1,337 research outputs found
Bound states in a quasi-two-dimensional Fermi gas
We consider the problem of N identical fermions of mass M and one
distinguishable particle of mass m interacting via short-range interactions in
a confined quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) geometry. For N=2 and mass ratios
M/m<13.6, we find non-Efimov trimers that smoothly evolve from 2D to 3D. In the
limit of strong 2D confinement, we show that the energy of the N+1 system can
be approximated by an effective two-channel model. We use this approximation to
solve the 3+1 problem and we find that a bound tetramer can exist for mass
ratios M/m as low as 5 for strong confinement, thus providing the first example
of a universal, non-Efimov tetramer involving three identical fermions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Assessment of changes in brain metabolites in Indian patients with type-2 diabetes mellitus using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy
BACKGROUND: The brain is a target for diabetic end-organ damage, though the pathophysiology of diabetic encephalopathy is still not well understood. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of diabetes on the metabolic profile of brain of patients having diabetes in comparison to healthy controls, using in-vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy to get an insight into the pathophysiology of cerebral damages caused due to diabetes. METHODS: Single voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) was performed at 1.5 T on right frontal, right parieto-temporal and right parieto-occipital white matter regions of the brain of 10 patients having type-2 diabetes along with 7 healthy controls. Absolute concentration of N-acetylaspartate (NAA), choline (cho), myo-inositol (mI), glutamate (Glu) and glutamine (Gln), creatine (Cr) and glucose were determined using the LC-Model and compared between the two groups. RESULTS: The concentration of N-acetylaspartate was significantly lower in the right frontal [4.35 ±0.69 vs. 5.23 ±0.74; p = 0.03] and right parieto-occipital region [5.44 ±0.52 vs.6.08 ±0.25; p = 0.02] of the brain of diabetics as compared to the control group. The concentrations of glutamate and glutamine were found to be significantly higher in the right frontal region of the brain [7.98 ±2.57 vs. 5.32 ±1.43; P = 0.01] in diabetics. Glucose levels were found significantly elevated in all the three regions of the brain in diabetics as compared to the control group. However, no significant changes in levels of choline, myo-inositol and creatine were observed in the three regions of the brain examined among the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: (1)H-MRS analysis indicates that type-2 diabetes mellitus may cause subtle changes in the metabolic profile of the brain. Decreased concentrations of NAA might be indicative of decreased neuronal viability in diabetics while elevated concentrations of Gln and Glu might be related to the fluid imbalance resulting from disruption of glucose homeostasis
MARKETING OF GREEN PRODUCTS AND ITS UNDERLYING PRACTICES
According to the American marketing Association green marketing is the marketing of products that are presumed to be environmentally safe. Every company has its own favorite marketing mix. Companies that develop new and improved products and services with environment inputs in mind give themselves access to new markets, increase their profit sustainability, and enjoy a competitive advantage over the companies which are not concerned for the environment. This study discusses the manufacturers green marketing practices and analyze the respondents’ views about Green Marketing Practices. The researcher has selected 149 units, as samples selected through Proportionate Stratified Random sampling method. The researcher uses the interview schedule instrument to collect the data from the respondents. The main objectives of the study is consists, to know the awareness level of respondents about green marketing practices and which factor more accounted to adopt green marketing practices into their business. Therefore, to know the perception level on the green marketing practices; There are 30 statements observed by the researcher which are relevant and accounted for green marketing practices. The factor analysis technique applied for the purpose of extracting the latent factors accounted for green marketing practices. From the results of factor analysis, “business ethics” factor is high loading factor to influence the sampled respondents to adopt green marketing practices. Another thing should be noted that most of the respondents in the study very aware of green marketing and its practices. Finally the researcher offers suggestion for improvement of green marketing practices
Pressure studies of impurity levels in AlxGa1-xAs
doi: 10.1088/0268-1242/4/4/033The authors present a study of the deep and shallow donor levels under hydrostatic pressure. The shallow levels follow the conduction bands, while the deep levels are strongly sublinear with pressure. The temperature dependence of the intensities and energies is used to obtain an energy level diagram of the deep levels at high pressures.This work was supported by theU S Army under grant number DAAL03-86K-0083, the US Department of Energy under grant number DE-AC02 84ER45048, and Amoco Corporation. M Chandrasekhar is a n A P Sloan Foundation Fellow
Classical magnetotransport of inhomogeneous conductors
We present a model of magnetotransport of inhomogeneous conductors based on
an array of coupled four-terminal elements. We show that this model generically
yields non-saturating magnetoresistance at large fields. We also discuss how
this approach simplifies finite-element analysis of bulk inhomogeneous
semiconductors in complex geometries. We argue that this is an explanation of
the observed non-saturating magnetoresistance in silver chalcogenides and
potentially in other disordered conductors. Our method may be used to design
the magnetoresistive response of a microfabricated array.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. Minor typos correcte
Evaluation of in vivo antidiabetic activity of Notonia grandiflora Wall.
