1,978 research outputs found
Skin toxicity after radiotherapy. About a case
A 60-year-old woman was admitted to the Department complaining of a slow growing mass in the right knee. Physical examination demonstrated a mass on the postero-lateral aspect of the right knee, which was not tender or mobile, however was rubbery and hard in consistency. Full flexion and extension was observed without any restriction of joint movement
A Solution of the Maxwell-Dirac Equations in 3+1 Dimensions
We investigate a class of localized, stationary, particular numerical
solutions to the Maxwell-Dirac system of classical nonlinear field equations.
The solutions are discrete energy eigenstates bound predominantly by the
self-produced electric field.Comment: 12 pages, revtex, 2 figure
Unification of gravity, gauge fields, and Higgs bosons
We consider a diffeomorphism invariant theory of a gauge field valued in a
Lie algebra that breaks spontaneously to the direct sum of the spacetime
Lorentz algebra, a Yang-Mills algebra, and their complement. Beginning with a
fully gauge invariant action -- an extension of the Plebanski action for
general relativity -- we recover the action for gravity, Yang-Mills, and Higgs
fields. The low-energy coupling constants, obtained after symmetry breaking,
are all functions of the single parameter present in the initial action and the
vacuum expectation value of the Higgs.Comment: 12 pages, no figures. v2 minor correction
Classical Electron Model with Negative Energy Density in Einstein-Cartan Theory of Gravitation
Experimental result regarding the maximum limit of the radius of the electron
\sim 10^{-16} cm and a few of the theoretical works suggest that the
gravitational mass which is a priori a positive quantity in Newtonian mechanics
may become negative in general theory of relativity. It is argued that such a
negative gravitational mass and hence negative energy density also can be
obtained with a better physical interpretation in the framework of
Einstein-Cartan theory.Comment: 12 Latex pages, added refs and conclusion
The TNG Near Infrared Camera Spectrometer
NICS (acronym for Near Infrared Camera Spectrometer) is the near-infrared
cooled camera-spectrometer that has been developed by the Arcetri Infrared
Group at the Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory, in collaboration with the
CAISMI-CNR for the TNG (the Italian National Telescope Galileo at La Palma,
Canary Islands, Spain).
As NICS is in its scientific commissioning phase, we report its observing
capabilities in the near-infrared bands at the TNG, along with the measured
performance and the limiting magnitudes. We also describe some technical
details of the project, such as cryogenics, mechanics, and the system which
executes data acquisition and control, along with the related software.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, compiled with A&A macros. A&A in pres
Facial emotion recognition in refugee children with a history of war trauma.
Over 36 million children are currently displaced due to war, yet we know little about how these experiences of war and displacement affect their socioemotional development-notably how they perceive facial expressions. Across three different experiments, we investigated the effects of war trauma exposure on facial emotion recognition in Syrian refugee (n = 130, Mage = 9.3 years, 63 female) and Jordanian nonrefugee children (n = 148, Mage = 9.4 years, 66 female) living in Jordan (data collected 2019-2020). Children in the two groups differed in trauma exposure, but not on any of our measures of mental health. In Experiment 1, we measured children's biases to perceive an emotion using morphed facial expressions and found no evidence that biases differed between refugees and nonrefugees. In Experiment 2, we adapted a novel perceptual scaling task that bypasses semantic knowledge, and again found no differences between the two group's discrimination of facial expressions. Finally, in Experiment 3, we recorded children's eye movements as they identified Middle Eastern actors' facial expressions, and again found no differences between the groups in either their identification accuracies or scanning strategies. Taken together, our results suggest that exposure to war-related trauma and displacement during early development, when reported by the caregiver but not always recollected by the child, does not appear to alter emotion recognition of facial expressions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
Northern JHK Standard Stars for Array Detectors
We report J, H and K photometry of 86 stars in 40 fields in the northern
hemisphere. The fields are smaller than or comparable to a 4x4 arcmin
field-of-view, and are roughly uniformly distributed over the sky, making them
suitable for a homogeneous broadband calibration network for near-infrared
panoramic detectors. K magnitudes range from 8.5 to 14, and J-K colors from
-0.1 to 1.2. The photometry is derived from a total of 3899 reduced images;
each star has been measured, on average, 26.0 times per filter on 5.5 nights.
Typical errors on the photometry are about 0.012.Comment: 10 pages including 3 figures, one separate figure on four pages. The
finding chart of the AS-30 field and a few coordinates have been corrected.
GIF finding charts can also be found at
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/~hunt/std.htm
Gravity from a fermionic condensate of a gauge theory
The most prominent realization of gravity as a gauge theory similar to the
gauge theories of the standard model comes from enlarging the gauge group from
the Lorentz group to the de Sitter group. To regain ordinary Einstein-Cartan
gravity the symmetry must be broken, which can be accomplished by known
quasi-dynamic mechanisms. Motivated by symmetry breaking models in particle
physics and condensed matter systems, we propose that the symmetry can
naturally be broken by a homogenous and isotropic fermionic condensate of
ordinary spinors. We demonstrate that the condensate is compatible with the
Einstein-Cartan equations and can be imposed in a fully de Sitter invariant
manner. This lends support, and provides a physically realistic mechanism for
understanding gravity as a gauge theory with a spontaneously broken local de
Sitter symmetry.Comment: 16 page
Perceptual reorganization from prior knowledge emerges late in childhood
Human vision relies heavily on prior knowledge. Here, we show for the first time that prior-knowledge-induced reshaping of visual inputs emerges gradually in late childhood. To isolate the effects of prior knowledge on perception, we presented 4- to 12-year-olds and adults with two-tone images – hard-to-recognize degraded photos. In adults, seeing the original photo triggers perceptual reorganization, causing mandatory recognition of the two-tone version. This involves top-down signaling from higher-order brain areas to early visual cortex. We show that children younger than 7–9 years do not experience this knowledge-guided shift, despite viewing the original photo immediately before each two-tone. To assess computations underlying this development, we compared human performance to three neural networks with varying architectures. The best-performing model behaved much like 4- to 5-year-olds, displaying feature-based rather than holistic processing strategies. The reconciliation of prior knowledge with sensory input undergoes a striking age-related shift, which may underpin the development of many perceptual abilities
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