26,126 research outputs found
Human African trypanosomiasis : the current situation in endemic regions and the risks for non-endemic regions from imported cases
Human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) is caused by Trypanosoma brucei
gambiense and T. b. rhodesiense and caused devastating epidemics during the 20th
century. Due to effective control programs implemented in the last two decades, the
number of reported cases has fallen to a historically low level. Although fewer than
977 cases were reported in 2018 in endemic countries, HAT is still a public health
problem in endemic regions until it is completely eliminated. In addition, almost 150
confirmed HAT cases were reported in non-endemic countries in the last three
decades. The majority of non-endemic HAT cases were reported in Europe, United
States and South Africa, due to historical alliances, economic links or geographic
proximity to disease endemic countries. Furthermore, with the implementation of the
“Belt and Road” project, sporadic imported HAT cases have been reported in China
as a warning sign of tropical diseases prevention. In this paper, we explore and
interpret the data on HAT incidence and find no positive correlation between the
number of HAT cases from endemic and non-endemic countries.This data will
provide useful information for better understanding the imported cases of HAT
globally in the post-elimination phase
Reexamining the temperature and neutron density conditions for r-process nucleosynthesis with augmented nuclear mass models
We explore the effects of nuclear masses on the temperature and neutron
density conditions required for r-process nucleosynthesis using four nuclear
mass models augmented by the latest atomic mass evaluation. For each model we
derive the conditions for producing the observed abundance peaks at mass
numbers A ~ 80, 130, and 195 under the waiting-point approximation and further
determine the sets of conditions that can best reproduce the r-process
abundance patterns (r-patterns) inferred for the solar system and observed in
metal-poor stars of the Milky Way halo. In broad agreement with previous
studies, we find that (1) the conditions for producing abundance peaks at A ~
80 and 195 tend to be very different, which suggests that, at least for some
nuclear mass models, these two peaks are not produced simultaneously; (2) the
typical conditions required by the critical waiting-point (CWP) nuclei with the
N = 126 closed neutron shell overlap significantly with those required by the
N=82 CWP nuclei, which enables coproduction of abundance peaks at A ~ 130 and
195 in accordance with observations of many metal-poor stars; and (3) the
typical conditions required by the N = 82 CWP nuclei can reproduce the
r-pattern observed in the metal-poor star HD 122563, which differs greatly from
the solar r-pattern. We also examine how nuclear mass uncertainties affect the
conditions required for the r-process and identify some key nuclei
including76Ni to 78Ni, 82Zn, 131Cd, and 132Cd for precise mass measurements at
rare-isotope beam facilities.Comment: 28 pages,9 figures,1 tabl
Semimetal to semimetal charge density wave transition in 1T-TiSe
We report an infrared study on 1-TiSe, the parent compound of the
newly discovered superconductor CuTiSe. Previous studies of this
compound have not conclusively resolved whether it is a semimetal or a
semiconductor: information that is important in determining the origin of its
unconventional CDW transition. Here we present optical spectroscopy results
that clearly reveal that the compound is metallic in both the high-temperature
normal phase and the low-temperature CDW phase. The carrier scattering rate is
dramatically different in the normal and CDW phases and the carrier density is
found to change with temperature. We conclude that the observed properties can
be explained within the scenario of an Overhauser-type CDW mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 4 page
Charge collective modes in an incommensurately modulated cuprate
We report the first measurement of collective charge modes of insulating
Sr14Cu24O41 using inelastic resonant x-ray scattering over the complete
Brillouin zone. Our results show that the intense excitation modes at the
charge gap edge predominantly originate from the ladder-containing planar
substructures. The observed ladder modes (E vs. Q) are found to be dispersive
for momentum transfers along the "legs" but nearly localized along the "rungs".
Dispersion and peakwidth characteristics are similar to the charge spectrum of
1D Mott insulators, and we show that our results can be understood in the
strong coupling limit (U >> t_{ladder}> t_{chain}). The observed behavior is in
marked contrast to the charge spectrum seen in most two dimensional cuprates.
