1,376 research outputs found
Inertial and retardation effects for dislocation interactions
A new formulation for the equation of motion of interacting dislocations is
derived. From this solution it is shown that additional coupling forces, of
kinetic and inertial origin, should be considered in Dislocation Dynamics (DD)
simulations at high strain rates. A heuristic modification of this general
equation of motion enables one to introduce retardation into inertial and
elastic forces, in accordance with a progressive rearrangement of fields
through wave propagation. The influence of the corresponding coupling terms and
retardation effects are then illustrated in the case of dislocation dipolar
interaction and coplanar annihilation. Finally, comparison is made between the
modified equation of motion and a precise numerical solution based on the
Peierls-Nabarro Galerkin method. Good agreement is found between the
Peierls-Nabarro Galerkin method and the EoM including retardation effects for a
dipolar interaction. For coplanar annihilation, it is demonstrated that an
unexpected mechanism, involving a complex interplay between the core of the
dislocations and kinetics energies, allows a renucleation from the completely
annihilated dislocations. A description of this phenomenon that could break the
most favourable reaction between dislocations is proposed
Métodos de fracionamento e caracterização da matéria orgânica do solo.
bitstream/item/32410/1/documento-106.pd
Efeito estufa: potencialidades e contribuições da agricultura.
bitstream/item/32413/1/documento-109.pd
The developmental pathways of preschool children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia: communicative and social sequelae one year after treatment
Early childhood is considered to be a period of rapid development, with the acquisition
of abilities predicting future positive school competences. Motor, cognitive, and social diculties
related to cancer therapies heavily impact the development of children with cancer. This study
focused on two main aims: To assess the developmental pathways of preschool children with
acute lymphoblastic leukemia one year post-treatment and to compare these abilities both with
those of a control group of healthy peers and with Italian norms. Forty-four children and their
families, recruited through the Hematology-Oncologic Clinic of the Department of Child andWoman
Health (University of Padua), agreed to participate in this study. The children\u2019s mean age was
4.52 years (SD = 0.94, range = 2.5\u20136 years), equally distributed by gender, all diagnosed with acute
lymphoblastic leukemia. Matched healthy peers were recruited through pediatricians\u2019 ambulatories.
Each family was interviewed adopting the Vineland adaptive behavior scales. Paired sampleWilcoxon
tests revealed that children were reported to have significantly more developmental diculties than
their healthy peers. When compared with Italian norms, they scored particularly low in verbal
competence, social, and coping skills. No significant association was found between treatment
variables and developmental abilities. These findings suggest that the creation of specialized
interventions, both for parents and children, may fill the possible delays in children\u2019s development
probably due to stress, lack of adequate stimulation, or dicult adaptation
Health-related quality of life in AYA cancer survivors who underwent HSCT compared with healthy peers
This\ue002study\ue002was\ue002aimed\ue002at\ue002comparing\ue002adolescent\ue002and\ue002young\ue002adult\ue002(AYA)\ue002Hematopoietic\ue002
Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT) paediatric cancer survivors and a control group of
healthy peers in terms of Health- Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) and frequency of
posttraumatic\ue002stress\ue002symptoms\ue002(PTSS).\ue002The\ue002participants\ue002were\ue00232\ue002AYA\ue002HSCT\ue002survi-
vors and 28 matched healthy peers. The survivors were, on average, 19.4 years old
(SD = 3.8), with an average age of 8.1 years (SD = 4.3) at diagnosis, and with a mean
time, since treatment was completed, of 8.5 years (SD = 3.2). The majority of survi-
vors (78.1%) did not show clinical PTSS, with intrusion symptoms most frequently
reported in those who had undergone autologous HSCT (F = 3.3; df = 2; p = 0.05) and
relapse presence in their treatment associated with more PTSS avoidance symptoms
(r = 0.4; p\ue002=\ue0020.002).\ue002Women\ue002reported\ue002more\ue002problems\ue002in\ue002the\ue002SF-\ue00236\ue002pain\ue002scale\ue002(t = 2.1;
df = 31; p\ue002=\ue0020.04)\ue002than\ue002men.\ue002Additionally,\ue00287.5%\ue002of\ue002survivors\ue002fell\ue002below\ue002the\ue00225th\ue002per-
centile\ue002in\ue002the\ue002SF-\ue00236\ue002general\ue002well-\ue002being\ue002scale,\ue002and\ue00270.8%\ue002had\ue002the\ue002same\ue002trend\ue002for\ue002the\ue002
SF-\ue00236\ue002fatigue\ue002scale.\ue002Survivors\ue002reported\ue002better\ue002emotional\ue002well-\ue002being\ue002(t\ue002=\ue0022.6,\ue002df = 27,
p = 0.01) and fewer limitations than their healthy peers (t = 2.5, df = 27, p = 0.02),
while they perceived a lower life satisfaction referring to the past (t\ue002=\ue002 122.8,\ue002df = 27,
p = 0.009)
Equation of motion for dislocations with inertial effects
An approximate equation of motion is proposed for screw and edge
dislocations, which accounts for retardation and for relativistic effects in
the subsonic range. Good quantitative agreement is found, in accelerated or in
decelerated regimes, with numerical results of a more fundamental nature.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, LaTe
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