1,803 research outputs found
A screening mechanism for extra W and Z gauge bosons
We generalize a previous construction of a fermiophobic model to the case of
more than one extra and gauge bosons. We focus in particular on the
existence of screening configurations and their implication on the gauge boson
mass spectrum. One of these configurations allows for the existence of a set of
relatively light new gauge bosons, without violation of the quite restrictive
bounds coming from the parameter. The links with Bess and
degenerate Bess models are also discussed. Also the signal given here by this
more traditional gauge extension of the SM could help to disentangle it from
the towers of Kaluza-Klein states over and gauge bosons in extra
dimensions.Comment: 23 pages, 1 figure, extended discussion on precision tests. To appear
in International Journal of Modern Physics
The Impact of Temperature Fluctuations on the Lyman-alpha Forest Power Spectrum
We explore the impact of spatial fluctuations in the intergalactic medium
temperature on the Lyman-alpha forest flux power spectrum near z ~ 3. We
develop a semianalytic model to examine temperature fluctuations resulting from
inhomogeneous HI and incomplete HeII reionizations. Detection of these
fluctuations might provide insight into the reionization histories of hydrogen
and helium. Furthermore, these fluctuations, neglected in previous analyses,
could bias constraints on cosmological parameters from the Lyman-alpha forest.
We find that the temperature fluctuations resulting from inhomogeneous HI
reionization are likely to be very small, with an rms amplitude of < 5%,
. More important are the temperature fluctuations
that arise from incomplete HeII reionization, which might plausibly be as large
as 50%, . In practice, however, these temperature
fluctuations have only a small effect on flux power spectrum predictions. The
smallness of the effect is possibly due to density fluctuations dominating over
temperature fluctuations on the scales probed by current measurements. On the
largest scales currently probed, k ~ 0.001 s/km (~0.1 h/Mpc), the effect on the
flux power spectrum may be as large as ~10% in extreme models. The effect is
larger on small scales, up to ~20% at k = 0.1 s/km, due to thermal broadening.
Our results suggest that the omission of temperature fluctuations effects from
previous analyses does not significantly bias constraints on cosmological
parameters.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, ApJ accepte
Measuring the Small-Scale Power Spectrum of Cosmic Density Fluctuations Through 21 cm Tomography Prior to the Epoch of Structure Formation
The thermal evolution of the cosmic gas decoupled from that of the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) at a redshift z~200. Afterwards and before the first
stars had formed, the cosmic neutral hydrogen absorbed the CMB flux at its
resonant 21cm spin-flip transition. We calculate the evolution of the spin
temperature for this transition and the resulting anisotropies that are
imprinted on the CMB sky due to linear density fluctuations during this epoch.
These anisotropies at an observed wavelength of 10.56[(1+z)/50] meters, contain
an amount of information that is orders of magnitude larger than any other
cosmological probe. Their detection, although challenging, could tightly
constrain any possible running of the spectral index from inflation (as
suggested by WMAP), small deviations from Gaussianity, or any significant
contribution from neutrinos or warm dark matter to the cosmic mass budget.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Repeatability of skin-markers based kinematic measures from a multi-segment foot model in walking and running.
Skin-markers based multi-segment models are growing in popularity to assess foot joint kinematics in different motor tasks. However, scarce is the current knowledge of the effect of high-energy motor tasks, such as running, on the repeatability of these measurements. This study aimed at assessing and comparing the inter-trial, inter-session, and inter-examiner repeatability of skin-markers based foot kinematic measures in walking and running in healthy adults. The repeatability of 24 kinematic measures from an established multi-segment foot model were assessed in two volunteers during multiple barefoot walking and running trials by four examiners in three sessions. Statistical Parametric Mapping (1D-SPM) analysis was performed to assess the degree of shape-similarity between patterns of kinematic measurements. The average inter-trial variability across measurements (deg) was 1.0 ± 0.3 and 0.8 ± 0.3, the inter-session was 3.9 ± 1.4 and 4.4 ± 1.5, and the inter-examiner was 5.4 ± 2.3 and 5.7 ± 2.2, respectively in walking and running. Inter-session variability was generally similar between the two motor tasks, but significantly larger in running for two kinematic measures (p 0.01). Inter-examiner variability was generally larger than inter-trial and inter-session variability. While no significant differences in frame-by-frame offset variability was detected in foot kinematics between walking and running, 1D-SPM revealed that the shape of kinematic measurements was significantly affected by the motor task, with running being less repeatable than walking. Although confirmation on a larger population and with different kinematic protocols should be sought, attention should be paid in the interpretation of skin-markers based kinematics in running across sessions or involving multiple examiners
Curva de embebição de sementes Enterolobium contortisiliquum (Vell) Morong (FABACEAE).
