178 research outputs found
Chiral Dynamics of Low-Energy Kaon-Baryon Interactions with Explicit Resonance
The processes involving low energy and interactions (where
or ) are studied in the framework of heavy baryon chiral
perturbation theory with the (1405) resonance appearing as an
independent field.
The leading and next-to-leading terms in the chiral expansion are taken into
account. We show that an approach which explicitly includes the (1405)
resonance as an elementary quantum field gives reasonable descriptions of both
the threshold branching ratios and the energy dependence of total cross
sections.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
On kaonic hydrogen. Phenomenological quantum field theoretic model revisited
We argue that due to isospin and U-spin invariance of strong low-energy
interactions the S-wave scattering lengths a^0_0 and a^1_0 of bar-KN scattering
with isospin I=0 and I = 1 satisfy the low-energy theorem a^0_0 + 3 a^1_0 = 0
valid to leading order in chiral expansion. In the model of strong low-energy
bar-KN interactions at threshold (EPJA 21,11 (2004)) we revisit the
contribution of the Sigma(1750) resonance, which does not saturate the
low-energy theorem a^0_0 + 3 a^1_0 = 0, and replace it by the baryon background
with properties of an SU(3) octet. We calculate the S-wave scattering
amplitudes of K^-N and K^-d scattering at threshold. We calculate the energy
level displacements of the ground states of kaonic hydrogen and kaonic
deuterium. The result obtained for kaonic hydrogen agrees well with recent
experimental data by the DEAR Collaboration. We analyse the cross sections for
elastic and inelastic K^-p scattering for laboratory momenta of the incident
K^- meson from the domain 70 MeV/c < p_K < 150 MeV/c. The theoretical results
agree with the available experimental data within two standard deviations.Comment: 20 pages, Latex, We have slightly corrected the contribution of the
double scattering. This changes the S-wave scattering length of K^-d
scattering by 17%, which is commensurable with the theoretical uncertaint
Attention and fluctuating attention in patients with dementia with lewy bodies and alzheimer disease
Background: Attentional deficits are described in the consensus clinical criteria for the operationalized diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) as characteristic of the condition. In addition, preliminary studies have indicated that both attentional impairments and fluctuation of attentional impairments are more marked in patients with DLB than in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), although neuropsychological function has not previously been examined in a large prospective cohort with confirmed diagnostic accuracy against postmortem diagnosis. Methods: A detailed evaluation of attention and fluctuating attention was undertaken in 155 patients with dementia (85 with DLB and 80 with AD) from a representative hospital dementia case register and 35 elderly controls using the Cognitive Drug Research Computerized Assessment System for Dementia Patients computerized neuropsychological battery. Operationalized clinical diagnosis was made using the consensus criteria for DLB and the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke-Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association criteria for AD. High levels of sensitivity and specificity have been achieved for the first 50 cases undergoing postmortem examination. Results: The groups were well matched for severity of cognitive impairments, bur the AD patients were older (mean age, 80 vs 78 years) and more likely to be female (55 vs 40). Patients with DLB were significantly more impaired than patients with AD on all measures of attention and fluctuating attention (for all comparisons, t � 2.5, P<.001), and patients from both dementia groups were significantly more impaired than elderly controls for all comparisons other than cognitive reaction time, which was significantly more impaired in DLB patients than controls but was comparable in controls and AD patients. There were, however, significant associations between the severity of cognitive impairment and the severity of both attentional deficits and fluctuations in attention. Conclusions: This large prospective study confirms that slowing of cognitive processing, attention, and fluctuations of attention are significantly more pronounced in DLB and AD patients, although fluctuating attention is common in patients with moderate-to-severe AD. Deficits of cognitive reaction rime appear to be specific to DLB, except in severe dementia. A detailed evaluation of attentional performance could make an important contribution to differential diagnosis, although the results need to be interpreted within the context of the overall severity of cognitive deficits
Aspects of Strangeness -1 Meson-Baryon Scattering
We consider meson-baryon interactions in S-wave with strangeness -1. This is
a sector populated by plenty of resonances interacting in several two-body
coupled channels. We consider a large set of experimental data, where the
recent experiments are remarkably accurate. This requires a sound theoretical
description to account for all the data and we employ Unitary Chiral
Perturbation Theory up to and including O(p^2). The spectroscopy of our
