12,937 research outputs found
A Probabilistic Approach to Classifying Supernovae Using Photometric Information
This paper presents a novel method for determining the probability that a
supernova candidate belongs to a known supernova type (such as Ia, Ibc, IIL,
\emph{etc.}), using its photometric information alone. It is validated with
Monte Carlo, and both space- and ground- based data. We examine the application
of the method to well-sampled as well as poorly sampled supernova light curves
and investigate to what extent the best currently available supernova models
can be used for typing supernova candidates. Central to the method is the
assumption that a supernova candidate belongs to a group of objects that can be
modeled; we therefore discuss possible ways of removing anomalous or less well
understood events from the sample. This method is particularly advantageous for
analyses where the purity of the supernova sample is of the essence, or for
those where it is important to know the number of the supernova candidates of a
certain type (\emph{e.g.}, in supernova rate studies).Comment: Version accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa
Leg Sympathetic Response to Noxious Skin Stimuli is Similar in High and Low Level Human Spinal Cord Injury
Objective To determine if sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction in the lower extremities is injury level dependent. Although sympathetic responses have been measured in the limbs of people with high and low level SCI using blood flow measurements, including Doppler ultrasound and venous plethysmography, a direct comparison between injury levels has not been made. Methods Volunteers with chronic SCI were grouped according to injury level. Above T6: high level (HL, n = 7), and T6 and below: low level (LL, n = 6). All subjects had complete motor and sensory loss. Leg arterial flows were recorded by venous occlusion plethysmography, and continuous heart rate and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were measured. The conditioning stimulus consisted of transcutaneous stimulation to the arch of the contralateral foot. Results HL and LL subjects demonstrated a significant decrease in arterial conductance during stimulation with no significant difference found between groups. As expected, only group HL demonstrated a significant increase in MAP. Conclusions These results support our hypothesis that local (leg) sympathetic responses are similar for both high and low level SCI. Significance While low level SCI does not typically present with autonomic dysreflexia, bouts of increased reflex sympathetic activity could have ramifications for metabolism as well as renal and motor system functio
Enantioselective Total Synthesis of (+)-Cassiol
An enantioselective total synthesis of (+)-cassiol is reported. The complex derived from Pd-2(pmdba)(3) and enantiopure t-BuPHOX ligand catalyzes enantioconvergent decarboxylative alkylation to generate the quaternary carbon stereocenter at an early stage. The overall synthetic strategy involves a convergent late-stage coupling of two fragments. The synthesis features a longest linear sequence of eight steps
Leg Sympathetic Response to Noxious Skin Stimuli is Similar in High and Low Level Human Spinal Cord Injury
Objective To determine if sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction in the lower extremities is injury level dependent. Although sympathetic responses have been measured in the limbs of people with high and low level SCI using blood flow measurements, including Doppler ultrasound and venous plethysmography, a direct comparison between injury levels has not been made. Methods Volunteers with chronic SCI were grouped according to injury level. Above T6: high level (HL, n = 7), and T6 and below: low level (LL, n = 6). All subjects had complete motor and sensory loss. Leg arterial flows were recorded by venous occlusion plethysmography, and continuous heart rate and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were measured. The conditioning stimulus consisted of transcutaneous stimulation to the arch of the contralateral foot. Results HL and LL subjects demonstrated a significant decrease in arterial conductance during stimulation with no significant difference found between groups. As expected, only group HL demonstrated a significant increase in MAP. Conclusions These results support our hypothesis that local (leg) sympathetic responses are similar for both high and low level SCI. Significance While low level SCI does not typically present with autonomic dysreflexia, bouts of increased reflex sympathetic activity could have ramifications for metabolism as well as renal and motor system functio
Nonlocal Optics of Plasmonic Nanowire Metamaterials
We present an analytical description of the nonlocal optical response of
plasmonic nanowire metamaterials that enable negative refraction, subwavelength
light manipulation, and emission lifetime engineering. We show that dispersion
of optical waves propagating in nanowire media results from coupling of
transverse and longitudinal electromagnetic modes supported by the composite
and derive the nonlocal effective medium approximation for this dispersion. We
derive the profiles of electric field across the unit cell, and use these
expressions to solve the long-standing problem of additional boundary
conditions in calculations of transmission and reflection of waves by nonlocal
nanowire media. We verify our analytical results with numerical solutions of
Maxwell's equations and discuss generalization of the developed formalism to
other uniaxial metamaterials
Baryon Electromagnetic Properties in Partially Quenched Heavy Hadron Chiral Perturbation Theory
The electromagnetic properties of baryons containing a heavy quark are
calculated at next-to-leading order in partially quenched heavy hadron chiral
perturbation theory. Calculations are performed for three light flavors in the
isospin limit and additionally for two light non-degenerate flavors. We use
partially-quenched charge matrices that are easy to implement on the lattice.
The results presented are necessary for the light quark mass extrapolation and
zero-momentum extrapolation of lattice QCD and partially quenched lattice QCD
calculations of heavy hadron electromagnetic properties. Additionally relations
between the sextet electromagnetic form factors and transition form factors are
derived.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, RevTex
Field Evaluation of Herbicides on Vegetables and Small Fruits 2004
Herbicide evaluation studies on vegetables and small fruits were conducted in 2004 at the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station at Fayetteville, AR, in an effort to evaluate new herbicides, herbicide mixtures, and their application timings for weed control efficacy and crop tolerance. Results of these studies, in part, provide useful information to producers, fellow researchers, the Crop Protection Industry, and the IR-4 Minor Crop Pest Management Program in the development of potential new herbicide uses in vegetable, and fruit
Superconducting Junctions with Ferromagnetic, Antiferromagnetic or Charge-Density-Wave Interlayers
Spectra and spin structures of Andreev interface states and the Josephson
current are investigated theoretically in junctions between clean
superconductors (SC) with ordered interlayers. The Josephson current through
the ferromagnet-insulator-ferromagnet interlayer can exhibit a nonmonotonic
dependence on the misorientation angle. The characteristic behavior takes place
if the pi state is the equilibrium state of the junction in the particular case
of parallel magnetizations. We find a novel channel of quasiparticle reflection
(Q reflection) from the simplest two-sublattice antiferromagnet (AF) on a
bipartite lattice. As a combined effect of Andreev and Q reflections, Andreev
states arise at the AF/SC interface. When the Q reflection dominates the
specular one, Andreev bound states have almost zero energy on AF/ s-wave SC
interfaces, whereas they lie near the edge of the continuous spectrum for
AF/d-wave SC boundaries. For an s-wave SC/AF/s-wave SC junction, the bound
states are found to split and carry the supercurrent. Our analytical results
are based on a novel quasiclassical approach, which applies to interfaces
involving itinerant antiferromagnets. Similar effects can take place on
interfaces of superconductors with charge density wave materials (CDW),
including the possible d-density wave state (DDW) of the cuprates.Comment: LT24 conference proceeding, 2 pages, 1 figur
Doubly Heavy Baryons and Quark-Diquark Symmetry in Quenched and Partially Quenched Chiral Perturbation Theory
We extend the chiral Lagrangian with heavy quark-diquark symmetry to quenched
and partially quenched theories. These theories are used to derive formulae for
the chiral extrapolation of masses and hyperfine splittings of doubly heavy
baryons in lattice QCD simulations. A quark-diquark symmetry prediction for the
hyperfine splittings of heavy mesons and doubly heavy baryons is rather
insensitive to chiral corrections in both quenched and partially quenched QCD.
Extrapolation formulae for the doubly heavy baryon electromagnetic transition
moments are also determined for the partially quenched theory.Comment: 19pp, Ref. adde
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