8,480 research outputs found

    Ab Initio Study of Phase Stability in Doped TiO2

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    Ab-initio density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the relative stability of anatase and rutile polymorphs of TiO2 were carried using all-electron atomic orbitals methods with local density approximation (LDA). The rutile phase exhibited a moderate margin of stability of ~ 3 meV relative to the anatase phase in pristine material. From computational analysis of the formation energies of Si, Al, Fe and F dopants of various charge states across different Fermi level energies in anatase and in rutile, it was found that the cationic dopants are most stable in Ti substitutional lattice positions while formation energy is minimised for F- doping in interstitial positions. All dopants were found to considerably stabilise anatase relative to the rutile phase, suggesting the anatase to rutile phase transformation is inhibited in such systems with the dopants ranked F>Si>Fe>Al in order of anatase stabilisation strength. Al and Fe dopants were found to act as shallow acceptors with charge compensation achieved through the formation of mobile carriers rather than the formation of anion vacancies

    A dictionary of Eastern Bonan

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    Eastern Bonan is a Mongolic language spoken on the upper reaches of the Yellow River, Gansu province in Amdo (northern) Tibet. Of the Eastern and Western varieties of Bonan [Bao'an 保漉, Bonang; ISO 639-3: peh; Glottocode: bona1250], Eastern Bonan is the officially-recognized variety. Unpublished Eastern Bonan data collected by Charles Li from 1982 to 1984 forms the basis of this dictionary; Arienne Dwyer digitized and analyzed these data, adding lemmatized headwords, etymological sources, parts of speech, Chinese glosses, and forms from other published sources. Charles N. Li is an Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at the University of California - Santa Barbara Arienne M. Dwyer is a Professor of Linguistic Anthropology at the University of KansasU.S. National Science Foundation (BCS-8308220 Baonan: Languages in Contact & Language Change

    Propagation characteristics of guided waves in stratified metallic optical waveguides

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    An eigenvalue equation is derived for stratified metallic optical slab waveguides with any number of layers. The equation is solved using the numerical zoom analysis (NZA) method. The analysis is applied to various metallic optical slabs and the propagation characteristics of the guided waves are determined, which may be useful for optimizing the design parameters. It is found possible, with proper optimization, to design a polarizer having hundreds of decibels of extinction ratio at the cost of a fraction of a decibel of insertion loss. Examples of optimizations with respect to wavelength, relative refractive indices, core/clad geometries, etc. are demonstrated for slabs with single or double metal layers. Guidelines for determining the metal film thickness have been formulated and tabulated for many useful metals

    From Verb-Medial Analytic Language to Verb-Final Synthetic Language: A Case of Typological Change

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    Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1984), pp. 307-32

    The Rise and Fall of Tones Through Diffusion

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    Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1986), pp. 173-18

    Identification of the Red Supergiant Progenitor of Supernova 2005cs: Do the Progenitors of Type II-P Supernovae Have Low Mass?

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    The stars that end their lives as supernovae (SNe) have been directly observed in only a handful of cases, due mainly to the extreme difficulty in identifying them in images obtained prior to the SN explosions. Here we report the identification of the progenitor for the recent Type II-plateau (core-collapse) SN 2005cs in pre-explosion archival images of the Whirlpool Galaxy (M51) obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). From high-quality ground-based images of the SN from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, we precisely determine the position of the SN and are able to isolate the SN progenitor to within 0".04 in the HST/ACS optical images. We further pinpoint the SN location to within 0".005 from HST/ACS ultraviolet images of the SN, confirming our progenitor identification. From photometry of the SN progenitor obtained with the pre-SN ACS images, and also limits to its brightness in pre-SN HST/NICMOS images, we infer that the progenitor is a red supergiant star of spectral type K0--M3, with initial mass 7--9 Msun. We also discuss the implications of the SN 2005cs progenitor identification and its mass estimate. There is an emerging trend that the most common Type II-plateau SNe originate from low-mass supergiants 8--15 Msun.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. A high resolution version can be found at http://astron.berkeley.edu/~weidong/sn05cs.p

