887 research outputs found

    Some results on a graph associated with a non-quasi-local atomic domain

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    Let R be an atomic domain which admits at least two maximal ideals. Let Irr(R) denote the set of all irreducible elements of R and let A(R) = {Rπ | π ∈ Irr(R)}. Let I(R) denote the subset of A(R) consisting of all Rπ ∈ A(R) such that π does not belong to the Jacobson radical of R. With R, we associate an undirected graph denoted by G(R) whose vertex set is I(R) and distinct vertices Rπ1 and Rπ2 are adjacent if and only if Rπ1 ∩ Rπ2 = Rπ1π2. The aim of this article is to discuss some results on the connectedness of G(R) and on the girth of G(R)

    The exact annihilating-ideal graph of a commutative ring

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    The rings considered in this article are commutative with identity. For an ideal II of a ring RR, we denote the annihilator of II in RR by Ann(I)Ann(I). An ideal II of a ring RR is said to be an exact annihilating ideal if there exists a non-zero ideal JJ of RR such that Ann(I)=JAnn(I) = J and Ann(J)=IAnn(J) = I. For a ring RR, we denote the set of all exact annihilating ideals of RR by EA(R)\mathbb{EA}(R) and EA(R)\{(0)}\mathbb{EA}(R)\backslash \{(0)\} by EA(R)\mathbb{EA}(R)^{*}. Let RR be a ring such that EA(R)\mathbb{EA}(R)^{*}\neq \emptyset. With RR, in [Exact Annihilating-ideal graph of commutative rings, {\it J. Algebra and Related Topics} {\bf 5}(1) (2017) 27-33] P.T. Lalchandani introduced and investigated an undirected graph called the exact annihilating-ideal graph of RR, denoted by EAG(R)\mathbb{EAG}(R) whose vertex set is EA(R)\mathbb{EA}(R)^{*} and distinct vertices II and JJ are adjacent if and only if Ann(I)=JAnn(I) = J and Ann(J)=IAnn(J) = I. In this article, we continue the study of the exact annihilating-ideal graph of a ring. In Section 2 , we prove some basic properties of exact annihilating ideals of a commutative ring and we provide several examples. In Section 3, we determine the structure of EAG(R)\mathbb{EAG}(R), where either RR is a special principal ideal ring or RR is a reduced ring which admits only a finite number of minimal prime ideals

    Cobalamin and Folic Acid Status in Relation to the Etiopathogenesis of Pancytopenia in Adults at a Tertiary Care Centre in North India

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    Background. Pancytopenia has multiple etiologies like megaloblastic anemia, aplastic anemia, leukemia, and various infections. We investigated the clinical, etiological and hematological profile including bone marrow morphology of patients with pancytopenia in relation to their vitamin B12 and folic acid status at a tertiary care referral hospital in north India. Methods. A total of 140 consecutive patients with pancytopenia were selected from June 2007 to December 2008. Bone marrow examination and other tests were carried out as warranted, including serum cobalamin and folate assays using liquid chromatography mass spectroscopy (LC MS/MS). Results. The study population consisted of 92 males and 48 females with a mean age of 32.8 years. Megaloblastic anemia 60.7%, aplastic anemia (7.8%), and leukemia (9.2%) were common causes. Infectious causes (16.4% of all cases) included leishmaniasis, HIV–AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. Severe cobalamin deficiency (B12 < 100 pg/mL) was seen in 81% of all patients including 91.6% of patients with MA. In contrast, only 7.14% of all pancytopenic patients were folate deficient. Folate deficiency (<5 ng/mL) was seen in just 5% MA patients. Combined cobalamin and folate deficiency was seen in 5 patients (3.51%). Conclusion. Cobalamin deficiency was found to be more common in our setting and is largely underdiagnosed in the age of folate supplementation. Infectious diseases like tuberculosis, leishmaniasis, and increasingly HIV are important and treatable causes of pancytopenia. This is in contrast with the developed nations where the bulk of disease is due to malignancy or marrow aplasia

    A real time correlator architecture using distributed arithmetic principles

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    A real time correlator design based on the principles of Distributed Arithmetic (DA) is described. This design is shown to be more efficient in terms of memory requirement than the direct DA implementation, especially when the number of coefficients is large. Since the proposed architecture implements the sum of product evaluation, it can be easily extended to finite and infinite response filters. Methods to further reduce the memory requirements are also discussed. A brief comparison is made between the proposed method and different DA implementations

