4,967 research outputs found
Feshbach Resonances and Limiting Thermodynamics of Strongly Correlated Nucleons
A finite temperature model of strongly correlated nucleons with underlying
isospin symmetries is developed. The model can be used to study the role of
bound states and Feshbach resonances on the thermal properties of a spin 1/2,
isospin 1/2 system of protons and neutrons by varying the proton fraction. An
analysis of features associated with a universal thermodynamic limit or unitary
limit is given. In the limit of very large scattering length, the effective
range to quantum thermal wavelength appears as a limiting scale in an
interaction energy and equation of state.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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A Tale of two Cities: A study of access and attitudes to food in the Deepdale and Ingol areas of Preston
Polioencephalomalacia in Iowa Cattle
Polioencephalomalacia is an acute or subacute disease of cattle and sheep characterized by bilaterial blindness without visible eye lesions and by other symptoms of a central nervous system disorder. This disease has been called forage poisoning in Colorado and blind staggers in Wyoming
Bremsstrahlung in Alpha-Decay
We present the first fully quantum mechanical calculation of photon radiation
accompanying charged particle decay from a barrier resonance. The soft-photon
limit agrees with the classical results, but differences appear at
next-to-leading-order. Under the conditions of alpha-decay of heavy nuclei, the
main contribution to the photon emission stems from Coulomb acceleration and
may be computed analytically. We find only a small contribution from the
tunneling wave function under the barrier.Comment: 12 pages, 2 Postscript figure
Integration of magnetic bearings in the design of advanced gas turbine engines
Active magnetic bearings provide revolutionary advantages for gas turbine engine rotor support. These advantages include tremendously improved vibration and stability characteristics, reduced power loss, improved reliability, fault-tolerance, and greatly extended bearing service life. The marriage of these advantages with innovative structural network design and advanced materials utilization will permit major increases in thrust to weight performance and structural efficiency for future gas turbine engines. However, obtaining the maximum payoff requires two key ingredients. The first key ingredient is the use of modern magnetic bearing technologies such as innovative digital control techniques, high-density power electronics, high-density magnetic actuators, fault-tolerant system architecture, and electronic (sensorless) position estimation. This paper describes these technologies. The second key ingredient is to go beyond the simple replacement of rolling element bearings with magnetic bearings by incorporating magnetic bearings as an integral part of the overall engine design. This is analogous to the proper approach to designing with composites, whereby the designer tailors the geometry and load carrying function of the structural system or component for the composite instead of simply substituting composites in a design originally intended for metal material. This paper describes methodologies for the design integration of magnetic bearings in gas turbine engines
Photoemission evidence for crossover from Peierls-like to Mott-like transition in highly strained VO
We present a spectroscopic study that reveals that the metal-insulator
transition of strained VO thin films may be driven towards a purely
electronic transition, which does not rely on the Peierls dimerization, by the
application of mechanical strain. Comparison with a moderately strained system,
which does involve the lattice, demonstrates the crossover from Peierls- to
Mott-like transitions
Strain dependence of bonding and hybridization across the metal-insulator transition of VO2
Soft x-ray spectroscopy is used to investigate the strain dependence of the
metal-insulator transition of VO2. Changes in the strength of the V 3d - O 2p
hybridization are observed across the transition, and are linked to the
structural distortion. Furthermore, although the V-V dimerization is
well-described by dynamical mean-field theory, the V-O hybridization is found
to have an unexpectedly strong dependence on strain that is not predicted by
band theory, emphasizing the relevance of the O ion to the physics of VO2
Mathematical modeling of cell population dynamics in the colonic crypt and in colorectal cancer
Colorectal cancer is initiated in colonic crypts. A succession of genetic mutations or epigenetic changes can lead to homeostasis in the crypt being overcome, and subsequent unbounded growth. We consider the dynamics of a single colorectal crypt by using a compartmental approach [Tomlinson IPM, Bodmer WF (1995) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 92: 11130-11134], which accounts for populations of stem cells, differential cells, and transit cells. That original model made the simplifying assumptions that each cell popuation divides synchronously, but we relax these assumptions by adopting an age-structured approach that models asynchronous cell division, and by using a continuum model. We discuss two mechanims that could regulate the growth of cell numbers and maintain the equilibrium that is normally observed in the crypt. The first will always maintain an equilibrium for all parameter values, whereas the second can allow unbounded proliferation if the net per capita growth rates are large enough. Results show that an increase in cell renewal, which is equivalent to a failure of programmed cell death or of differentiation, can lead to the growth of cancers. The second model can be used to explain the long lag phases in tumor growth, during which news, higher equilibria are reached, before unlimited growth in cell number ensues
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