1,057 research outputs found

    Inner Shell Ionization with High Velocity Positive Ions

    Get PDF
    This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant PHY 76-84033 and Indiana Universit

    L-Subshell Ionization with High Velocity Positive Ions

    Get PDF
    This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grants PHY 76-84033A01, PHY 78-22774, and Indiana Universit

    Photon-Photon Scattering, Pion Polarizability and Chiral Symmetry

    Get PDF
    Recent attempts to detect the pion polarizability via analysis of ÎłÎłâ†’Ï€Ï€\gamma\gamma\rightarrow\pi\pi measurements are examined. The connection between calculations based on dispersion relations and on chiral perturbation theory is established by matching the low energy chiral amplitude with that given by a full dispersive treatment. Using the values for the polarizability required by chiral symmetry, predicted and experimental cross sections are shown to be in agreement.Comment: 21 pages(+10 figures available on request), LATEX, UMHEP-38

    Production of triploid Sandersonia aurantiaca plants

    Get PDF
    Triploid plants of Sandersonia aurantiaca were produced by crossing diploid and tetraploid forms of S. aurantiaca. Enlarged ovules were transferred to in vitro culture 14–30 days after pollination. The triploid nature of the embryo derived plants was determined by flow cytometry and chromosome counts both of which showed that the triploid plants had features that were midway between those of the two parents. The mean nuclear DNA contents of 2C nuclei from diploid, triploid and tetraploid forms of S. aurantiaca were 6.86pg, 10.04pg and 13.55pg, respectively. The nuclear DNA content of 1C nuclei of sperm cells from pollen grains was 2.94pg. Mitotic chromosome counts from the three plants gave 2n = 24, 36 and 48 chromosomes for the diploid, triploid and tetraploid forms, respectively. Meiotic chromosome counts for the diploid and tetraploid plants were n = 12 and n = 24, respectively. The triploid showed mainly bivalents, but lagging chromosomes led to micronuclei and infertility in gametes. The morphological features of the various plants corroborated other evidence indicating that the triploid plants were the result of a cross between diploid and tetraploid plants

    Epidemics and control strategies for diseases of farmed salmonids: A parameter study

    Get PDF
    AbstractThe susceptibility of the English and Welsh fish farming and fisheries industry to emergent diseases is assessed using a stochastic simulation model. The model dynamics operate on a network comprising directed transport and river contacts, as well as undirected local and fomite transmissions. The directed connections cause outward transmission risk to be geographically more confined than inward risk. We consider reactive, proactive, and hybrid methods of control which correspond to a mixture of policy and the ease of disease detection. An explicit investigation of the impact of laboratory capacity is made. General quantified guidelines are derived to mitigate future epidemics

    Directional detection as a strategy to discover Galactic Dark Matter

    Full text link
    Directional detection of Galactic Dark Matter is a promising search strategy for discriminating genuine WIMP events from background ones. Technical progress on gaseous detectors and read-outs has permitted the design and construction of competitive experiments. However, to take full advantage of this powerful detection method, one need to be able to extract information from an observed recoil map to identify a WIMP signal. We present a comprehensive formalism, using a map-based likelihood method allowing to recover the main incoming direction of the signal and its significance, thus proving its galactic origin. This is a blind analysis intended to be used on any directional data. Constraints are deduced in the (σn,mχ\sigma_n, m_\chi) plane and systematic studies are presented in order to show that, using this analysis tool, unambiguous dark matter detection can be achieved on a large range of exposures and background levels.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures Final version to appear in Phys. Lett.