    Heat Transfer Modeling and Analysis of Solar Thermo-chemical Reactor for Hydrogen Production from Water

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    AbstractA solar thermo-chemical reactor is modeled and analyzed for the solar thermal dissociation of zinc oxide into zinc and oxygen involved in the thermo-chemical cycle for hydrogen production. The reactor consists of a cavity surrounded by a rotating insulation layer made of alumina. The granular zinc oxide particles are fed into the cavity and are directly exposed to the solar radiation entering the cavity through a quartz window. A three dimensional numerical model coupling the multiphase particle dynamics in gravitational field, multiphase heat transfer, k-ɛ turbulence model, discrete ordinates radiation model, Arrhenius reaction rate model is developed. The cavity temperature and oxygen molar flow rate at the outlet of the reactor which is the indicator of the reaction rate has been validated with a 10kW reactor prototype. An energy balance study of thermal performance parameters including the various losses occurring from the reactor and efficiency is also done. The major losses were contributed by re-radiation (46%) and sensible heating of reactor components (35.5%), while the minor losses were contributed by convection by argon (1%) and conduction through insulation (2%).The thermal efficiency of the reactor is calculated to be 15.5%

    Adjunctive quetiapine for serotonin reuptake inhibitor-resistant obsessive-compulsive disorder: A meta-analysis of randomised controlled treatment trials

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    Small studies have shown positive effects from adding a variety of antipsychotic agents in patients with obsessive–compulsive disorder who are unresponsive to treatment with serotonin reuptake inhibitors. The evidence, however, is contradictory. This paper reports a meta-analysis of existing double-blind randomized placebo-controlled studies looking at the addition of the second-generation antipsychotic quetiapine in such cases. Three studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Altogether 102 individuals were subjected to analysis using Review Manager (4.2.7). The results showed evidence of efficacy for adjunctive quetiapine (< 400 mg/day) on the primary efficacy criterion, measured as changes from baseline in total Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale scores (P = 0.008), the clinical significance of which was limited by between-study heterogeneity. The mechanism underlying the effect may involve serotonin and/or dopamine neurotransmission

    Synthesis and Spectroscopic, Thermal and Crystal Structure Studies of Hydrazinium Hydrogensuccinate

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    The mono-hydrazinium salt of succinic acid (hydrazinium hydrogensuccinate salt) was prepared by reacting hydrazine hydrate and succinic acid. Its spectral, thermal and structural properties have been determined. The salt, N2H5+.C4H5O4–, is a molecular salt containing discrete hydrazinium cations and hydrogen  succinate anions. The crystal packing consists of infinite chains of anions and cations that are alternatively linked throughO–H···N and bifurcatedN–H···O bonds and this chain is connected to adjacent antiparallel chains by N–H···O hydrogen bonding. The adjacent chains are cross linked by N–H···O bonds from the donor N2H5+ ions, thus forming a three-dimensional network. The salt undergoes melting followed by decomposition to give gaseous products.KEYWORDS: Hydrazine, succinic acid, hydrazinium hydrogensuccinate, crystal structure, thermal studies

    The relationships between expressed emotion, cortisol, and EEG alpha asymmetry

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    Families can express high criticism, hostility and emotional over-involvement towards a person with or at risk of mental health problems. Perceiving such high expressed emotion (EE) can be a major psychological stressor for individuals, especially those at risk of mental health problems. To reveal the biological mechanisms underlying the effect of EE on health, this study investigated physiological response (salivary cortisol, frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA)) to verbal criticism and their relationship to anxiety and perceived EE. Using a repeated-measures design, healthy participants attended three testing sessions on non-consecutive days. On each day, participants listened to one of three types of auditory stimuli, namely criticism, neutral or praise, and Electroencephalography (EEG) and salivary cortisol were measured. Results showed a reduction in cortisol following criticism but there was no significant change in FAA. Post-criticism cortisol concentration negatively correlated with perceived EE after controlling for baseline mood. Our findings suggest that salivary cortisol change responds to criticism in non-clinical populations might be largely driven by individual differences in the perception of criticism (e.g., arousal and relevance). Criticisms expressed by audio comments may not be explicitly perceived as an acute emotional stressor, and thus, physiological change responds to criticisms could be minimum
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