538 research outputs found

    Strangeness production in a constituent quark model

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    We develop a model to calculate strangeness production in both elementary and heavy ion collisions, within the framework of a statistical approach to hadronisation. Calculations are based on the canonical partition function of the thermal Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model with exact conservation of flavor and color. It turns out that the growth of strange quarks production in heavy ion collisions is due to the initial excess of non-strange matter over antimatter, whereas a suppression occurs for elementary collisions, owing to the constraint of exact quantum charges conservation over small volumes.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the GISELDA Meeting held in Frascati, 14-18 January 200

    Strangeness production in a statistical effective model of hadronisation

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    We suppose that overall strangeness production in both high energy elementary and heavy ion collisions can be described within the framework of an equilibrium statistical model in which the effective degrees of freedom are constituent quarks as used in effective lagrangian models. In this picture, the excess of relative strangeness production in heavy ion collisions with respect to elementary particle collisions arises from the unbalance between initial non-strange matter and antimatter and from the exact colour and flavour quantum number conservation over different finite volumes. The comparison with the data and the possible sources of model dependence are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 .eps figures. Talk given at QCD@work, MartinaFranca (Italy) June 16-20 2001, to be published in the Proceeding

    C, N, O Abundances in the Most Metal-Poor Damped Lyman alpha Systems

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    This study focuses on some of the most metal-poor damped Lyman alpha absorbers known in the spectra of high redshift QSOs, using new and archival observations obtained with UV-sensitive echelle spectrographs on the Keck and VLT telescopes. The weakness and simple velocity structure of the absorption lines in these systems allows us to measure the abundances of several elements, and in particular those of C, N, and O, a group that is difficult to study in DLAs of more typical metallicities. We find that when the oxygen abundance is less than about 1/100 of solar, the C/O ratio in high redshift DLAs and sub-DLAs matches that of halo stars of similar metallicity and shows higher values than expected from galactic chemical evolution models based on conventional stellar yields. Furthermore, there are indications that at these low metallicities the N/O ratio may also be above simple expectations and may exhibit a minimum value, as proposed by Centurion and her collaborators in 2003. Both results can be interpreted as evidence for enhanced production of C and N by massive stars in the first few episodes of star formation, in our Galaxy and in the distant proto-galaxies seen as QSO absorbers. The higher stellar yields implied may have an origin in stellar rotation which promotes mixing in the stars' interiors, as considered in some recent model calculations. We briefly discuss the relevance of these results to current ideas on the origin of metals in the intergalactic medium and the universality of the stellar initial mass function.Comment: 17 pages, 9 Figures, Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ

    The Lyman-alpha Forest and Heavy Element Systems of GB1759+7539

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    (abridged) We present observations of the high-redshift QSO GB1759+7539 (z=3.05) obtained with HIRES on the Keck 10m telescope. The spectrum has a resolution of FWHM = 7 km/s, and a typical signal-to-noise ratio per 2 km/s pixel of ~25 in the Ly-alpha forest region, and ~60 longward of the Ly-alpha emission. The observed Ly-alpha forest systems have a mean redshift of z=2.7. There is marginal evidence of clustering along the line of sight over the velocity range 100 < v < 250 km/s. The 1-point and 2-point joint probability distributions of the transmitted flux for the Ly-alpha forest were calculated, and shown to be very insensitive to the heavy element contamination. We could find no evidence of Voigt profile departures due to infalling gas, as observed in the simulated forest spectra. Twelve heavy-element absorption systems were identified, including damped Lyman-alpha systems at z=2.62 and 2.91. The C, N, O, Al, Si, P, S, Mg, Fe, and Ni absorption features of these systems were studied, and the elemental abundances calculated for the weak unsaturated lines. The systems have metallicities of Z(2.62) ~1/20 Z(solar) and Z(2.91) \~1/45 Z(solar). Both systems appear to have a low dust content. They show an over-abundance of alpha-elements relative to Fe-peak elements, and an under-abundance of odd atomic number elements relative to even. Nitrogen was observed, and found to be under-abundant relative to oxygen, in line with the time delay model of primary nitrogen production. C II* was also seen, allowing us to determine an upper limit to the cosmic microwave background temperature at z=2.62 of T(CMB)<12.9K.Comment: Added reference, and new S & N abundance determinations for z=2.91 syste

    The kinetic temperature in a damped Lyman-alpha absorption system in Q2206-199 - an example of the warm neutral medium

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    By comparing the widths of absorption lines from OI, SiII and FeII in the redshift z=2.076 single-component damped Lyman alpha absorption system in the spectrum of Q2206-199 we establish that these absorption lines arise in Warm Neutral Medium gas at ~12000 +/- 3000K. This is consistent with thermal equilibrium model estimates of ~ 8000K for the Warm Neutral Medium in galaxies, but not with the presence of a significant cold component. It is also consistent with, but not required by, the absence of CII* fine structure absorption in this system. Some possible implications concerning abundance estimates in narrow-line WNM absorbers are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. MNRAS accepte