solutions is studied within this approach, discussing the rise from the pole
content of two \Lambda(1405) resonances and of the \Lambda(1670),
\Lambda(1800), \Sigma(1480), \Sigma(1620) and \Sigma(1750). We finally argue
about our preferred fit.Comment: 6 figures, 3 figures, talk given in the IVth International Conference
on Quarks and Nuclear Physics (QNP06), Madrid June 5th and 10th, 2006. One
reference is update
Development of the MapMe intervention body image scales of known weight status for 4-5 and 10-11 year old children
This work was supported by the National Prevention Research Initiative [grant number MR/J00054X/1] (incorporating funding from Alzheimer’s Research UK; Alzheimer’s Society; Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council; British Heart Foundation; Cancer Research UK; Chief Scientist Office, Scottish Government Health Directorate; Department of Health; Diabetes UK; Economic and Social Research Council; Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council; Health and Social Care Research Division, Public Health Agency, Northern Ireland; Medical Research Council; Stroke Association; Wellcome Trust and World Cancer Research Fund).Background: Parents tend to visually assess children to determine their weight status and typically underestimate child body size. A visual tool may aid parents to more accurately assess child weight status and so support strategies to reduce childhood overweight. Body image scales (BIS) are visual images of people ranging from underweight to overweight but none exist for children based on UK criteria. Our aim was to develop sex- and age-specific BIS for children, based on British growth reference (UK90) criteria. Methods: BIS were developed using 3D surface body scans of children, their associated weight status using UK90 criteria from height and weight measurements, and qualitative work with parents and health professionals. Results: Height, weight and 3D body scans were collected (211 4-5 years; 177 10-11 years). 12 qualitative sessions were held with 37 participants. Four BIS (4-5 year old girls and boys, 10-11 year old girls and boys) were developed. Conclusions: This study has created the first sex- and age-specific BIS, based on UK90 criteria. The BIS have potential for use in child overweight prevention and management strategies, and in future research. This study also provides a protocol for the development of further BIS appropriate to other age groups and ethnicities.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Initial State Interactions for -Proton Radiative Capture
The effects of the initial state interactions on the radiative
capture branching ratios are examined and found to be quite sizable. A general
coupled-channel formalism for both strong and electromagnetic channels using a
particle basis is presented, and applied to all the low energy data
with the exception of the {\it 1s} atomic level shift. Satisfactory fits are
obtained using vertex coupling constants for the electromagnetic channels that
are close to their expected SU(3) values.Comment: 16 pages, uses revte
Flavor SU(3) breaking effects in the chiral unitary model for meson-baryon scatterings
We examine flavor SU(3) breaking effects on meson-baryon scattering
amplitudes in the chiral unitary model. It turns out that the SU(3) breaking,
which appears in the leading quark mass term in the chiral expansion, can not
explain the channel dependence of the subtraction parameters of the model,
which are crucial to reproduce the observed scattering amplitudes and resonance
properties.Comment: RevTeX4, 4 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
Baryon polarization in low-energy unpolarized meson-baryon scattering
We compute the polarization of the final-state baryon, in its rest frame, in
low-energy meson--baryon scattering with unpolarized initial state, in
Unitarized BChPT. Free parameters are determined by fitting total and
differential cross-section data (and spin-asymmetry or polarization data if
available) for , and scattering. We also compare our
results with those of leading-order BChPT
DN interaction from meson exchange
A model of the DN interaction is presented which is developed in close
analogy to the meson-exchange KbarN potential of the Juelich group utilizing
SU(4) symmetry constraints. The main ingredients of the interaction are
provided by vector meson (rho, omega) exchange and higher-order box diagrams
involving D*N, D\Delta, and D*\Delta intermediate states. The coupling of DN to
the pi-Lambda_c and pi-Sigma_c channels is taken into account. The interaction
model generates the Lambda_c(2595) resonance dynamically as a DN quasi-bound
state. Results for DN total and differential cross sections are presented and
compared with predictions of an interaction model that is based on the
leading-order Weinberg-Tomozawa term. Some features of the Lambda_c(2595)
resonance are discussed and the role of the near-by pi-Sigma_c threshold is
emphasized. Selected predictions of the orginal KbarN model are reported too.
Specifically, it is pointed out that the model generates two poles in the
partial wave corresponding to the Lambda(1405) resonance.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
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