527 research outputs found
The Stability of the Weak Skyrmions
We consider a set of gauge invariant terms in higher order effective
Lagrangians of the strongly interacting scalar of the electroweak theory. The
terms are introduced in the framework of the hidden gauge symmetry formalism.
The usual gauge term is known to stabilize the skyrmion but only in the large
vector mass limit. We find that adding higher-order gauge terms is insufficient
to insure stability. We then proceed to analyze other gauge invariant
interaction terms. Some of the conclusions also apply to QCD skyrmions.Comment: 3 pages, revtex v3, (optional), LAVAL-PHY-11-9
On the electromagnetic form factors of the proton from generalized Skyrme models
We compare the prediction of Skyrme-like effective Lagrangians with data for
electromagnetic form factors of proton and consider the possibility of fixing
the parameters of these higher-order Lagrangians. Our results indicate that one
or two-parameter models can lead to better agreement with the data but more
accurate determination of the effective Lagragian faces theoretical
uncertainties.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, revte
Cooperation between interleukin-5 and the chemokine eotaxin to induce eosinophil accumulation in vivo.
Experiments were designed to study the effect of systemically administered IL-5 on local eosinophil accumulation induced by the intradermal injection of the chemokine eotaxin in the guinea pig. Intravenous interleukin-5 (IL-5) stimulated a rapid and dramatic increase in the numbers of accumulating eosinophils induced by i.d.-injected eotaxin and, for comparison, leukotriene B4. The numbers of locally accumulating eosinophils correlated directly with a rapid increase in circulating eosinophils: circulating eosinophil numbers were 13-fold higher 1 h after intravenous IL-5 (18.3 pmol/kg). This increase in circulating cells corresponded with a reduction in the number of displaceable eosinophils recovered after flushing out the femur bone marrow cavity. Intradermal IL-5, at the doses tested, did not induce significant eosinophil accumulation. We propose that these experiments simulate important early features of the tissue response to local allergen exposure in a sensitized individual, with eosinophil chemoattractant chemokines having an important local role in eosinophil recruitment from blood microvessels, and IL-5 facilitating this process by acting remotely as a hormone to stimulate the release into the circulation of a rapidly mobilizable pool of bone marrow eosinophils. This action of IL-5 would be complementary to the other established activities of IL-5 that operate over a longer time course
Near-BPS Skyrmions: Non-shell configurations and Coulomb effects
The relatively small binding energy in nuclei suggests that they may be well
represented by near-BPS Skyrmions since their mass is roughly proportional to
the baryon number For that purpose, we propose a generalization of the
Skyrme model with terms up to order six in derivatives of the pion fields and
treat the nonlinear and Skyrme terms as small perturbations. For our
special choice of mass term (or potential) , we obtain well-behaved
analytical BPS-type solutions with non-shell configurations for the baryon
density, as opposed to the more complex shell-like configurations found in most
extensions of the Skyrme model . Along with static and (iso)rotational
energies, we add to the mass of the nuclei the often neglected Coulomb energy
and isospin breaking term. Fitting the four model parameters, we find a
remarkable agreement for the binding energy per nucleon with respect to
experimental data. These results support the idea that nuclei could be near-BPS
Skyrmions.Comment: Correction of minors errors, references adde
Simulated annealing for generalized Skyrme models
We use a simulated annealing algorithm to find the static field configuration
with the lowest energy in a given sector of topological charge for generalized
SU(2) Skyrme models. These numerical results suggest that the following
conjecture may hold: the symmetries of the soliton solutions of extended Skyrme
models are the same as for the Skyrme model. Indeed, this is verified for two
effective Lagrangians with terms of order six and order eight in derivatives of
the pion fields respectively for topological charges B=1 up to B=4. We also
evaluate the energy of these multi-skyrmions using the rational maps ansatz. A
comparison with the exact numerical results shows that the reliability of this
approximation for extended Skyrme models is almost as good as for the pure
Skyrme model. Some details regarding the implementation of the simulated
annealing algorithm in one and three spatial dimensions are provided.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, added 2 reference
Mid-infrared selection of quasar-2s in Spitzer's First Look Survey
We present early results from the spectroscopic follow-up of a sample of
candidate obscured AGN selected in the mid-infrared from the Spitzer First Look
Survey. Our selection allows a direct comparison of the numbers of obscured and
unobscured AGN at a given luminosity for the first time, and shows that the
ratio of obscured to unobscured AGN at infrared luminosities corresponding to
low luminosity quasars is ~1:1 at z~0.5. Most of our optically-faint candidate
obscured AGN have the high-ionization, narrow-line spectra expected from type-2
AGN. A composite spectrum shows evidence for Balmer absorption lines,
indicating recent star-formation activity in the host galaxies. There is
tentative evidence for a decrease in the obscured AGN fraction with increasing
AGN luminosity.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the workshop "Multiband approach to
AGN" Bonn October 2004 in Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italian
Skyrmions from a Born-Infeld Action
We consider a geometrically motivated Skyrme model based on a general
covariant kinetic term proposed originally by Born and Infeld. We introduce
this new term by generalizing the Born-Infeld action to a non-abelian
gauge theory and by using the hidden gauge symmetry formalism. The static
properties of the Skyrmion are then analyzed and compared with other
Skyrme-like models.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures (not included), revtex v3, LAVAL-PHY-11-9
Using interactive web training to teach parents to select function-based interventions for challenging behaviour : a preliminary study
Background: Children with developmental disability often engage in challenging behaviour,
which may require that parents implement behavioural assessments and interventions. The
purpose of our pilot study was to examine the effects of an interactive web training (IWT) to
teach behavioural function identification and intervention selection to parents.
Method: Twenty-six parents of children with developmental disability responded to function
identification and intervention selection tasks on clinical vignettes before and following IWT.
We also measured social validity and the duration of training.
Results: Our results show that parents were more accurate in the identification of behavioural
function and selected more adequate interventions following IWT. On average, parents spent less
than 2.5hr to complete IWT and rated it positively.
Conclusions: The IWT appears to be a viable tool to teach parents about function-based
intervention, but additional research is needed to examine whether it translates to changes in
parental practices and child behaviour
Improved Fast Neutron Spectroscopy via Detector Segmentation
Organic scintillators are widely used for fast neutron detection and
spectroscopy. Several effects complicate the interpretation of results from
detectors based upon these materials. First, fast neutrons will often leave a
detector before depositing all of their energy within it. Second, fast neutrons
will typically scatter several times within a detector, and there is a
non-proportional relationship between the energy of, and the scintillation
light produced by, each individual scatter; therefore, there is not a
deterministic relationship between the scintillation light observed and the
neutron energy deposited. Here we demonstrate a hardware technique for reducing
both of these effects. Use of a segmented detector allows for the
event-by-event correction of the light yield non-proportionality and for the
preferential selection of events with near-complete energy deposition, since
these will typically have high segment multiplicities.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in
Physics Research Section
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