8,810 research outputs found
Older Adults and Forgoing Cancer Screening
Although there is a growing recognition that older adults and those with extensive comorbid conditions undergo cancer screening too frequently, there is little information about patients’ perceptions regarding cessation of cancer screening. Information on older adults’ views of screening cessation would be helpful both for clinicians and for those designing interventions to reduce overscreening
High-order gauge-invariant perturbations of a spherical spacetime
We complete the formulation of a general framework for the analysis of
high-order nonspherical perturbations of a four-dimensional spherical spacetime
by including a gauge-invariant description of the perturbations. We present a
general algorithm to construct these invariants and provide explicit formulas
for the case of second-order metric perturbations. We show that the well-known
problem of lack of invariance for the first-order perturbations with l=0,1
propagates to increasing values of l for perturbations of higher order, owing
to mode coupling. We also discuss in which circumstances it is possible to
construct the invariants
Crystal growth furnace with trap doors
An improved furnace is provided for growing crystalline bodies from a melt. The improved furnace is characterized by a door assembly which is remotely controlled and is arranged so as to selectively shut off or permit communication between an access port in the furnace enclosure and a hot zone within that enclosure. The invention is especially adapted to facilitate use of crystal growing cartridges of the type disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,118,197
A Riemann-Hilbert Problem for an Energy Dependent Schr\"odinger Operator
\We consider an inverse scattering problem for Schr\"odinger operators with
energy dependent potentials. The inverse problem is formulated as a
Riemann-Hilbert problem on a Riemann surface. A vanishing lemma is proved for
two distinct symmetry classes. As an application we prove global existence
theorems for the two distinct systems of partial differential equations
for suitably restricted,
complementary classes of initial data
Sum Rules for the Dirac Spectrum of the Schwinger Model
The inverse eigenvalues of the Dirac operator in the Schwinger model satisfy
the same Leutwyler-Smilga sum rules as in the case of QCD with one flavor. In
this paper we give a microscopic derivation of these sum rules in the sector of
arbitrary topological charge. We show that the sum rules can be obtained from
the clustering property of the scalar correlation functions. This argument also
holds for other theories with a mass gap and broken chiral symmetry such as QCD
with one flavor. For QCD with several flavors a modified clustering property is
derived from the low energy chiral Lagrangian. We also obtain sum rules for a
fixed external gauge field and show their relation with the bosonized version
of the Schwinger model. In the sector of topological charge the sum rules
are consistent with a shift of the Dirac spectrum away from zero by
average level spacings. This shift is also required to obtain a nonzero chiral
condensate in the massless limit. Finally, we discuss the Dirac spectrum for a
closely related two-dimensional theory for which the gauge field action is
quadratic in the the gauge fields. This theory of so called random Dirac
fermions has been discussed extensively in the context of the quantum Hall
effect and d-wave super-conductors.Comment: 41 pages, Late
Practice pointer: Using the new UK-WHO growth charts
The new UK growth charts for children aged 0-4 years (designed using data from the new WHO standards) describe the optimal pattern of growth for all children, rather than the prevailing pattern in the UK (as with previous charts).
The new charts are suitable for all ethnic groups and set breast feeding as the norm.
UK children match the new charts well for length and height, but after age 6 months fewer children will be below the 2nd centile for weight or show weight faltering, and more will be above the 98th centile.
The new charts look different: they have a separate preterm section, no lines between 0 and 2 weeks, and the 50th percentile is no longer emphasised.
The charts give clear instructions on gestational correction, and there is a new chart for infants born before 32 weeks’ gestation.
The instructions advise on when and how to measure and when a measurement or growth pattern is outside the normal range.
The charts include a “look-up” tool for determining the body mass index centile from height and weight centiles without calculation and aid for predicting adult height.
The charts and supporting educational materials can be downloaded from www.growthcharts.rcpch.ac.u
Better Unitary Equipment Air-Handlers for Efficiency and Humidity Control
Regulatory requirements drive unitary equipment
design. For residential equipment, SEER reflects
performance at moderate temperatures, and is largely
independent of high temperature efficiency and high
latent heat removal capability. The test procedure
gives too little credit for advanced air handlers that
reduce air conditioning load and facilitate adaptive
humidity control through automatic fan speed
adjustment. DC permanent magnet variable speed
motors have much lower market share than less
efficient permanent split capacitor designs: changing
saves 15% - 25% at high fan speed, and at least 50%
at lower speeds (high latent cooling). Humidistats
allow dynamic humidity control by reducing air flow,
cooling the evaporator. Following market
transformation to increase market share, federal
equipment stanards should be augmented to include
specific air handler air flow efficiency levels, such as
0.2 watts/cfm at size-dependent static pressures. We
estimate that customer payback will be less than three
years in a mature market
GENETIC CONTROL OF THE IMMUNE RESPONSE TO STAPHYLOCOCCAL NUCLEASE : I. IR-NASE: CONTROL OF THE ANTIBODY RESPONSE TO NUCLEASE BY THEIR REGION OF THE MOUSEH-2 COMPLEX
A number of inbred and congenic resistant strains of mice were immunized with staphylococcal nuclease (Nase). Antibody responses were measured in the sera of the animals by a sensitive method involving inhibition of enzymatic hydrolysis of DNA, High responder strains included A/J, DBA/2, BALB/c, AKR/J, C57BR, and SJL/J. DBA/1 and C57BL/6 mice were low responders. The strain distribution of anti-Nase response potential was compatible with the relevant immune response gene(s) being linked to the murine major histocompatibility complex. Linkage of this response to H-2 was demonstrated by the findings that: (a) the congenic C3H/HeJ and C3H.SW mice were respectively high and low responders; (b) the congenic lines B10.A and B10.D2 were high responders, whereas the C57BL/10 strain was a poor responder; and (c) anti-Nase response potential of F2 progeny from DBA/1 x SJL/J matings correlated with their H-2 type. Three B10.A recombinant lines were used to map this Ir gene within H-2. B10.A(4R) was a high responder to Nase, whereas B10.A(2R) and B10.A(5R) were both low responders. We wish to propose the name Ir-Nase for the gene(s) controlling antibody responsiveness to this immunogen. Our data indicate that Ir-Nase is located within the same chromosomal segment of the H-2 complex as is Ir-IgG
Quantum gravitational optics: Effective Raychaudhuri equation
Vacuum polarization in QED in a background gravitational field induces
interactions which {\it effectively} modify the classical picture of light
rays, as the null geodesics of spacetime. These interactions violate the strong
equivalence principle and affect the propagation of light leading to
superluminal photon velocities. Taking into account the QED vacuum
polarization, we study the propagation of a bundle of rays in a background
gravitational field. To do so we consider the perturbative deformation of
Raychaudhuri equation through the influence of vacuum polarization on photon
propagation. We analyze the contribution of the above interactions to the
optical scalars namely, shear, vorticity and expansion using the Newman-Penrose
formalism.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, RevTex format, Replaced with the published
versio
Simultaneity as an Invariant Equivalence Relation
This paper deals with the concept of simultaneity in classical and
relativistic physics as construed in terms of group-invariant equivalence
relations. A full examination of Newton, Galilei and Poincar\'e invariant
equivalence relations in is presented, which provides alternative
proofs, additions and occasionally corrections of results in the literature,
including Malament's theorem and some of its variants. It is argued that the
interpretation of simultaneity as an invariant equivalence relation, although
interesting for its own sake, does not cut in the debate concerning the
conventionality of simultaneity in special relativity.Comment: Some corrections, mostly of misprints. Keywords: special relativity,
simultaneity, invariant equivalence relations, Malament's theore
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