Objetivou-se com este trabalho avaliar o padrão de embebição das sementes Enterolobium contortisiliquum submetida a diferentes concentrações polietilenoglicol.Edição dos Resumos do V Workshop de Tecnologia e Fisiologia de Sementes e Mudas, Petrolina, dez. 2014
Cornering New Physics in b --> s Transitions
We derive constraints on Wilson coefficients of dimension-six effective
operators probing the b --> s transition, using recent improved measurements of
the rare decays Bs --> mu+mu-, B --> K mu+mu- and B --> K* mu+mu- and including
all relevant observables in inclusive and exclusive decays. We consider
operators present in the SM as well as their chirality-flipped counterparts and
scalar operators. We find good agreement with the SM expectations. Compared to
the situation before winter 2012, we find significantly more stringent
constraints on the chirality-flipped coefficients due to complementary
constraints from B --> K mu+mu- and B --> K* mu+mu- and due to the LHCb
measurement of the angular observable S_3 in the latter decay. We also list the
full set of observables sensitive to new physics in the low recoil region of B
--> K* mu+mu-.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables. v3: typos correcte
Uso de diferentes concentrações de ácido salicílico na germinação de sementes de melancia Crimson Sweet.
Suplemento. Edição dos Anais do 52 Congresso Brasileiro de Olericultura, Salvador, jul. 2012
Clinical biological and genetic heterogeneity of the inborn errors of pulmonary surfactant metabolism
Pulmonary surfactant is a multimolecular complex located at the air-water interface within the alveolus to which a range of physical (surface-active properties) and immune functions has been assigned. This complex consists of a surface-active lipid layer (consisting mainly of phospholipids), and of an aqueous subphase. From discrete surfactant sub-fractions one can isolate strongly hydrophobic surf acta nt proteins B (SP-B) and C (SP-C) as well as collectins SP-A and SP-D, which were shown to have specific structural, metabolic, or immune properties. Inborn or acquired abnormalities of the surfactant, qualitative or quantitative in nature, account for a number of human diseases. Beside hyaline membrane disease of the preterm neonate, a cluster of hereditary or acquired lung diseases has been characterized by periodic acid-Schiff-positive material filling the alveoli. From this heterogeneous nosologic group, at least two discrete entities presently emerge. The first is the SP-B deficiency, in which an essentially proteinaceous material is stored within the alveoli, and which represents an autosomal recessive Mendelian entity linked to the SFTPB gene (MIM 1786640). The disease usually generally entails neonatal respiratory distress with rapid fatal outcome, although partial or transient deficiencies have also been observed. The second is alveolar proteinosis, characterized by the storage of a mixed protein and lipid material, which constitutes a relatively heterogeneous clinical and biological syndrome, especially with regard to age at onset (from the neonate through to adulthood) as well as the severity of associated signs. Murine models, with a targeted mutation of the gene encoding granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (Csfgm) or the beta subunit of its receptor (II3rb1) support the hypothesis of an abnormality of surfactant turnover in which the alveolar macrophage is a key player. Apart from SP-B deficiency, in which a near-consensus diagnostic chart can be designed, the ascertainment of other abnormalities of surfactant metabolism is not straightforward. The disentanglement of this disease cluster is however essential to propose specific therapeutic procedures: repeated broncho-alveolar ravages, GM-CSF replacement, bone marrow grafting or lung transplantation
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