816 research outputs found
On the Quantum Kinetic Equation in Weak Turbulence
The quantum kinetic equation used in the study of weak turbulence is
reconsidered in the context of a theory with a generic quartic interaction. The
expectation value of the time derivative of the mode number operators is
computed in a perturbation expansion which places the large diagonal component
of the quartic term in the unperturbed Hamiltonian. Although one is not
perturbing around a free field theory, the calculation is easily tractable
owing to the fact that the unperturbed Hamiltonian can be written solely in
terms of the mode number operators.Comment: 12 pages, LATEX, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Metallic Triple Beam Resonator with Thick-film Printed Drive and Pickup
A triple beam resonator fabricated in 430S17 stainless steel with thick-film piezoelectric elements to drive and detect the vibrations is presented. The resonator substrate was fabricated by a simultaneous, double-sided photochemical etching technique and the thick-film piezoelectric elements were deposited by a standard screen-printing process. The combination of these two batch-fabrication processes provides the opportunity for mass production of the device at low cost. The resonator, a dynamically balanced triple beam tuning fork (TBTF) structure 23.5 mm long and 6.5 mm wide, has a favoured mode at 4.96 kHz with a Q-factor of 3630 operating in air
A simple model for electron plasma heating in supernova remnants
Context: Multiwavelength observations of supernova remnants can be explained
within the framework of diffusive shock acceleration theory, which allows
effective conversion of the explosion energy into cosmic rays. Although the
models of nonlinear shocks describe reasonably well the nonthermal component of
emission, certain issues, including the heating of the thermal electron plasma
and the related X-ray emission, still remain open.
Methods: Numerical solution of the equations of the Chevalier model for
supernova remnant evolution, coupled with Coulomb scattering heating of the
electrons.
Results: The electron temperature and the X-ray thermal Bremsstrahlung
emission from supernova remnants have been calculated as functions of the
relevant parameters. Since only the Coulomb mechanism was considered for
electron heating, the values obtained for the electron temperatures should be
treated as lower limits. Results from this work can be useful to constrain
model parameters for observed SNRs.Comment: Accepted to A&A as a research not
Palytoxin acts on Na(+),K (+)-ATPase but not nongastric H(+),K (+)-ATPase
Palytoxin (PTX) opens a pathway for ions to pass through Na,K-ATPase. We investigate here whether PTX also acts on nongastric H,K-ATPases. The following combinations of cRNA were expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes: Bufo marinus bladder H,K-ATPase alpha(2)- and Na,K-ATPase beta(2)-subunits; Bufo Na,K-ATPase alpha(1)- and Na,K-ATPase beta(2)-subunits; and Bufo Na,K-ATPase beta(2)-subunit alone. The response to PTX was measured after blocking endogenous Xenopus Na,K-ATPase with 10 microM ouabain. Functional expression was confirmed by measuring (86)Rb uptake. PTX (5 nM: ) produced a large increase of membrane conductance in oocytes expressing Bufo Na,K-ATPase, but no significant increase occurred in oocytes expressing Bufo H,K-ATPase or in those injected with Bufo beta(2)-subunit alone. Expression of the following combinations of cDNA was investigated in HeLa cells: rat colonic H,K-ATPase alpha(1)-subunit and Na,K-ATPase beta(1)-subunit; rat Na,K-ATPase alpha(2)-subunit and Na,K-ATPase beta(2)-subunit; and rat Na,K-ATPase beta(1)- or Na,K-ATPase beta(2)-subunit alone. Measurement of increases in (86)Rb uptake confirmed that both rat Na,K and H,K pumps were functional in HeLa cells expressing rat colonic HKalpha(1)/NKbeta(1) and NKalpha(2)/NKbeta(2). Whole-cell patch-clamp measurements in HeLa cells expressing rat colonic HKalpha(1)/NKbeta(1) exposed to 100 nM PTX showed no significant increase of membrane current, and there was no membrane conductance increase in HeLa cells transfected with rat NKbeta(1)- or rat NKbeta(2)-subunit alone. However, in HeLa cells expressing rat NKalpha(2)/NKbeta(2), outward current was observed after pump activation by 20 mM K(+) and a large membrane conductance increase occurred after 100 nM PTX. We conclude that nongastric H,K-ATPases are not sensitive to PTX when expressed in these cells, whereas PTX does act on Na,K-ATPase
On Dijkgraaf-Witten Type Invariants
We explicitly construct a series of lattice models based upon the gauge group
which have the property of subdivision invariance, when the coupling
parameter is quantized and the field configurations are restricted to satisfy a
type of mod- flatness condition. The simplest model of this type yields the
Dijkgraaf-Witten invariant of a -manifold and is based upon a single link,
or -simplex, field. Depending upon the manifold's dimension, other models
may have more than one species of field variable, and these may be based on
higher dimensional simplices.Comment: 18 page
Prognostic significance of new onset atrial fibrillation in acute coronary syndrome patients treated conservatively
Background: The purpose of this study was to assess the association between new onset of
atrial fibrillation (AF) and in-hospital management and mortality in acute coronary syndrome
patients admitted to hospitals without on-site invasive facilities.
Methods: We assessed data concerning in-hospital management and mortality of 24 patients
with, and 977 patients without, new onset of AF from the Krakow Registry of Acute Coronary
Syndromes database.
Results: Patients with new onset of AF were older and more likely to have diabetes, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiogenic shock and chest pain on admission, and a shorter
time from the onset of symptoms to admission. These patients more frequently received glycoprotein
IIb/IIIa inhibitors, thrombolytics, and were less likely to be treated with statins during
their hospital stay. Risk of AF occurrence was lower in patients treated with statins (1.9% vs
5.2%; p = 0.021). Among patients treated conservatively, in-hospital mortality was higher in
patients with new onset of AF (8.1% vs 33.3%; p = 0.001). Independent predictors of inhospital
death in this group of patients were: new onset of AF, age, cardiogenic shock, chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, history of renal insufficiency, and discharge diagnosis.
Conclusions: New onset of AF is associated with excessive in-hospital mortality in acute
coronary syndrome patients staying on conservative treatment in community hospitals without
on-site invasive facilities. (Cardiol J 2010; 17, 1: 57-64
Three Dimensional Structure and Energy Balance of a Coronal Mass Ejection
The Ultraviolet Coronagraph Spectrometer (UVCS) observed Doppler shifted
material of a partial Halo Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) on December 13 2001. The
observed ratio of [O V]/O V] is a reliable density diagnostic important for
assessing the state of the plasma. Earlier UVCS observations of CMEs found
evidence that the ejected plasma is heated long after the eruption. We have
investigated the heating rates, which represent a significant fraction of the
CME energy budget. The parameterized heating and radiative and adiabatic
cooling have been used to evaluate the temperature evolution of the CME
material with a time dependent ionization state model. The functional form of a
flux rope model for interplanetary magnetic clouds was also used to
parameterize the heating. We find that continuous heating is required to match
the UVCS observations. To match the O VI-bright knots, a higher heating rate is
required such that the heating energy is greater than the kinetic energy. The
temperatures for the knots bright in Ly and C III emission indicate
that smaller heating rates are required for those regions. In the context of
the flux rope model, about 75% of the magnetic energy must go into heat in
order to match the O VI observations. We derive tighter constraints on the
heating than earlier analyses, and we show that thermal conduction with the
Spitzer conductivity is not sufficient to account for the heating at large
heights.Comment: 40 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ For associated
mpeg file, please see https://www.cora.nwra.com/~jylee/mpg/f5.mp
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