites of vortices in this theory may possess fractional ``Cheshire spin'' which can be changed by passing an additional vortex through the system.Comment: 11 pages, UICHEP-TH/92-15; FERMILAB-PUB-92/233-T; SLAC-PUB-588

    Platinum-catalysed cinnamaldehyde hydrogenation in continuous flow

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    Platinum is one of the most widely used hydrogenation catalysts. Here we describe the translation of batch reactions to continuous flow, affording tunable C=O versus C=C hydrogenation over a Pt/SiO2 catalyst, resulting in high steady state activity and single-pass yields in the selective hydrogenation of cinnamaldehyde to cinnamyl alcohol under mild conditions. Negligible catalyst deactivation occurs under extended flow operation due to removal of reactively-formed poisons from the reaction zone. Process intensification imparts a four-fold enhancement in cinnamyl alcohol productivity

    Highly selective hydrogenation of furfural over supported Pt nanoparticles under mild conditions

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    The selective liquid phase hydrogenation of furfural to furfuryl alcohol over Pt nanoparticles supported on SiO₂, ZnO, γ-Al2O₃, CeO₂ is reported under extremely mild conditions. Ambient hydrogen pressure, and temperatures as low as 50 °C are shown sufficient to drive furfural hydrogenation with high conversion and >99% selectivity to furfuryl alcohol. Strong support and solvent dependencies are observed, with methanol and n-butanol proving excellent solvents for promoting high furfuryl alcohol yields over uniformly dispersed 4 nm Pt nanoparticles over MgO, CeO₂ and γ-Al₂O₃. In contrast, non-polar solvents conferred poor furfural conversion, while ethanol favored acetal by-product formation. Furfural selective hydrogenation can be tuned through controlling the oxide support, reaction solvent and temperature

    Beyond the simple Proximity Force Approximation: geometrical effects on the non-retarded Casimir interaction

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    We study the geometrical corrections to the simple Proximity Force Approximation for the non-retarded Casimir force. We present analytical results for the force between objects of various shapes and substrates, and between pairs of objects. We compare the results to those from more exact numerical calculations. We treat spheres, spheroids, cylinders, cubes, cones, and wings; the analytical PFA results together with the geometrical correction factors are summarized in a table.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures, 1 tabl

    Strong Decays of Excited Heavy Mesons In Chiral Perturbation Theory

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    We construct an effective Lagrangian describing the interaction of soft pions and kaons with mesons containing a heavy quark and light degrees of freedom in an orbital pp wave. The formalism is easily extended to heavy mesons and baryons in arbitrary excited states. We calculate the leading contributions to the strong decays \dtwo\to\d\pi, \dtwo\to\dstar\pi and \done\to\dstar\pi. We confirm the relations between the rates previously obtained by Isgur and Wise using heavy quark symmetry, and find that the absolute widths are consistent with na\"\i ve power counting. We also estimate the branching ratios for the two pion decays \dtwo\to\dstar\pi\pi, \done\to\dstar\pi\pi and \done\to\d\pi\pi, which are dominated by pole graphs. Our predictions depend on the masses and widths of the as yet unseen scalar-pseudovector pp-wave doublet. Heavy quark spin symmetry predicts \Gamma(\dtwo\to\dstar\pi\pi): \Gamma(\done\to\dstar\pi\pi):\Gamma(\done\to\d\pi\pi)=3:1:2, but this relation is badly violated in practice because 1/M1/M effects arising purely from kinematics are large.Comment: (14 pages, 2 figures available from the authors, harvmac.tex required), SLAC-PUB-5812, UCSD/PTH 92-1

    A Tri-state Investigation of Firearms Confiscation on Three Regional University Campuses

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    While the use of firearms is pronounced throughout the US, there are few studies that address the availability of firearms on university campuses in states that are adjacent to each other. This study uses a five-year longitudinal design to investigate three universities that were randomly selected in the neighboring states of North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina to examine the extent of firearm confiscation by public safety officers. In the final analysis, we conclude that unless viable strategies that target preventing firearms used in domestic violence, alleviating access to guns, and addressing mental health illnesses among college students are created to effectively confiscate firearms on university campuses, deadly violence could become an inevitable occurrence