The aim of this study was to determine the in vivo hypoglycaemic activity of ethyl acetate extract of Notonia grandiflora (EANG) in albino wistar rats. EANG was orally administrated to STZ (40 mg/kg, i.p, b.w) induced diabetic rats at the doses of 100 and 200 mg/kg b.w for 21 days. The effect of EANG on blood glucose, body weight, plasma insulin, urea, uric acid, creatinine, Hb, HbA1C, liver glycogen content, bilirubin level, liver enzymes (Serum glutamate pyruvate transaminases, serum glutamate oxaloacetate transaminases, alkaline phosphatase) were measured in the diabetic rats. Treatment of EANG significantly lowered the levels of blood glucose and glycosylated haemoglobin. It also restored body weight, liver glycogen content, and serum insulin level in diabetic rats in a dose-dependent manner. A significant reduction in the activity of liver function enzymes associated with diabetes and serum levels of renal parameters after treatment with EANG was observed, signifying the protective effects of EANG in diabetes-associated complications. Hence, it could be used as a safer complementary drug in the management of diabetes and associated complications
Hydrostatic pressure dependence of the luminescence and Raman frequencies in polyfluorene
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.68.115203 http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.68.115203We present studies of the photoluminescence (PL), absorption, and Raman scattering spectra from poly[2,7-(9,9′-bis(2-ethylhexyl))fluorene] under hydrostatic pressures of 0-100 kbar at room temperature. The well-defined PL and associated vibronics that are observed at atmospheric pressure change dramatically around 20 kbar in the bulk sample and at around 35 kbar for the thin-film sample. Beyond these pressures the PL emission from the backbone is swamped by strong peaks due to aggregates and keto defects in the 2.1-2.6 eV region. The Raman peaks shift to higher energies and exhibit unexpected antiresonance line shapes at higher pressures, indicating a strong electron-phonon interaction.S.G. acknowledges the donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund No. 38193-B7! for partial support of this research. U.S. thanks SONY International Europe, Stuttgart, and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) for financial support
Pressure Raman effects and internal stress in network glasses
Raman scattering from binary GexSe1-x glasses under hydrostatic pressure
shows onset of a steady increase in the frequency of modes of corner-sharing
GeSe4 tetrahedral units when the external pressure P exceeds a threshold value
Pc. The threshold pressure Pc(x) decreases with x in the 0.15 < x < 0.20 range,
nearly vanishes in the 0.20 < x < 0.25 range, and then increases in the 0.25 <
x < 1/3 range. These Pc(x) trends closely track those in the non-reversing
enthalpy, DHnr(x), near glass transitions (Tgs), and in particular, both
DHnr(x) and Pc(x) vanish in the reversibility window (0.20 < x < 0.25). It is
suggested that Pc provides a measure of stress at the Raman active units; and
its vanishing in the reversibility window suggests that these units are part of
an isostatically rigid backbone. Isostaticity also accounts for the non-aging
behavior of glasses observed in the reversibility window
Photoluminescence of short-period GaAs/AlAs superlattices: A hydrostatic pressure and temperature study
URL:http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.58.7222
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.58.7222The temperature and pressure dependence of type-I and -II transitions from photoluminescence (PL) spectra in a series of (GaAs)m/(AlAs)m superlattices show that the temperature dependence of energy bands can be described very well with a Bose-Einstein-type equation. From these measurements the parameters that describe the temperature dependence of excitonic transition energies and the corresponding broadening of the PL line are deduced. The pressure dependence of the PL linewidths of the type-I exciton as a function of pressure and temperature yield the intervalley deformation potential. Beyond the type-I-type-II crossover, the PL linewidth increases as a function of both pressure and temperature. The electron-phonon deformation potential for Γ-X scattering is found to be temperature dependent.We thank S. Satpathy and S. Zollner for valuable discussions. One of us ~H.R.C.! acknowledges support by the NSF under Grant No. DMR-9633107. M.C. thanks the U.S. Army
for support through Grant No. DAAL03-92-0381. The work at Purdue University was supported by the National Science Foundation: Materials Research Science and Engineering Center Grant Nos. DMR 94-00415 and DMR 93-03186
Devil's staircases and supersolids in a one-dimensional dipolar Bose gas
We consider a single-component gas of dipolar bosons confined in a
one-dimensional optical lattice, where the dipoles are aligned such that the
long-ranged dipolar interactions are maximally repulsive. In the limit of zero
inter-site hopping and sufficiently large on-site interaction, the phase
diagram is a complete devil's staircase for filling fractions between 0 and 1,
wherein every commensurate state at a rational filling is stable over a finite
interval in chemical potential. We perturb away from this limit in two
experimentally motivated directions involving the addition of hopping and a
reduction of the onsite interaction. The addition of hopping alone yields a
phase diagram, which we compute in perturbation theory in the hopping, where
the commensurate Mott phases now compete with the superfluid. Further softening
of the onsite interaction yields alternative commensurate states with double
occupancies which can form a staircase of their own, as well as one-dimensional
"supersolids" which simultaneously exhibit discrete broken symmetries and
superfluidity
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