156 research outputs found
Nurses' intentions to wear gloves during venipuncture procedures: A behavioral psychology perspective
Registered nurses working at a teaching hospital in Kuwait were surveyed to assess the psychosocial variables associated with their intention to comply with glove-wearing recommendations. Perceived consequences and normative beliefs, as well as sex and years of nursing experience, significantly influenced their behavioral intentions, suggesting that improvements in intention to comply are more likely to come from practical demonstrations that show nurses the potential outcomes of both using and not using gloves
Using the fractional interaction law to model the impact dynamics in arbitrary form of multiparticle collisions
Using the molecular dynamics method, we examine a discrete deterministic
model for the motion of spherical particles in three-dimensional space. The
model takes into account multiparticle collisions in arbitrary forms. Using
fractional calculus we proposed an expression for the repulsive force, which is
the so called fractional interaction law. We then illustrate and discuss how to
control (correlate) the energy dissipation and the collisional time for an
individual article within multiparticle collisions. In the multiparticle
collisions we included the friction mechanism needed for the transition from
coupled torsion-sliding friction through rolling friction to static friction.
Analysing simple simulations we found that in the strong repulsive state binary
collisions dominate. However, within multiparticle collisions weak repulsion is
observed to be much stronger. The presented numerical results can be used to
realistically model the impact dynamics of an individual particle in a group of
colliding particles.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 1 table; In review process of Physical Review
Random Sequential Adsorption: From Continuum to Lattice and Pre-Patterned Substrates
The random sequential adsorption (RSA) model has served as a paradigm for
diverse phenomena in physical chemistry, as well as in other areas such as
biology, ecology, and sociology. In the present work, we survey aspects of the
RSA model with emphasis on the approach to and properties of jammed states
obtained for large times in continuum deposition versus that on lattice
substrates, and on pre-patterned surfaces. The latter model has been of recent
interest in the context of efforts to use pre-patterning as a tool to improve
selfassembly in micro- and nanoscale surface structure engineering
Performance of a MIS Type Pd-Cr/AlN/Si Hydrogen Sensor
An MIS Hydrogen sensor with a Pd0.96Cr0.04/AlN/Si structure was fabricated, exhibiting the dynamic range considerably wider than that of analogous devices with pure Pd gates. A useful response could be obtained for Hydrogen concentrations as large as 50,000 ppm. Although the response amplitude was much reduced at the lower concentrations, satisfactory signal to noise down to 50 ppm could be obtained. The saturating magnitude of the electrical response is in the range of 0.1 to 0.5 V, which is the same as that for the pure Pd gated devices, inspite of the 3 orders of magnitude difference in the saturation hydrogen concentration. This result will be discussed in terms of the response mechanism of these devices
Antideuteron yield at the AGS and coalescence implications
We present Experiment 864's measurement of invariant antideuteron yields in
11.5A GeV/c Au + Pt collisions. The analysis includes 250 million triggers
representing 14 billion 10% central interactions sampled for events with high
mass candidates. We find (1/2 pi pt) d^(2)N/dydpt = 3.5 +/- 1.5 (stat.)
+0.9,-0.5 (sys.) x 10^(-8) GeV^(-2)c^(2) for 1.8=0.35 GeV/c
(y(cm)=1.6) and 3.7 +/- 2.7 (stat.) +1.4,-1.5 (sys.) x 10^(-8) GeV^(-2)c^(2)
for 1.4=0.26 GeV/c, and a coalescence parameter B2-bar of 4.1 +/-
2.9 (stat.) +2.3,-2.4 (sys.) x 10^(-3) GeV^(2)c^(-3). Implications for the
coalescence model and antimatter annihilation are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Latex, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Mass dependence of light nucleus production in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions
Light nuclei can be produced in the central reaction zone via coalescence in
relativistic heavy ion collisions. E864 at BNL has measured the production of
ten light nuclei with nuclear number of A=1 to A=7 at rapidity and
. Data were taken with a Au beam of momentum of 11.5 A
on a Pb or Pt target with different experimental settings. The
invariant yields show a striking exponential dependence on nuclear number with
a penalty factor of about 50 per additional nucleon. Detailed analysis reveals
that the production may depend on the spin factor of the nucleus and the
nuclear binding energy as well.Comment: (6 pages, 3 figures), some changes on text, references and figures'
lettering. To be published in PRL (13Dec1999
Search for Exotic Strange Quark Matter in High Energy Nuclear Reactions
We report on a search for metastable positively and negatively charged states
of strange quark matter in Au+Pb reactions at 11.6 A GeV/c in experiment E864.
We have sampled approximately six billion 10% most central Au+Pb interactions
and have observed no strangelet states (baryon number A < 100 droplets of
strange quark matter). We thus set upper limits on the production of these
exotic states at the level of 1-6 x 10^{-8} per central collision. These limits
are the best and most model independent for this colliding system. We discuss
the implications of our results on strangelet production mechanisms, and also
on the stability question of strange quark matter.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Nuclear Physics A (Carl Dover
memorial edition
Measurements of Light Nuclei Production in 11.5 A GeV/c Au+Pb Heavy-Ion Collisions
We report on measurements by the E864 experiment at the BNL-AGS of the yields
of light nuclei in collisions of Au(197) with beam momentum of 11.5 A GeV/c on
targets of Pb(208) and Pt(197). The yields are reported for nuclei with baryon
number A=1 up to A=7, and typically cover a rapidity range from y(cm) to
y(cm)+1 and a transverse momentum range of approximately 0.1 < p(T)/A < 0.5
GeV/c. We calculate coalescence scale factors B(A) from which we extract model
dependent source dimensions and collective flow velocities. We also examine the
dependences of the yields on baryon number, spin, and isospin of the produced
nuclei.Comment: 21 figures-to be published in Phys. Rev.
Antiproton Production in 11.5 A GeV/c Au+Pb Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
We present the first results from the E864 collaboration on the production of
antiprotons in 10% central 11.5 A GeV/c Au+Pb nucleus collisions at the
Brookhaven AGS. We report invariant multiplicities for antiproton production in
the kinematic region 1.4<y<2.2 and 50<p_T<300 MeV/c, and compare our data with
a first collision scaling model and previously published results from the E878
collaboration. The differences between the E864 and E878 antiproton
measurements and the implications for antihyperon production are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Production of and in Central 11.5 GeV/c Au + Pt Heavy Ion Collisions
We present measurements from BNL AGS Experiment E864 of the
invariant multiplicity and of the 90% Confidence Level upper limit on the
yield in central 11.5 A GeV/c Au + Pt collisions. The
measurements span a rapidity range from center of mass, , to +1
and a transverse momentum range of GeV/c. We compare these
results with E864 measurements of stable light nuclei and particle unstable
nuclei yields of the same baryon number. The implications of these results for
the coalescence of strange clusters are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
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