44,790 research outputs found
Electronic spectrum of crystalline antimony
Electronic spectrum of crystalline antimon
Exchange interaction and correlations radically change behaviour of a quantum particle in a classically forbidden region
Exchange interaction strongly influences the long-range behaviour of
localised electron orbitals and quantum tunneling amplitudes. It violates the
oscillation theorem (creates extra nodes) and produces a power-law decay
instead of the usual exponential decrease at large distances. For inner
orbitals inside molecules decay is , for macroscopic systems , where is the Fermi momentum and for 1D, 3.5
for 2D and 4 for 3D crystal. Correlation corrections do not change these
conclusions. Slow decay increases the exchange interaction between localized
spins and the under-barrier tunneling amplitude. The under-barrier transmission
coefficients in solids (e.g. for point contacts) become temperature-dependent
Energy landscape and rigidity
The effects of floppy modes in the thermodynamical properties of a system are
studied. From thermodynamical arguments, we deduce that floppy modes are not at
zero frequency and thus a modified Debye model is used to take into account
this effect. The model predicts a deviation from the Debye law at low
temperatures. Then, the connection between the topography of the energy
landscape, the topology of the phase space and the rigidity of a glass is
explored. As a result, we relate the number of constraints and floppy modes
with the statistics of the landscape. We apply these ideas to a simple model
for which we provide an approximate expression for the number of energy basins
as a function of the rigidity. This allows to understand certains features of
the glass transition, like the jump in the specific heat or the reversible
window observed in chalcogenide glasses.Comment: 1 text+3 eps figure
Orthotic management of cerebral palsy : recommendations from a consensus conference
An international multidisciplinary group of healthcare professionals and researchers participated in a consensus conference on the management of cerebral palsy, convened by the International Society for Prosthetics and Orthotics. Participants reviewed the evidence and considered contemporary thinking on a range of treatment options including physical and occupational therapy, and medical, surgical and orthotic interventions. The quality of many of the reviewed papers was compromised by inadequate reporting and lack of transparency, in particular regarding the types of patients and the design of the interventions being evaluated. Substantial evidence suggests that ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs) that control the foot and ankle in stance and swing phases can improve gait efficiency in ambulant children (GMFCS levels I-III). By contrast, little high quality evidence exists to support the use of orthoses for the hip, spine or upper limb. Where the evidence for orthosis use was not compelling consensus was reached on recommendations for orthotic intervention. Subsequent group discussions identified recommendations for future research. The evidence to support using orthoses is generally limited by the brevity of follow-up periods in research studies; hence the extent to which orthoses may prevent deformities developing over time remains unclear. The full report of the conference can be accessed free of charge at www.ispoint.org
Method of forming a wick for a heat pipe
A method of forming a tubular wick for a heat pipe is presented. The method is characterized by the steps of forming a wick blank of a predetermined thickness comprising a plurality of superimposed layers of stainless steel mesh screen, wet rolling the blank for reducing the thickness, wrapping the blank about an inner mandrel, compressing the blank into a rigid tubular structure, removing the tubular structure from the mandrel and sintering the tubular structure
Compaction dynamics of a granular media under vertical tapping
We report new experimental results on granular compaction under consecutive
vertical taps. The evolution of the mean volume fraction and of the mean
potential energy of a granular packing presents a slow densification until a
final steady-state, and is reminiscent to usual relaxation in glasses via a
stretched exponential law. The intensity of the taps seems to rule the
characteristic time of the relaxation according to an Arrhenius's type relation
>. Finally, the analysis of the vertical volume fraction profile reveals an
almost homogeneous densification in the packing.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Europhysics Letter
Issues on the molecular-beam epitaxial growth of p-SiGe inverted-modulation-doped structures
The influence of boron segregation and silicon cap-layer thickness on two-dimensional hole gases (2-DHGs) has been investigated in Si/Si0.8Ge0.2/Si inverted-modulation-doped heterostructures grown by solid-source molecular-beam epitaxy. Boron segregation, which is significant in structures with small spacer layers, can be suppressed by growth interruption after the boron doping. How growth interruption affected the electrical properties of the 2-DHG and the boron doping profile as measured by secondary ion mass spectroscopy are reported. We report also on the role played by the unpassivated silicon cap, and compare carrier transport at the normal and inverted interfaces
Computer-aided space shuttle orbiter wing design study
An analytical and experimental investigation has been made to provide a space shuttle orbiter wing design that met the guideline requirements of landing performance, stability, and hypersonic trim for a specified center-of-gravity envelope. The analytical study was facilitated by the use of the Optimal Design Integration system (ODIN) and the experimental part of the investigation was conducted in the Langley low-turbulence pressure tunnel and the Langley continuous-flow hypersonic tunnel
A phase III, multi-centre, double-masked randomised controlled trial of adjunctive intraocular and peri-ocular steroid (triamcinolone acetonide) versus standard treatment in eyes undergoing vitreoretinal surgery for open globe trauma (ASCOT): statistical analysis plan.
BACKGROUND: Open globe ocular trauma complicated by intraocular scarring (proliferative vitreoretinopathy) is a relatively rare, blinding, but potentially treatable condition for which, at present, surgery is often unsatisfactory and visual results frequently poor. To date, no pharmacological adjuncts to surgery have been proven to be effective. The aim of the Adjunctive Steroid Combination in Ocular Trauma (ASCOT) randomised controlled trial is to determine whether adjunctive steroid (triamcinolone acetonide), given at the time of surgery, can improve the outcome of vitreoretinal surgery in patients with open globe ocular trauma. This article presents the statistical analysis plan for the main publication as approved and signed off by the Trial Steering Committee prior to the first data extraction for the Data Monitoring Committee meeting report. METHODS/DESIGN: ASCOT is a pragmatic, multi-centre, parallel-group, double-masked randomised controlled trial. The aim of the study is to recruit from 20-25 centres in the United Kingdom and randomise 300 eyes (from 300 patients) into two treatment arms. Both groups will receive standard surgical treatment and care; the intervention arm will additionally receive a pre-operative steroid combination (triamcinolone acetonide) into the vitreous cavity consisting of 4 mg/0.1 ml and 40 mg/1 ml sub-Tenon's. Participants will be followed for 6 months post-surgery. The primary outcome is the proportion of patients achieving a clinically meaning improvement in visual acuity in the study eye at 6 months after initial surgery, defined as a 10 letter score improvement in the ETDRS (the standard scale to test visual acuity). TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN30012492 . Registered on 5 September 2014. EudraCT2014-002193-37 . Registered on 5 September 2014
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