    Early mandibular canine-lateral incisor transposition: case report

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    Purpose. The main aim of the present study is to present a case of mandibular transposition between lateral incisor and canine in a paediatric patient. Materials and methods. A fixed multibracket orthodontic treatment was performed by means of a modified welded arch as to correct the transposition and obtaining a class I functional and symmetrical occlusion, also thanks to the early diagnosis of the eruption anomaly. Results. Our case report shows that a satisfactory treatment of mandibular transpositions is obtained when detected at an early stage of the tooth development. Conclusions. The main treatment options to be taken into consideration in case of a mandibular transposition are two: correcting the transposition or aligning it leaving the dental elements in their transposed order; in both cases, the followups show a stable condition, maintained without relapses. Several factors, such as age of the patient, occlusion, aesthetics, patient’s collaboration, periodontal support and duration of treatment have to be considered as to prevent potential damage to dental elements and support appliances. The choice between the two treatment approaches for mandibular lateral incisor/canine transpositions mainly depends on the time the anomaly is detected

    Physical properties of two low-luminosity z ~ 1.9 galaxies behind the lensing cluster AC 114

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    We present VLT/ISAAC near-infrared spectroscopy of two gravitationally-lensed z ~ 1.9 galaxies, A2 and S2, located behind the cluster AC 114. Thanks to large magnification factors, we have been successful in detecting rest-frame optical emission lines in star-forming galaxies 1 to 2 magnitudes fainter than in previous studies of Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) at z ~ 3. From the Ha luminosity, we estimate star formation rates (SFRs) which are 7 to 15 times higher than those inferred from the UV continuum flux at 1500 ang without dust extinction correction. The behavior of S2 and A2 in terms of O/H and N/O abundance ratios are very different, and they are also different from typical LBGs at z ~ 3. S2 is a low-metallicity object (Z ~ 0.03 Zsun) with a low N/O ratio, similar to those derived in the most metal-poor nearby HII galaxies. In contrast, A2 is a high-metallicity galaxy (Z ~ 1.3 Zsun) with a high N/O abundance ratio, similar to those derived in the most metal-rich starburst nucleus galaxies. The virial masses, derived from emission-line widths, are 0.5 and 2.4 x 10^10 Msun, for S2 and A2 respectively. Thanks to the gravitational amplification, the line profiles of S2 are spatially resolved, leading to a velocity gradient of +- 240 km/s, which yields a dynamical mass of ~ 1.3 x 10^10 Msun within the inner 1 kpc radius. Combining these new data with the sample of LBGs at z ~ 3, we conclude that these three galaxies exhibit different physical properties in terms of SFRs, abundance and mass-to-light ratios, and reddening. High-redshift galaxies of different luminosities could thus have quite different star formation histories (abridged version).Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&

    Correlation between parodontal indexes and orthodontic retainers: prospective study in a group of 16 patients

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    Purpose. Fixed retainers are used to stabilize dental elements after orthodontic treatment. Being it a permanent treatment, it is necessary to instruct patients about a constant and continuous monitoring of their periodontal conditions and a correct oral hygiene. The aim of this study was to highlight the possible adverse effects of bonded retainers on parameters correlated to the health conditions of periodontal tissues. Materials and methods. We selected 16 patients, under treatment in the Orthodontics Department of University of Bari Dental School, who had undergone a lingual retainer insertion at the end of the orthodontic treatment. The patients were then divided into two groups (Control Group and Study Group) and monitored for 3 and 36 months, respectively. The following indexes were taken into consideration: gingival index (GI), plaque index (PI) and the presence of calculus (Calculus Index, CI), the probing depth and the presence of gingival recession on the six inferior frontal dental elements. Results. After the observation was carried out, any of the patients showed periodontal sockets and gingival recession. In the Study Group, only 1 patient had a PI score=3, the 7 left had scores between 0.66 and 2.83. In the Control Group, one patient had score=0, the other ones showed values between 0.5 and 1.66. The mean GI in the Study Group peaked at a score of 2.83, the minimum was 0.66; whereas in the Control Group the maximum value was 2 and the minimum 0.66. The CI in the Group Study was between 1 and 2. In the Control Group it was absent in only 1 patient, whereas in the remaining 7, it had a value between 0.3 and 1. The clinical data were studied by means of the Wilcoxon test. We found a statistically significant difference for what concerns the Plaque Indexes (PI) (P&gt;0.05) and Calculus Indexes (CI) (P&gt;0.1) in both groups, with higher scores in the Study Group, having retainers for 36 months. Any statistically significant difference was calculated for the GI. Conclusions. We can therefore conclude that patients with lingual retainers need periodontal hygiene and treatment as to prevent, in the course of time, periodontal damages non-detectable in short-term

    Topological Signature of First Order Phase Transitions

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    We show that the presence and the location of first order phase transitions in a thermodynamic system can be deduced by the study of the topology of the potential energy function, V(q), without introducing any thermodynamic measure. In particular, we present the thermodynamics of an analytically solvable mean-field model with a k-body interaction which -depending on the value of k- displays no transition (k=1), second order (k=2) or first order (k>2) phase transition. This rich behavior is quantitatively retrieved by the investigation of a topological invariant, the Euler characteristic, of some submanifolds of the configuration space. Finally, we conjecture a direct link between the Euler characteristic and the thermodynamic entropy.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
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