1,821 research outputs found

    Crossover between ionic/covalent and pure ionic bonding in magnesium oxyde clusters

    Full text link
    An empirical potential with fluctuating charges is proposed for modelling (MgO)_n clusters in both the molecular (small n) and bulk (n->infty) regimes. Vectorial polarization forces are explicitely taken into account in the self-consistent determination of the charges. Our model predicts cuboid cluster structures, in agreement with previous experimental and theoretical results. The effective charge transferred between magnesium and oxygen smoothly increases from 1 to 2, with an estimated crossover size above 300 MgO molecules

    Nonperturbative QCD Vacuum Effects in Nonlocal Quark Dynamics

    Get PDF
    A straightforward calculation reveals the essentially nonlocal character of the leading heavy QQˉQ\bar{Q} interaction arising from nonperturbative gluon field correlations in the model of a fluctuating QCD vacuum. In light of this quarkonium spin splitting ratio predictions which have supported the scalar confinement ansatz are reconsidered as a specific example of possible consequences for spectroscopy.Comment: Latex, 9 page

    Limits on the monopole magnetic field from measurements of the electric dipole moments of atoms, molecules and the neutron

    Full text link
    A radial magnetic field can induce a time invariance violating electric dipole moment (EDM) in quantum systems. The EDMs of the Tl, Cs, Xe and Hg atoms and the neutron that are produced by such a field are estimated. The contributions of such a field to the constants, χ\chi of the T,P-odd interactions χeN⋅s/s\chi_e {\bf N} \cdot {\bf s}/s and χNN⋅I/I\chi_N {\bf N} \cdot {\bf I}/I are also estimated for the TlF, HgF and YbF molecules (where s{\bf s} (I{\bf I}) is the electron (nuclear) spin and N{\bf N} is the molecular axis). The best limit on the contact monopole field can be obtained from the measured value of the Tl EDM. The possibility of such a field being produced from polarization of the vacuum of electrically charged magnetic monopoles (dyons) by a Coulomb field is discussed, as well as the limit on these dyons. An alternative mechanism involves chromomagnetic and chromoelectric fields in QCD.Comment: Uses RevTex, 16 pages, 4 postscript figures. An explanation of why there is no orbital contribution to the EDM has been added, and the presentation has been improved in genera

    The Non-Trivial Effective Potential of the `Trivial' lambda Phi^4 Theory: A Lattice Test

    Full text link
    The strong evidence for the `triviality' of (lambda Phi^4)_4 theory is not incompatible with spontaneous symmetry breaking. Indeed, for a `trivial' theory the effective potential should be given exactly by the classical potential plus the free-field zero-point energy of the shifted field; i.e., by the one-loop effective potential. When this is renormalized in a simple, but nonperturbative way, one finds, self-consistently, that the shifted field does become non-interacting in the continuum limit. For a classically scale-invariant (CSI) lambda Phi^4 theory one finds m_h^2 = 8 pi^2 v^2, predicting a 2.2 TeV Higgs boson. Here we extend our earlier work in three ways: (i) we discuss the analogy with the hard-sphere Bose gas; (ii) we extend the analysis from the CSI case to the general case; and (iii) we propose a test of the predicted shape of the effective potential that could be tested in a lattice simulation.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, DE-FG05-92ER40717-

    Relative spins and excitation energies of superdeformed bands in 190Hg: Further evidence for octupole vibration

    Get PDF
    An experiment using the Eurogam Phase II gamma-ray spectrometer confirms the existence of an excited superdeformed (SD) band in 190Hg and its very unusual decay into the lowest SD band over 3-4 transitions. The energies and dipole character of the transitions linking the two SD bands have been firmly established. Comparisons with RPA calculations indicate that the excited SD band can be interpreted as an octupole-vibrational structure.Comment: 12 pages, latex, 4 figures available via WWW at http://www.phy.anl.gov/bgo/bc/hg190_nucl_ex.htm

    Translation to practice: a randomised controlled study of an evidenced based booklet targeted at breast care nurses in the United Kingdom

