38,912 research outputs found

    A new view of the Lindemann criterion

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    The Lindemann criterion is reformulated in terms of the average shear modulus GcG_c of the melting crystal, indicating a critical melting shear strain which is necessary to form the many different inherent states of the liquid. In glass formers with covalent bonds, one has to distinguish between soft and hard degrees of freedom to reach agreement. The temperature dependence of the picosecond mean square displacements of liquid and crystal shows that there are two separate contributions to the divergence of the viscosity with decreasing temperature: the anharmonic increase of the shear modulus and a diverging correlation length .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Indirect ELISA for Detection of Fascioliasis IgG Antibodies in Human Sera

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    Currently, coprological examination based on egg detection in stool samples is used as the most ideal standard for the diagnosis of human fascioliasis. However, this method has been proven not to be adequate when being employed in the acute phase of the disease, and presents a poor sensitivity during the chronic phase. Serodiagnosis has become an excellent alternative to coprological examination in efforts to combat the effects of fascioliasis on human and animal health. Human fascioliasis is usually recognized as an infection of the bile ducts and liver caused by Fasciola hepatica, known to affect over 2 million humans. In this research, Indirect Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) was performed to discern between positive and negative IgG antibody titers in sera in collaboration with a lab in Peru. A batch of approximately 325 samples of human sera of endemic Fasciola hepatica from regions in Peru was gathered and sent to the laboratory in order to be examined with the method explained in the following paragraph. In the search for a test for the diagnosis of fascioliasis on humans, indirect ELISA started to be employed in order to determine positive and negative values. In the indirect ELISA test, the sample antibody is sandwiched between the antigen coated on the plate and an enzyme-labeled, anti-species globulin conjugate. The addition of an enzyme substrate-chromogen reagent causes color to develop. This color is directly proportional to the amount of bound sample antibody. The more antibody present in the sample, the stronger the color development in the test wells. Positive samples presented a very strong optical density value, while negative samples were clear or low optical density value, measured with the aid of a spectrophotometer

    Penumbral thermal structure below the visible surface

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    ContextContext. The thermal structure of the penumbra below its visible surface (i.e., τ5≥1\tau_5 \ge 1) has important implications for our present understanding of sunspots and their penumbrae: their brightness and energy transport, mode conversion of magneto-acoustic waves, sunspot seismology, and so forth. AimsAims. We aim at determining the thermal stratification in the layers immediately beneath the visible surface of the penumbra: τ5∈[1,3]\tau_5 \in [1,3] (≈70−80\approx 70-80 km below the visible continuum-forming layer). MethodsMethods. We analyzed spectropolarimetric data (i.e., Stokes profiles) in three Fe \textsc{i} lines located at 1565 nm observed with the GRIS instrument attached to the 1.5-meter solar telescope GREGOR. The data are corrected for the smearing effects of wide-angle scattered light and then subjected to an inversion code for the radiative transfer equation in order to retrieve, among others, the temperature as a function of optical depth T(τ5)T(\tau_5). ResultsResults. We find that the temperature gradient below the visible surface of the penumbra is smaller than in the quiet Sun. This implies that in the region τ5≥1\tau_5 \ge 1 the penumbral temperature diverges from that of the quiet Sun. The same result is obtained when focusing only on the thermal structure below the surface of bright penumbral filaments. We interpret these results as evidence of a thick penumbra, whereby the magnetopause is not located near its visible surface. In addition, we find that the temperature gradient in bright penumbral filaments is lower than in granules. This can be explained in terms of the limited expansion of a hot upflow inside a penumbral filament relative to a granular upflow, as magnetic pressure and tension forces from the surrounding penumbral magnetic field hinder an expansion like this.Comment: 5 pages; 2 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter

    Inverse Symmetry Breaking in Multi-Scalar Field Theories

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    We review how the phenomena of inverse symmetry breaking (and symmetry nonrestoration) may arise in the context of relativistic as well as nonrelativistic multi-scalar field theories. We discuss how the consideration of thermal effects on the couplings produce different transition patterns for both theories. For the relativistic case, these effects allow the appearance of inverse symmetry breaking (and symmetry nonrestoration) at arbitrarily large temperatures. On the other hand, the same phenomena are suppressed in the nonrelativistic case, which is relevant for condensed matter physics. In this case, symmetry nonrestoration does not happen while inverse symmetry is allowed only to be followed by symmetry restoration characterizing a reentrant phase. The aim of this paper is to give more insight concerning the, qualitatively correct, results obtained by using one loop perturbation theory in the evaluation of thermal masses and couplings.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, talk given at the workshop on Quantum Fields Under the Influence of External Conditions, QFEXT05, Barcelona, sep-200
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