26 research outputs found

    High Order Overtone CO Laser

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    Excitation of nitrogen molecular ions in a strong laser field by electron recollisions

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    A semiclassical model of electron rescattering in a strong laser field is applied to the evaluation of the probability of nitrogen molecular ion excitation. Depending on the ionization phase, a group of electrons oscillate around the parent ion for several laser periods and rescatter at large angles. The effect of ion attraction enhances significantly the probability of ion excitation by electron–ion collisions. The total probability of ion transfer from ground to excited ionic molecular state and the corresponding dipolar moment are evaluated for typical laser filament parameters.Initiative d'excellence de l'Université de Bordeau

    Trends in human birth weight across two successive generations

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    OBJECTIVE: To determine the correlation between parental and offspring birthweight (BW) in India. METHODS: The study involved two birth cohorts of successive generations. The parental cohort comprised of 472 fathers and 422 mothers from an earlier study. Details of their anthropometry at birth and in adulthood were available. 1525 children born to them comprised the offspring cohort. BW was obtained from hospital records for the offspring cohort. Odds ratios and regression coefficients were calculated to estimate the risks of a low birth weight (LBW) parent producing a LBW baby and quantitate the effects after adjusting for confounders. RESULTS: A LBW mother had a 2.8 times risk (95%CI 1.2-6.4) of delivering a LBW baby (p=0.02) and a LBW father was twice as likely to produce a LBW baby (OR 2.2; 95%CI 1.0 - 4.8; p=0.05). Every 100g increase in maternal BW was associated with an increase in offspring BW of 14 g; the equivalent figure for paternal BW was 18.1g (p< 0.001 for both). Between the generations, the incidence of LBW decreased from 19.7% to 17.2% (p=0.1). Mean BW increased in males (2846 g vs 2861 g; p=0.59) but not in females (2790 g vs 2743 g; p=0.08). CONCLUSION: Both maternal and paternal BW are strong determinants of offspring BW. The effect of mothers' BW on offspring BW is weaker than that seen in developed nations. Stronger intrauterine constraint exhibited by Indian women secondary to a higher prevalence of growth restriction in utero may be responsible. Paternal effects may be governed by paternal genes inherited by the offspring
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