Quite generally, our results also show that momentum-tunability of inelastic
scattering can be used to resolve mode contributions in multi-component
incommensurate systems.Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figure
Augmented EPA with augmented EFIE method for packaging analysis
It is evident that the low frequency full wave electromagnetic modelling is necessary for IC packaging analysis. Considering the complexity, it is very difficult to solve the whole problem directly. Even though the domain decomposition method is a legitimate approach for these types of problems, the domain decomposition method based on the equivalence principle has the low frequency breakdown issue. In this paper, we developed a low frequency augmented equivalence principle algorithm (AEPA) with the augmented electric field integral equation (AEFIE) for packaging and IC analysis. On the equivalence surfaces, not only the electric current and the magnetic current, but also the electric charge and the magnetic charge are used to capture the low frequency couplings. Inside each AEPA box, AEFIE is applied to maintain the low frequency accuracy. As a result, we are able to solve low frequency domain decomposition problems and apply it to IC packaging analysis.published_or_final_versionThe 2010 IEEE Electrical Design of Advanced Packaging & Systems Symposium (EDAPS), Singapore, 7-9 December 2010. In Proceedings of EDAPS, 2010, p. 1-
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Polyisoprene Captured Sulfur Nanocomposite Materials for High-Areal-Capacity Lithium Sulfur Battery
A polyisoprene-sulfur (PIPS) copolymer and nano sulfur composite material (90 wt % sulfur) is synthesized through inverse vulcanization of PIP polymer with micrometer-sized sulfur particles for high-areal-capacity lithium sulfur batteries. The polycrystalline structure and nanodomain nature of the copolymer are revealed through high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). PIP polymer is also used as binders for the electrode to further capture the dissovlved polysulfides. A high areal capacity of ca. 7.0 mAh/cm2 and stable cycling are achieved based on the PIPS nanosulfur composite with a PIP binder, crucial to commercialization of lithium sulfur batteries. The chemical confinement both at material and electrode level alleviates the diffusion of polysulfides and the shuttle effect. The sulfur electrodes, both fresh and cycled, are analyzed through scanning electron microscopy (SEM). This approach enables scalable material production and high sulfur utilization at the cell level
Anomalous metallic state of CuTiSe: an optical spectroscopy study
We report an optical spectroscopy study on the newly discovered
superconductor CuTiSe. Consistent with the development from a
semimetal or semiconductor with a very small indirect energy gap upon doping
TiSe, it is found that the compound has a low carrier density. Most
remarkably, the study reveals a substantial shift of the "screened" plasma edge
in reflectance towards high energy with decreasing temperature. This
phenomenon, rarely seen in metals, indicates either a sizeable increase of the
conducting carrier concentration or/and a decrease of the effective mass of
carriers with reducing temperature. We attribute the shift primarily to the
later effect.Comment: 4 figures, 4+ page
Resonant Neutrino Spin-Flavor Precession and Supernova Nucleosynthesis and Dynamics
We discuss the effects of resonant spin-flavor precession (RSFP) of Majorana
neutrinos on heavy element nucleosynthesis in neutrino-heated supernova ejecta
and the dynamics of supernovae. In assessing the effects of RSFP, we explicitly
include matter-enhanced (MSW) resonant neutrino flavor conversion effects where
appropriate. We point out that for plausible ranges of neutrino magnetic
moments and proto-neutron star magnetic fields, spin-flavor conversion of
(or ) with a cosmologically significant mass (1--100 eV)
into a light could lead to an enhanced neutron excess in
neutrino-heated supernova ejecta. This could be beneficial for models of
-process nucleosynthesis associated with late-time neutrino-heated ejecta
from supernovae. Similar spin-flavor conversion of neutrinos at earlier epochs
could lead to an increased shock reheating rate and, concomitantly, a larger
supernova explosion energy. We show, however, that such increased neutrino
heating likely will be accompanied by an enhanced neutron excess which could
exacerbate the problem of the overproduction of the neutron number
nuclei in the supernova ejecta from this stage. In all of these scenarios, the
average energy will be increased over those predicted by supernova
models with no neutrino mixings. This may allow the SN1987a data to constrain
RSFP-based schemes.Comment: Latex file, 33 pages including 11 figures, uses psfig.sty, minor
changes about wording and clarification of the text, to be published in Phys.
Rev.
Numerical simulation of floating bodies in extreme free surface waves
In this paper, we use the in-house Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) flow code AMAZON-SC as a numerical wave tank (NWT) to study wave loading on a wave energy converter (WEC) device in heave motion. This is a surface-capturing method for two fluid flows that treats the free surface as contact surface in the density field that is captured automatically without special provision. A time-accurate artificial compressibility method and high resolution Godunov-type scheme are employed in both fluid regions (air/water). The Cartesian cut cell method can provide a boundary-fitted mesh for a complex geometry with no requirement to re-mesh globally or even locally for moving geometry, requiring only changes to cut cell data at the body contour. Extreme wave boundary conditions are prescribed in an empty NWT and compared with physical experiments prior to calculations of extreme waves acting on a floating Bobber-type device. The validation work also includes the wave force on a fixed cylinder compared with theoretical and experimental data under regular waves. Results include free surface elevations, vertical displacement of the float, induced vertical velocity and heave force for a typical Bobber geometry with a hemispherical base under extreme wave conditions
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