14,952 research outputs found
Tests for the asymptotic behaviour of the gamma^* --> gamma pi^0 form factor
The gamma^* --> gamma pi^0 transition measured at different photon
virtualities already provides us with a clean test for the behaviour of the
pi^0 gamma^* gamma off-shell axial anomaly at large time-like squared momenta.
It also allows reliable predictions for the branching ratio of heavy quarkonium
decays into omega pi^0.Comment: Latex, 7 pages + 1 .ps figure, comments on the Brodsky-Lepage limit
and 5 new references adde
Tests of flavor symmetry in J/psi decays
We use SU(3) flavor symmetry to analyze the and baryon-antibaryon
decays of . Both, the SU(3)-invariant and -violating contributions are
considered. Particular attention is paid to the interference of the
electromagnetic and strong amplitudes.Comment: 8 pages, latex. Talk given at CAM-94 Physics Meetin
Turning waves and breakdown for incompressible flows
We consider the evolution of an interface generated between two immiscible
incompressible and irrotational fluids. Specifically we study the Muskat and
water wave problems. We show that starting with a family of initial data given
by (\al,f_0(\al)), the interface reaches a regime in finite time in which is
no longer a graph. Therefore there exists a time where the solution of
the free boundary problem parameterized as (\al,f(\al,t)) blows-up: \|\da
f\|_{L^\infty}(t^*)=\infty. In particular, for the Muskat problem, this result
allows us to reach an unstable regime, for which the Rayleigh-Taylor condition
changes sign and the solution breaks down.Comment: 15 page
Thickness of the buccal bone wall and root angulation in the maxilla and mandible: an approach to cone beam computed tomography
Background: The objective of this paper is to anatomically describe the bone morphology in the maxillary and mandibular tooth areas, which might help in planning post-extraction implants. Methods: CBCT images (Planmeca ProMax 3D) of 403 teeth (208 upper teeth and 195 lower teeth) were obtained from 49 patients referred to the Dental School of Seville from January to December 2014. The thickness of the facial wall was measured at the crest, point A, 4mm below, point B, and at the apex, point C. The second parameter was the angle formed between the dental axis and the axis of the basal bone. Results: A total of 403 teeth were measured. In the maxilla, 89.4% of incisors, 93.94% of canines, 78% of premolars and 70.5% of molars had a buccal bone wall thickness less than the ideal 2mm. In the mandible, 73.5% of incisors, 49% of canines, 64% of premolars and 53% of molars had <1mm buccal bone thickness as measured at point B. The mean angulation in the maxilla was 11.67±6.37° for incisors, 16.88±7.93° for canines, 13.93±8.6° for premolars, and 9.89±4.8° for molars. In the mandible, the mean values were 10.63±8.76° for incisors, 10.98±7.36° for canines, 10.54±5.82° for premolars and 16.19±11.22° for molars. Conclusions: The high incidence of a buccal wall thickness of less than 2mm in over 80% of the assessed sites indicates the need for additional regeneration procedures, and several locations may also require custom abutments to solve the angulation problems for screw-retained crowns
Evidence of non-thermal X-ray emission from HH 80
Protostellar jets appear at all stages of star formation when the accretion
process is still at work. Jets travel at velocities of hundreds of km/s,
creating strong shocks when interacting with interstellar medium. Several cases
of jets have been detected in X-rays, typically showing soft emission. For the
first time, we report evidence of hard X-ray emission possibly related to
non-thermal processes not explained by previous models of the post-shock
emission predicted in the jet/ambient interaction scenario. HH 80 is located at
the south head of the jet associated to the massive protostar IRAS 18162-2048.
It shows soft and hard X-ray emission in regions that are spatially separated,
with the soft X-ray emission region situated behind the region of hard X-ray
emission. We propose a scenario for HH 80 where soft X-ray emission is
associated to thermal processes from the interaction of the jet with denser
ambient matter and the hard X-ray emission is produced by synchrotron radiation
at the front shock.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Reactivity of a Pt(100) cluster modified by adsorption of a nickel tetramer
The aim of this paper is to report a study of the reactivity of Pt(100) cluster and the same system modified by a nickel tetramer towards the atomic hydrogen adsorption. This study was carried out in the framework of density functional theory which provides global and local indexes that can be used to characterize the reactivity. The analyzed reactivity descriptors were: chemical potential, chemical hardness, electrophilicity index and Fukui function. The results showed that the global reactivity descriptor predicts that the platinum cluster modified by nickel is more reactive than the pure platinum cluster and that the local Fukui function provides information about the most susceptible site to electrophilic attack in platinum cluster.Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicada
Reactivity of a Pt(100) cluster modified by adsorption of a nickel tetramer
The aim of this paper is to report a study of the reactivity of Pt(100) cluster and the same system modified by a nickel tetramer towards the atomic hydrogen adsorption. This study was carried out in the framework of density functional theory which provides global and local indexes that can be used to characterize the reactivity. The analyzed reactivity descriptors were: chemical potential, chemical hardness, electrophilicity index and Fukui function. The results showed that the global reactivity descriptor predicts that the platinum cluster modified by nickel is more reactive than the pure platinum cluster and that the local Fukui function provides information about the most susceptible site to electrophilic attack in platinum cluster.Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicada
A Data Mining Perspective of XRF Elemental Analysis from Pueblo People’s Pottery
Hierarchical clustering was used to identify elemental signatures in artifacts attributed to the Pueblo peoples. The artifacts in this study are pottery samples found at different sites in the state of New Mexico, USA. Three methods were applied: complete, average, and Ward. Their corresponding cophenetic correlation coefficients were used to contrast the three methods. Elemental characterization was only based on X-ray fluorescence excitation from a portable spectrometer with the silver anode. The elemental correlations here disclosed by data mining techniques are expected to guide further archaeological studies and assist experts in the assessment of provenance and historical ethnographic studies.
XRF elemental analysi
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