    Defective Tmprss3-Associated Hair Cell Degeneration in Inner Ear Organoids

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    Mutations in the gene encoding the type II transmembrane protease 3 (TMPRSS3) cause human hearing loss, although the underlying mechanisms that result in TMPRSS3-related hearing loss are still unclear. We combined the use of stem cell-derived inner ear organoids with single-cell RNA sequencing to investigate the role of TMPRSS3. Defective Tmprss3 leads to hair cell apoptosis without altering the development of hair cells and the formation of the mechanotransduction apparatus. Prior to degeneration, Tmprss3-KO hair cells demonstrate reduced numbers of BK channels and lower expressions of genes encoding calcium ion-binding proteins, suggesting a disruption in intracellular homeostasis. A proteolytically active TMPRSS3 was detected on cell membranes in addition to ER of cells in inner ear organoids. Our in vitro model recapitulated salient features of genetically associated inner ear abnormalities and will serve as a powerful tool for studying inner ear disorders

    Platinum catalysed aerobic selective oxidation of cinnamaldehyde to cinnamic acid

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    Aerobic selective oxidation of allylic aldehydes offers an atom and energy efficient route to unsaturated carboxylic acids, however suitable heterogeneous catalysts offering high selectivity and productivity have to date proved elusive. Herein, we demonstrate the direct aerobic oxidation of cinnamaldehyde to cinnamic acid employing silica supported Pt nanoparticles under base-free, batch and continuous flow operation. Surface and bulk characterisation of four families of related Pt/silica catalysts by XRD, XPS, HRTEM, CO chemisorption and N2 porosimetry evidence surface PtO2 as the common active site for cinnamaldehyde oxidation, with a common turnover frequency of 49,000 ± 600 h−1; competing cinnamaldehyde hydrogenolysis is favoured over metallic Pt. High area mesoporous (SBA-15 or KIT-6) and macroporous-mesoporous SBA-15 silicas confer significant rate and cinnamic acid yield enhancements versus low area fumed silica, due to superior platinum dispersion. High oxygen partial pressures and continuous flow operation stabilise PtO2 active sites against in-situ reduction and concomitant deactivation, further enhancing cinnamic acid productivity

    Extending the range of liquids available for NMR cryoporometry studies of porous materials

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    Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) cryoporometry, although well established, can be limited by the inability of any one liquid to probe a broad range of pore sizes, a relatively small number of commonly-used probe liquids and the requirement to match the probe liquid to the chemistry of the material being studied. Here we demonstrate, for the first time, the use of menthol and t-butanol as probe liquids in NMR cryoporometry measurements. Using appropriate estimates for the values of the melting point depression constant, kc, and the non-freezing surface layer, 2sl, NMR melting data was converted into pore size distributions. The melting point depression constant for t-butanol is similar to that of cyclohexane; however due to its functionality, t-butanol may be the preferred liquid used to study the porosity of hydrophilic materials. Menthol, having a larger value of kc, can accurately analyze larger pore sizes up to 100 nm. This represents the first use of menthol and t-butanol to accurately probe pore dimensions in NMR cryoporometry

    NMR cryoporometric measurements of porous silica:A method for the determination of melting point depression parameters of probe liquids

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    Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) cryoporometry is a non-invasive method for determining the pore size distributions of materials such as porous silica. Cryoporometry has several advantages over other porometric techniques. It is able to measure the melting process in a series of discrete steps, whereas transient heat flow techniques, such as differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), have a minimum rate of measurement, and, secondly, NMR cryoporometry can analyze pore shapes with any geometry, where nitrogen porosimetry is complicated for samples with spherical pores with narrow necks. However, one key drawback of the method is that, for any one liquid observed in any one material, there is a lack of consensus in the two parameters, kckc andView the MathML source2sl , used to convert experimental NMR melting point depression data into a pore size distribution. By considering two decades worth of literature data, values for both were obtained for water in porous silica supports, in particular an estimate of a non-freezing layer between the solid ice and the inner surface of the pore. These values were used to produce pore size distributions for three silica materials, SBA-15 and KIT-6, both with cylindrical pores but possessing different structures, and SBA-16, which has spherical pores. This represents the first time KIT-6 has been characterized by the NMR method. Furthermore, this work demonstrates a general method for obtaining values for kckc and View the MathML source2sl which can be applied to any liquid for which suitable literature data is available
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