3,227 research outputs found

    Analysis of the velocity field of granular hopper flow

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    We report the analysis of radial characteristics of the flow of granular material through a conical hopper. The discharge is simulated for various orifice sizes and hopper opening angles. Velocity profiles are measured along two radial lines from the hopper cone vertex: along the main axis of the cone and along its wall. An approximate power law dependence on the distance from the orifice is observed for both profiles, although differences between them can be noted. In order to quantify these differences, we propose a Local Mass Flow index that is a promising tool in the direction of a more reliable classification of the flow regimes in hoppers

    Dispersive ππ→KKˉ\pi\pi\rightarrow K\bar K amplitude and giant CP violation in B to three light-meson decays at LHCb

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    The LHCb collaboration has recently reported the largest CP violation effect from a single amplitude, as well as other giant CP asymmetries in several BB-meson decays into three charmless light mesons. It is also claimed that this is predominantly due to ππ→KKˉ\pi\pi\rightarrow K\bar K rescattering in the final state, particularly in the 1 to 1.5 GeV region. In these analyses the ππ→KKˉ\pi\pi\rightarrow K\bar K amplitude is by default estimated from the ππ\pi\pi elastic scattering amplitude and does not describe the existing ππ→KKˉ\pi\pi\rightarrow K\bar K scattering data. Here we show how the recent model-independent dispersive analysis of ππ→KKˉ\pi\pi\rightarrow K\bar K data can be easily implemented in the LHCb formalism. This leads to a more accurate description of the asymmetry, while being consistent with the measured scattering amplitude and confirming the prominent role of hadronic final state interactions, paving the way for more elaborated analyses.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Minor corrections and discussions were added. Extended appendix with an additional improved model of the S-wave. Final version to appear in Phys.Rev.Let

    Quantum Critical Point in the Spin Glass-Kondo Transition in Heavy Fermion Systems

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    The Kondo-Spin Glass competition is studied in a theoretical model of a Kondo lattice with an intra-site Kondo type exchange interaction treated within the mean field approximation, an inter-site quantum Ising exchange interaction with random couplings among localized spins and an additional transverse field in the x direction, which represents a simple quantum mechanism of spin flipping. We obtain two second order transition lines from the spin-glass state to the paramagnetic one and then to the Kondo state. For a reasonable set of the different parameters, the two second order transition lines do not intersect and end in two distinct QCP.Comment: 20 pages; 1 figure; to appear in Physical Review

    Computational system for geostatistical analysis.

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    ABSTRACT: Geostatistics identifies the spatial structure of variables representing several phenomena and its use is becoming more intense in agricultural activities. This paper describes a computer program, based on Windows Interfaces (Borland Delphi), which performs spatial analyses of datasets through geostatistic tools: Classical statistical calculations, average, cross- and directional semivariograms, simple kriging estimates and jackknifing calculations. A published dataset of soil Carbon and Nitrogen was used to validate the system. The system was useful for the geostatistical analysis process, for the manipulation of the computational routines in a MS-DOS environment. The Windows development approach allowed the user to model the semivariogram graphically with a major degree of interaction, functionality rarely available in similar programs. Given its characteristic of quick prototypation and simplicity when incorporating correlated routines, the Delphi environment presents the main advantage of permitting the evolution of this system

    Deciphering the role of Staphylococcus aureus in Pseudomonas aeruginosa adaptation to cystic fibrosis lungs: bystander or intervener?

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    Microbiotec'17 - Congress of Microbiology and Biotechnology 2017Background: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the major responsible for the high mortality rate of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients due to the development of chronic infections. To long persist, P. aeruginosa uses sophisticated mechanisms to achieve fulladaptation, mainly triggered by the harsh environmental conditions of CF lungs. The influence of Staphylococcus aureus, a primary colonizer of CF lungs, in increasing P. aeruginosa pathogenicity has also been reported. The main objective of this study was to decipher the impact of S. aureus on P. aeruginosa pathogenicity using in vitro conditions mimicking CF lungs. [...]This study was supported by the FCT (UID/BIO/04469/2013), COMPETE 2020 (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-006684) and BioTecNorte operation (NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000004) funded by the European Regional Development Fund under the scope of Norte2020 - Programa Operacional Regional do Norte.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Food consumption of Rhammatocerus schistocercoides Rehn (Orthoptera: Acrididae) infected by the fungus Metarhizium flavoviride Gams & Rozsypal.

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