    K_S\rightarrow \gamma\gamma , K_L\rightarrow\pi^0\gamma\gamma$ and Unitarity

    Full text link
    Agreement between the experimental value Γ(KS→γγ)\Gamma (K_S\rightarrow \gamma\gamma) and the number predicted via a one-loop chiral perturbation theory calculation has been cited as a success for the latter. On the other hand the one-loop prediction for the closely related process KL→π0γγK_L\rightarrow \pi^0\gamma\gamma has been found to be a factor three below the experimental value. Using the inputs of unitarity and dispersion relations, we demonstrate the importance of higher order loop effects to both of these processes.Comment: 20 pages (4 figures available on request), UMHEP-39

    Finite temperature theory of the trapped two dimensional Bose gas

    Full text link
    We present a Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) theoretical treatment of the two-dimensional trapped Bose gas and indicate how semiclassical approximations to this and other formalisms have lead to confusion. We numerically obtain results for the fully quantum mechanical HFB theory within the Popov approximation and show that the presence of the trap stabilizes the condensate against long wavelength fluctuations. These results are used to show where phase fluctuations lead to the formation of a quasicondensate.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Are they ‘worth their weight in gold’? Sport for older adults: benefits and barriers of their participation for sporting organisations

    Get PDF
    The ageing global population has led to an increased focus on health for older adults. However, older adults have not been a specific priority for some sporting organisations (SOs). Thus, there is an emerging opportunity for this age group to be considered within international sport policy. The aim of this study was to understand the benefits and barriers that SOs encounter when engaging older adults. Eight focus group interviews (n = 49) were held with representatives of Australian national sporting organisations (NSOs), and older adults who were either sport club or non-sport club members. The socioecological model domains, interpersonal, organisational and policy, were used as a framework for thematic analysis, and organisational capacity building concepts were utilised to explain the findings. Common perceived benefits included interpersonal benefits (intergenerational opportunities and role models) and organisational benefits (volunteering, financial contributions and maximised facility usage) for engaging older adults. Common perceived barriers included interpersonal barriers (competing priorities and perceived societal expectations), organisational barriers (lack of appropriate playing opportunities, lack of facility access and lack of club capacity) and policy barriers (strategic organisational focus on children and elite sport and risk management). Whilst participation in sport is not common for older adults, their involvement can be invaluable for sport clubs. It is not anticipated that any policy focus on older adults will significantly increase active participation for this age group. However, any increase in older adults’ sport participation either through actively playing, supporting family and friends and/or volunteering will contribute to the positive health of individuals, sport clubs and the community.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Determining the thermal histories of Apollo 15 mare basalts using diffusion modelling in olivine

    Get PDF
    Mare basalts collected at the Apollo 15 landing site can be classified into two groups. Based on differing whole-rock major element chemistry, these groups are the quartz-normative basalt suite and the olivine-normative basalt suite. In this study we use modelling of Fe-Mg interdiffusion in zoned olivine crystals to investigate the magmatic environments in which the zonation was formed, be that within the lunar crust or during cooling within a surficial lava flow, helping to understand the thermal histories of the two basalt suites. Interdiffusion of Fe-Mg in olivine was modelled in 29 crystals in total, from six olivine-normative basalt thin sections and from three quartz-normative basalt thin sections. We used a dynamic diffusion model that includes terms for both crystal growth and intracrystalline diffusion during magma cooling. Calculated diffusion timescales range from 5 to 24 days for quartz-normative samples, and 6 to 91 days for olivine-normative samples. Similarities in diffusion timescales point to both suites experiencing similar thermal histories and eruptive processes. The diffusion timescales are short (between 5 and 91 days), and compositional zonation is dominated by crystal growth, which indicates that the diffusion most likely took place during cooling and solidification within lava flows at the lunar surface. We used a simple conductive cooling model to link our calculated diffusion timescales with possible lava flow thicknesses, and from this we estimate that Apollo 15 lava flows are a minimum of 3–6 m thick. This calculation is consistent with flow thickness estimates from photographs of lava flows exposed in the walls of Hadley Rille at the Apollo 15 landing site. Our study demonstrates that diffusion modelling is a valuable method of obtaining information about lunar magmatic environments recorded by individual crystals within mare basalt samples
    • 

    corecore