11,124 research outputs found
Effects of initial flow velocity fluctuation in event-by-event (3+1)D hydrodynamics
Hadron spectra and elliptic flow in high-energy heavy-ion collisions are
studied within a (3+1)D ideal hydrodynamic model with fluctuating initial
conditions given by the AMPT Monte Carlo model. Results from event-by-event
simulations are compared with experimental data at both RHIC and LHC energies.
Fluctuations in the initial energy density come from not only the number of
coherent soft interactions of overlapping nucleons but also incoherent
semi-hard parton scatterings in each binary nucleon collision. Mini-jets from
semi-hard parton scatterings are assumed to be locally thermalized through a
Gaussian smearing and give rise to non-vanishing initial local flow velocities.
Fluctuations in the initial flow velocities lead to harder transverse momentum
spectra of final hadrons due to non-vanishing initial radial flow velocities.
Initial fluctuations in rapidity distributions lead to expanding hot spots in
the longitudinal direction and are shown to cause a sizable reduction of final
hadron elliptic flow at large transverse momenta.Comment: 17 pages in RevTex, 18 figures, final version published in PR
AdS and Lifshitz Black Holes in Conformal and Einstein-Weyl Gravities
We study black hole solutions in extended gravities with higher-order
curvature terms, including conformal and Einstein-Weyl gravities. In addition
to the usual AdS vacuum, the theories admit Lifshitz and Schr\"odinger vacua.
The AdS black hole in conformal gravity contains an additional parameter over
and above the mass, which may be interpreted as a massive spin-2 hair. By
considering the first law of thermodynamics, we find that it is necessary to
introduce an associated additional intensive/extensive pair of thermodynamic
quantities. We also obtain new Liftshitz black holes in conformal gravity and
study their thermodynamics. We use a numerical approach to demonstrate that AdS
black holes beyond the Schwarzschild-AdS solution exist in Einstein-Weyl
gravity. We also demonstrate the existence of asymptotically Lifshitz black
holes in Einstein-Weyl gravity. The Lifshitz black holes arise at the boundary
of the parameter ranges for the AdS black holes. Outside the range, the
solutions develop naked singularities. The asymptotically AdS and Lifshitz
black holes provide an interesting phase transition, in the corresponding
boundary field theory, from a relativistic Lorentzian system to a
non-relativistic Lifshitz system.Comment: typos corrected, references adde
Are spectroscopic factors from transfer reactions consistent with asymptotic normalisation coefficients?
It is extremely important to devise a reliable method to extract
spectroscopic factors from transfer cross sections. We analyse the standard
DWBA procedure and combine it with the asymptotic normalisation coefficient,
extracted from an independent data set. We find that the single particle
parameters used in the past generate inconsistent asymptotic normalization
coefficients. In order to obtain a consistent spectroscopic factor,
non-standard parameters for the single particle overlap functions can be used
but, as a consequence, often reduced spectroscopic strengths emerge. Different
choices of optical potentials and higher order effects in the reaction model
are also studied. Our test cases consist of: C(d,p)C(g.s.) at
MeV, O(d,p)O(g.s.) at MeV and
Ca(d,p)Ca(g.s.) at MeV. We underline the
importance of performing experiments specifically designed to extract ANCs for
these systems.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, Phys. Rev. C (in press
Semantic Sentiment Analysis of Twitter Data
Internet and the proliferation of smart mobile devices have changed the way
information is created, shared, and spreads, e.g., microblogs such as Twitter,
weblogs such as LiveJournal, social networks such as Facebook, and instant
messengers such as Skype and WhatsApp are now commonly used to share thoughts
and opinions about anything in the surrounding world. This has resulted in the
proliferation of social media content, thus creating new opportunities to study
public opinion at a scale that was never possible before. Naturally, this
abundance of data has quickly attracted business and research interest from
various fields including marketing, political science, and social studies,
among many others, which are interested in questions like these: Do people like
the new Apple Watch? Do Americans support ObamaCare? How do Scottish feel about
the Brexit? Answering these questions requires studying the sentiment of
opinions people express in social media, which has given rise to the fast
growth of the field of sentiment analysis in social media, with Twitter being
especially popular for research due to its scale, representativeness, variety
of topics discussed, as well as ease of public access to its messages. Here we
present an overview of work on sentiment analysis on Twitter.Comment: Microblog sentiment analysis; Twitter opinion mining; In the
Encyclopedia on Social Network Analysis and Mining (ESNAM), Second edition.
201
Doping dependence of phonon and quasiparticle heat transport of pure and Dy-doped Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} single crystals
The temperature and magnetic-field (H) dependences of thermal conductivity
(\kappa) of Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta} (Bi2212) are systematically measured for
a broad doping range by using both pure Bi2212 single crystals with tuned
oxygen contents and Bi_2Sr_2Ca_{1-x}Dy_xCu_2O_{8+\delta} (Dy-Bi2212) single
crystals with different Dy contents x. In the underdoped samples, the
quasiparticle (QP) peak below T_c is strongly suppressed, indicating strong QP
scattering by impurities or oxygen defects, whereas the phonon conductivity is
enhanced in moderately Dy-doped samples and a phonon peak at 10 K is observed
for the first time in Bi2212 system, which means Dy^{3+} ions not only
introduce the impurities or point defects but also stabilize the crystal
lattice. The subkelvin data show that the QP heat conductivity gradually
decreases upon lowering the hole doping level. The magnetic-field dependence of
\kappa at temperature above 5 K is mainly due to the QP scattering off
vortices. While the underdoped pure Bi2212 show very weak field dependence of
\kappa, the Dy-doped samples present an additional "dip"-like term of \kappa(H)
at low field, which is discussed to be related to the phonon scattering by free
spins of Dy^{3+} ions. For non-superconducting Dy-Bi2212 samples with x \simeq
0.50, an interesting "plateau" feature shows up in the low-T \kappa(H)
isotherms with characteristic field at 1 -- 2 T, for which we discuss the
possible revlevance of magnon excitations.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Persistent pulmonary congestion before discharge predicts rehospitalization in heart failure: a lung ultrasound study
BACKGROUND: B-lines evaluated by lung ultrasound (LUS) are the sonographic sign of pulmonary congestion, a major predictor of morbidity and mortality in patients with heart failure (HF). Our aim was to assess the prognostic value of B-lines at discharge to predict rehospitalization at 6 months in patients with acute HF (AHF).
METHODS: A prospective cohort of 100 patients admitted to a Cardiology Department for dyspnea and/or clinical suspicion of AHF were enrolled (mean age 70 ± 11 years). B-lines were evaluated at admission and before discharge. Subjects were followed-up for 6-months after discharge.
RESULTS: Mean B-lines at admission was 48 ± 48 with a statistically significant reduction before discharge (20 ± 23, p 15) (log rank χ(2) 20.5, p 15 before discharge (hazard ratio [HR] 11.74; 95 % confidence interval [CI] 1.30-106.16) was an independent predictor of events at 6 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Persistent pulmonary congestion before discharge evaluated by ultrasound strongly predicts rehospitalization for HF at 6-months. Absence or a mild degree of B-lines identify a subgroup at extremely low risk to be readmitted for HF decompensation
Hybrid Newton-type method for a class of semismooth equations
In this paper, we present a hybrid method for the solution of a class of composite semismooth equations encountered frequently in applications. The method is obtained by combining a generalized finite-difference Newton method to an inexpensive direct search method. We prove that, under standard assumptions, the method is globally convergent with a local rate of convergence which is superlinear or quadratic. We report also several numerical results obtained applying the method to suitable reformulations of well-known nonlinear complementarity problem
- …