3,099 research outputs found
Neutrino oscillations in low density medium
For the case of small matter effects: , where is the
matter potential, we develop the perturbation theory using as the expansion parameter. We derive simple and physically
transparent formulas for the oscillation probabilities in the lowest order in
which are valid for arbitrary density profile. The formulas can be
applied for propagation of the solar and supernova neutrinos in matter of the
Earth, substantially simplifying numerical calculations. Using these formulas
we study sensitivity of the oscillation effects to structures of the density
profile situated at different distances from the detector . We show that for
the mass-to-flavor state transitions, {\it e.g.}, , the
sensitivity is suppressed for remote structures: ,
where is the oscillation length and is the energy
resolution of detector.Comment: discussion simplified, clarifications adde
Chemotherapy versus supportive care in advanced non-small cell lung cancer: improved survival without detriment to quality of life
BACKGROUND: In 1995 a meta-analysis of randomised trials investigating the value of adding chemotherapy to primary treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) suggested a small survival benefit for cisplatin-based chemotherapy in each of the primary treatment settings. However, the metaanalysis included many small trials and trials with differing eligibility criteria and chemotherapy regimens. METHODS: The aim of the Big Lung Trial was to confirm the survival benefits seen in the meta-analysis and to assess quality of life and cost in the supportive care setting. A total of 725 patients were randomised to receive supportive care alone (n = 361) or supportive care plus cisplatin-based chemotherapy (n = 364). RESULTS: 65% of patients allocated chemotherapy (C) received all three cycles of treatment and a further 27% received one or two cycles. 74% of patients allocated no chemotherapy (NoC) received thoracic radiotherapy compared with 47% of the C group. Patients allocated C had a significantly better survival than those allocated NoC: HR 0.77 (95% CI 0.66 to 0.89, p = 0.0006), median survival 8.0 months for the C group v 5.7 months for the NoC group, a difference of 9 weeks. There were 19 (5%) treatment related deaths in the C group. There was no evidence that any subgroup benefited more or less fromchemotherapy. No significant differences were observed between the two groups in terms of the pre-defined primary and secondary quality of life end points, although large negative effects of chemotherapy were ruled out. The regimens used proved to be cost effective, the extra cost of chemotherapy being offset by longer survival. CONCLUSIONS: The survival benefit seen in this trial was entirely consistent with the NSCLC meta-analysis and subsequent similarly designed large trials. The information on quality of life and cost should enablepatients and their clinicians to make more informed treatment choices
Super-Poincare' algebras, space-times and supergravities (I)
A new formulation of theories of supergravity as theories satisfying a
generalized Principle of General Covariance is given. It is a generalization of
the superspace formulation of simple 4D-supergravity of Wess and Zumino and it
is designed to obtain geometric descriptions for the supergravities that
correspond to the super Poincare' algebras of Alekseevsky and Cortes'
classification.Comment: 29 pages, v2: minor improvements at the end of Section 5.
Regularity of Kobayashi metric
We review some recent results on existence and regularity of Monge-Amp\`ere
exhaustions on the smoothly bounded strongly pseudoconvex domains, which admit
at least one such exhaustion of sufficiently high regularity. A main
consequence of our results is the fact that the Kobayashi pseudo-metric k on an
appropriare open subset of each of the above domains is actually a smooth
Finsler metric. The class of domains to which our result apply is very large.
It includes for instance all smoothly bounded strongly pseudoconvex complete
circular domains and all their sufficiently small deformations.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures - The previously announced main result had a gap.
In this new version the corrected statement is given. To appear on the volume
"Geometric Complex Analysis - Proceedings of KSCV 12 Symposium
Galactic Bulge Microlensing Optical Depth from EROS-2
We present a new EROS-2 measurement of the microlensing optical depth toward
the Galactic Bulge. Light curves of clump-giant stars
distributed over of the Bulge were monitored during seven Bulge
seasons. 120 events were found with apparent amplifications greater than 1.6
and Einstein radius crossing times in the range 5 {\rm d}.
This is the largest existing sample of clump-giant events and the first to
include northern Galactic fields. In the Galactic latitude range
1.4\degr<|b|<7.0\degr, we find with . These results are in good
agreement with our previous measurement, with recent measurements of the MACHO
and OGLE-II groups, and with predictions of Bulge models.Comment: accepted A&A, minor revision
Use of sulfur isotope ratios to determine anthropogenic sulfur signals in a grassland ecosystem
Archived soil and herbage samples from the control plot of the Rothamsted Park Grass Experiment, established in 1856, were used to investigate the effects of dramatically changing SO2 pollution inputs on the concentrations and stable isotope ratios of S in the samples. Both herbage S concentrations and δ34S showed clear trends over the last 135 years. Herbage S concentrations correlated positively with annual total SO2 emissions in the U.K. (R 2 = 0.61), whereas herbage δ34S correlated negatively with SO2 emissions (R 2 = 0.83). These results indicate that local variations of anthropogenic S inputs were not important at the site and verify the usefulness of this unique sample set for environmental monitoring. In contrast, the concentrations of total and extractable S in the topsoil were less sensitive to the changing pollution, although the δ34S values of soil S also decreased significantly, particularly during the period 1900−1970. Based on these S isotope ratios, we estimated that anthropogenic S contributed up to 50% of the herbage S uptake at the peak of SO2 emissions and still accounts for about 30% of the S presently stored in the topsoil
The effect of metallicity on the Cepheid distance scale and its implications for the Hubble constant () determination
Recent HST determinations of the expansion's rate of the Universe (the Hubble
constant, H_0) assumed that the Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation at V and I
are independent of metallicity (Freedman, et al., 1996, Saha et al., 1996,
Tanvir et al., 1995). The three groups obtain different vales for H_0. We note
that most of this discrepancy stems from the asumption (by both groups) that
the Period-Luminosity relation is independent of metallicity. We come to this
conclusion as a result of our study of the Period-Luminosity relation of 481
Cepheids with 3 millions two colour measurements in the Large Magellanic Cloud
and the Small Magellanic Cloud obtained as a by-product of the EROS
microlensing survey. We find that the derived interstellar absorption
corrections are particularly sensitive to the metallicity and when our result
is applied to recent estimates based on HST Cepheids observations it makes the
low-H_0 values higher and the high-H_0 value lower, bringing those discrepant
estimates into agrement around .Comment: 4 pages, Latex, with 2 .ps accepted for publication astronomy and
astrophysics Letter
- …