7,302 research outputs found
Single-particle potential in a chiral approach to nuclear matter including short range NN-terms
We extend a recent chiral approach to nuclear matter of Lutz et al. [Phys.
Lett. B474 (2000) 7] by calculating the underlying (complex-valued)
single-particle potential U(p,k_f) + i W(p,k_f). The potential for a nucleon at
the bottom of the Fermi-sea, U(0,k_{f0})= - 20.0 MeV, comes out as much too
weakly attractive in this approach. Even more seriously, the total
single-particle energy does not rise monotonically with the nucleon momentum p,
implying a negative effective nucleon mass at the Fermi-surface. Also, the
imaginary single-particle potential, W(0,k_{f0}) = 51.1 MeV, is too large. More
realistic single-particle properties together with a good nuclear matter
equation of state can be obtained if the short range contributions of
non-pionic origin are treated in mean-field approximation (i.e. if they are not
further iterated with 1pi-exchange). We also consider the equation of state of
pure neutron matter and the asymmetry energy A(k_f) in that
approach. The downward bending of these quantities above nuclear matter
saturation density seems to be a generic feature of perturbative chiral
pion-nucleon dynamics.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Possible strong symmetric hydrogen bonding in disodium trihydrogen bis(2,2'-oxydiacetate) nitrate
In the title compound, 2Na+·C8H11O10-·NO3-, the NaI atom is heptacoordinate with an approximately pentagonal-bipyramidal geometry. A possible strong symmetric hydrogen bond, with the H atom located at an inversion centre and an OO distance of 2.450 (2) Å, is observed in the crystal structure
Self-Employment in Germany: The Trend Has Been Increasing for Some Time
Entrepreneurial self-employment in Germany has undergone a strong upturn in the last 20 years. The number of self-employed people rose by 40 percent between 1991 and 2009. The reasons for this development are the catch-up processes in eastern Germany, structural change towards the service sector, and a strong willingness among the highly skilled, the unmarried and among foreigners to enter self-employment. Furthermore, the percentage of women becoming involved in start-ups increased substantially during the monitoring period. The decision to take up self-employment generally pays off: after three years, 38 percent of all entrepreneurs still being active in the market had a higher income, while only 17 percent had a lower income than in their former paid employment position.Entrepreneurship, self-employment, start-ups
Effects of Selection for Halothane Resistance on Lipid Concentration and Composition in Drosophilia melanogaster
Drosophila melanogaster is increasingly used as a model system for anesthesia studies. Lipids may play a role in anesthetic resistance by sequestering the hydrophobic anesthetics from nervous tissue. Alternatively, changes in membrane lipid composition (phospholipids and/or cholesterols) may contribute to resistance through alteration of neurological membranes. This project studied the relationship of lipids to anesthetic resistance in a strain of Drosophilia melanogasier with a high level of halothane resistance produced by 13 generations of mass selection. The estimated dose of anesthetic needed to produce anesthesia in one-half of the flies tested (ED50( for this strain was 2.3 times that of the unselected control. Total lipids were extracted and the concentration of total lipids was determined. The average percent of total lipids +/- standard error found in D. melanogaster was 8.73% +/- 0.08 for the resistant strain and 7.57% +/- 0.03 for the control, a relative increase of 15.3%. After determining that the total lipid content was greater in the resistant population (p=0.0004), the fatty acids of the phospholipids were analyzed. The purpose of this study was to determine if alterations in fatty acids were associated with the increase in anesthetic resistance, as predicted by the fluidization hypothesis. Gas chromatography was used to analyze the percentage of saturated fatty acids in phospholipids. Both populations had the same mean normalized percent of saturated fatty acids. This result did not support the hypothesis that resistance was due to altered phospholipid fatty acids
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