4,331 research outputs found
Hard breakup of the deuteron into two Delta-isobars
We study high energy photodisintegration of the deuteron into two
-isobars at large center of mass angles within the QCD hard
rescattering model (HRM). According to the HRM, the process develops in three
main steps: the photon knocks the quark from one of the nucleons in the
deuteron; the struck quark rescatters off a quark from the other nucleon
sharing the high energy of the photon; then the energetic quarks recombine into
two outgoing baryons which have large transverse momenta. Within the HRM, the
cross section is expressed through the amplitude of scattering which we evaluated based on the quark-interchange
model of hard hadronic scattering. Calculations show that the angular
distribution and the strength of the photodisintegration is mainly determined
by the properties of the
scattering. We predict that the cross section of
the deuteron breakup to is 4-5 times larger than that
of the breakup to the channel. Also, the angular
distributions for these two channels are markedly different. These can be
compared with the predictions based on the assumption that two hard
-isobars are the result of the disintegration of the preexisting
components of the deuteron wave function. In this case, one
expects the angular distributions and cross sections of the breakup in both and channels to be similar.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Originalism and Brown v. Board of Education
Article published in the Michigan State Law Review
To what extent is Gluon Confinement an empirical fact?
Experimental verifications of Confinement in hadron physics have established
the absence of charges with a fraction of the electron's charge by studying the
energy deposited in ionization tracks at high energies, and performing Millikan
experiments with charged droplets at rest. These experiments test only the
absence of particles with fractional charge in the asymptotic spectrum, and
thus "Quark" Confinement. However what theory suggests is that Color is
confined, that is, all asymptotic particles are color singlets. Since QCD is a
non-Abelian theory, the gluon force carriers (indirectly revealed in hadron
jets) are colored. We empirically examine what can be said about Gluon
Confinement based on the lack of detection of appropriate events, aiming at an
upper bound for high-energy free-gluon production.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, version accepted at Few Body Physic
The INSIDEOUT framework provides precise signatures of the balance of intrinsic and extrinsic dynamics in brain states
Finding precise signatures of different brain states is a central, unsolved question in neuroscience. We reformulated the problem to quantify the 'inside out' balance of intrinsic and extrinsic brain dynamics in brain states. The difference in brain state can be described as differences in the detailed causal interactions found in the underlying intrinsic brain dynamics. We used a thermodynamics framework to quantify the breaking of the detailed balance captured by the level of asymmetry in temporal processing, i.e. the arrow of time. Specifically, the temporal asymmetry was computed by the time-shifted correlation matrices for the forward and reversed time series, reflecting the level of non-reversibility/non-equilibrium. We found precise, distinguishing signatures in terms of the reversibility and hierarchy of large-scale dynamics in three radically different brain states (awake, deep sleep and anaesthesia) in electrocorticography data from non-human primates. Significantly lower levels of reversibility were found in deep sleep and anaesthesia compared to wakefulness. Non-wakeful states also showed a flatter hierarchy, reflecting the diversity of the reversibility across the brain. Overall, this provides signatures of the breaking of detailed balance in different brain states, perhaps reflecting levels of conscious awareness
Strength-dependent perturbation of whole-brain model working in different regimes reveals the role of fluctuations in brain dynamics
Despite decades of research, there is still a lack of understanding of the role and generating mechanisms of the ubiquitous fluctuations and oscillations found in recordings of brain dynamics. Here, we used whole-brain computational models capable of presenting different dynamical regimes to reproduce empirical data's turbulence level. We showed that the model's fluctuations regime fitted to turbulence more faithfully reproduces the empirical functional connectivity compared to oscillatory and noise regimes. By applying global and local strength-dependent perturbations and subsequently measuring the responsiveness of the model, we revealed each regime's computational capacity demonstrating that brain dynamics is shifted towards fluctuations to provide much-needed flexibility. Importantly, fluctuation regime stimulation in a brain region within a given resting state network modulates that network, aligned with previous empirical and computational studies. Furthermore, this framework generates specific, testable empirical predictions for human stimulation studies using strength-dependent rather than constant perturbation. Overall, the whole-brain models fitted to the level of empirical turbulence together with functional connectivity unveil that the fluctuation regime best captures empirical data, and the strength-dependent perturbative framework demonstrates how this regime provides maximal flexibility to the human brain
Visualizing Clinical Evidence: Citation Networks for the Incubation Periods of Respiratory Viral Infections
Simply by repetition, medical facts can become enshrined as truth even when there
is little empirical evidence supporting them. We present an intuitive and clear
visual design for tracking the citation history of a particular scientific fact
over time. We apply this method to data from a previously published literature
review on the incubation period of nine respiratory viral infections. The
resulting citation networks reveal that the conventional wisdom about the
incubation period for these diseases was based on a small fraction of available
data and in one case, on no retrievable empirical evidence. Overall, 50%
of all incubation period statements did not provide a source for their estimate
and 65% of original sources for incubation period data were not
incorporated into subsequent publications. More standardized and widely
available methods for visualizing these histories of medical evidence are needed
to ensure that conventional wisdom cannot stray too far from empirically
supported knowledge
Data-driven discovery of canonical large-scale brain dynamics
Human behavior and cognitive function correlate with complex patterns of spatio-temporal brain dynamics, which can be simulated using computational models with different degrees of biophysical realism. We used a data-driven optimization algorithm to determine and classify the types of local dynamics that enable the reproduction of different observables derived from functional magnetic resonance recordings. The phase space analysis of the resulting equations revealed a predominance of stable spiral attractors, which optimized the similarity to the empirical data in terms of the synchronization, metastability, and functional connectivity dynamics. For stable limit cycles, departures from harmonic oscillations improved the fit in terms of functional connectivity dynamics. Eigenvalue analyses showed that proximity to a bifurcation improved the accuracy of the simulation for wakefulness, while deep sleep was associated with increased stability. Our results provide testable predictions that constrain the landscape of suitable biophysical models, while supporting noise-driven dynamics close to a bifurcation as a canonical mechanism underlying the complex fluctuations that characterize endogenous brain activity
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