    Nonfactorizable contributions to B→D(∗)MB \to D^{(*)} M decays

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    While the factorization assumption works well for many two-body nonleptonic BB meson decay modes, the recent measurement of Bˉ→D(∗)0M0\bar B\to D^{(*)0}M^0 with M=πM=\pi, ρ\rho and ω\omega shows large deviation from this assumption. We analyze the B→D(∗)MB\to D^{(*)}M decays in the perturbative QCD approach based on kTk_T factorization theorem, in which both factorizable and nonfactorizable contributions can be calculated in the same framework. Our predictions for the Bauer-Stech-Wirbel parameters, ∣a2/a1∣=0.43±0.04|a_2/a_1|= 0.43\pm 0.04 and Arg(a2/a1)∌−42∘Arg(a_2/a_1)\sim -42^\circ and ∣a2/a1∣=0.47±0.05|a_2/a_1|= 0.47\pm 0.05 and Arg(a2/a1)∌−41∘Arg(a_2/a_1)\sim -41^\circ, are consistent with the observed B→DπB\to D\pi and B→D∗πB\to D^*\pi branching ratios, respectively. It is found that the large magnitude ∣a2∣|a_2| and the large relative phase between a2a_2 and a1a_1 come from color-suppressed nonfactorizable amplitudes. Our predictions for the Bˉ0→D(∗)0ρ0{\bar B}^0\to D^{(*)0}\rho^0, D(∗)0ωD^{(*)0}\omega branching ratios can be confronted with future experimental data.Comment: 25 pages with Latex, axodraw.sty, 6 figures and 5 tables, Version published in PRD, Added new section 5 and reference

    Influence of Crohn’s disease related polymorphisms in innate immune function on ileal microbiome

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    We have previously identified NOD2 genotype and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) phenotype, as associated with shifts in the ileal microbiome (“dysbiosis”) in a patient cohort. Here we report an integrative analysis of an expanded number of Crohn's disease (CD) related genetic defects in innate immune function (NOD2, ATG16L1, IRGM, CARD9, XBP1, ORMDL3) and composition of the ileal microbiome by combining the initial patient cohort (Batch 1, 2005–2010, n = 165) with a second consecutive patient cohort (Batch 2, 2010–2012, n = 118). These combined patient cohorts were composed of three non-overlapping phenotypes: 1.) 106 ileal CD subjects undergoing initial ileocolic resection for diseased ileum, 2.) 88 IBD colitis subjects without ileal disease (predominantly ulcerative colitis but also Crohn’s colitis and indeterminate colitis, and 3.) 89 non-IBD subjects. Significant differences (FDR C. difficile infection, and NOD2 genotype on ileal dysbiosis in the expanded analysis. The relative abundance of the Proteobacteria phylum was positively associated with ileal CD and colitis phenotypes, but negatively associated with NOD2R genotype. Additional associations with ORMDL3 and XBP1 were detected at the phylum/subphylum level. IBD medications, such as immunomodulators and anti-TNFα agents, may have a beneficial effect on reversing dysbiosis associated with the IBD phenotype. Exploratory analysis comparing microbial composition of the disease unaffected region of the resected ileum between 27 ileal CD patients who subsequently developed endoscopic recurrence within 6–12 months versus 34 patients who did not, suggested that microbial biomarkers in the resected specimen helped stratify patients with respect to risk of post-surgical recurrence.</div

    Off-shell effects in dilepton production from hot interacting mesons

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    The production of dielectrons in reactions involving a_1 mesons and pions is studied. We compare results obtained with different phenomenological Lagrangians that have been used in connection with hadronic matter and finite nuclei. We insist on the necessity for those interactions to satisfy known empirical properties of the strong interaction. Large off-shell effects in dielectron production are found and some consequences for the interpretation of heavy ion data are outlined. We also compare with results obtained using experimentally-extracted spectral functions.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX2e, 2 figure
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