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: In the United Kingdom (UK), it was documented that a problem of knowledge transfer existed within the speciality of breast-cancer care, thus depriving patients of receiving optimal care. Despite increasingly robust research evidence indicating recommendation of whole body exercise for people affected by breast cancer, commensurate changes to practice were not noted amongst breast-care nurses (BCNs). AIM: To evaluate the effect of a targeted booklet, Exercise and Breast Cancer: A Booklet for Breast-Care Nurses, on changes in knowledge, reported practice, and attitudes of BCNs in the UK. METHOD: A prospective, experimental approach was used for designing a pre- and post-test randomised controlled study. Comparisons of knowledge, reported practice, and attitudes based on responses to a questionnaire were made at two time-points in two groups of BCNs (control and experimental). The unit of randomisation and analysis was hospital clusters of BCNs. The sample comprised 92 nurses from 62 hospitals. Analysis consisted of descriptive statistics and clustered regression techniques: clustered logistic regression for knowledge items, clustered linear regression for knowledge scores, ologit for attitude and reported practice items, and clustered multiple regression for paired and multiple variable analysis. RESULTS: A statistically significant increase in knowledge and changes in reported practice and attitudes were found. Robust variables affecting knowledge acquisition were: promotion of health, promotion of exercise, and understanding how exercise can reduce cancer-related fatigue. DISCUSSION: The study has shown that evidence-based printed material, such as an information booklet, can be used as an effective research dissemination method when developed for needs, values, and context of a target audience. CONCLUSIONS: This practical approach to research dissemination could be replicated and applied to other groups of nurses.</p

    Renormalization Group Approach to the Coulomb Pseudopotential for C_{60}

    Full text link
    A numerical renormalization group technique recently developed by one of us is used to analyse the Coulomb pseudopotential (μ∗{\mu^*}) in C60{{\rm C}_{60}} for a variety of bare potentials. We find a large reduction in μ∗{\mu^*} due to intraball screening alone, leading to an interesting non-monotonic dependence of μ∗{\mu^*} on the bare interaction strength. We find that μ∗{\mu^*} is positive for physically reasonable bare parameters, but small enough to make the electron-phonon coupling a viable mechanism for superconductivity in alkali-doped fullerides. We end with some open problems.Comment: 12 pages, latex, 7 figures available from [email protected]

    Stock de carbono en especies arbóreas del espinal entrerriano

    Get PDF
    El objetivo fue estimar el stock de carbono (C) en la biomasa arbórea de los bosques nativos del Espinal y valorar el servicio ecosistémico que prestan como secuestradores de C ante escenarios de cambio climático. El estudio se desarrolló en el área de bosques nativos de Entre Ríos. Se cuantificó la biomasa arbórea aérea y la fracción de C por componente (fuste, ramas ≥5cm de diámetro y &lt;5cm) de las especies dominantes (Prosopis affinis, Vachellia caven y P.nigra). Se obtuvieron para cada especie, modelos alométricos de alta precisión y factores de expansión de la biomasa, que constituyen herramientas de utilidad para estimar el C almacenado en estos ecosistemas. Los bosques nativos del Espinal entrerriano almacenan en promedio en su biomasa arbórea aérea, un stock de 43,99±10,43 tC/ha, que representan 161,44 t CO2/ha capturados de la atmósfera. Se estimó una tasa promedio de captura y fijación de C de 0,75±0,17 tC/ha/año. Este valor indica que en promedio, 1 ha de bosque nativo secuestra 2,75 t CO2/año. La información generada permite valorar el servicio ambiental que brindan los bosques nativos del Espinal entrerriano como sumidero de C en un escenario de cambio climático, siendo prioritaria su protección contra la deforestación y degradación. ARK: http://id.caicyt.gov.ar/ark:/s22504559/1pkod656v

    Can forest management based on natural disturbances maintain ecological resilience?

    Get PDF
    Given the increasingly global stresses on forests, many ecologists argue that managers must maintain ecological resilience: the capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbances without undergoing fundamental change. In this review we ask: Can the emerging paradigm of natural-disturbance-based management (NDBM) maintain ecological resilience in managed forests? Applying resilience theory requires careful articulation of the ecosystem state under consideration, the disturbances and stresses that affect the persistence of possible alternative states, and the spatial and temporal scales of management relevance. Implementing NDBM while maintaining resilience means recognizing that (i) biodiversity is important for long-term ecosystem persistence, (ii) natural disturbances play a critical role as a generator of structural and compositional heterogeneity at multiple scales, and (iii) traditional management tends to produce forests more homogeneous than those disturbed naturally and increases the likelihood of unexpected catastrophic change by constraining variation of key environmental processes. NDBM may maintain resilience if silvicultural strategies retain the structures and processes that perpetuate desired states while reducing those that enhance resilience of undesirable states. Such strategies require an understanding of harvesting impacts on slow ecosystem processes, such as seed-bank or nutrient dynamics, which in the long term can lead to ecological surprises by altering the forest's capacity to reorganize after disturbance
    • …
    corecore