4,526 research outputs found
Constraining Light Colored Particles with Event Shapes
Using recently developed techniques for computing event shapes with
Soft-Collinear Effective Theory, LEP event shape data is used to derive strong
model-independent bounds on new colored particles. In the effective field
theory computation, colored particles contribute in loops not only to the
running of alpha_s but also to the running of hard, jet and soft functions.
Moreover, the differential distribution in the effective theory explicitly
probes many energy scales, so event shapes have strong sensitivity to new
particle thresholds. Using thrust data from ALEPH and OPAL, colored adjoint
fermions (such as a gluino) below 51.0 GeV are ruled out to 95% confidence
level. This is nearly an order-of-magnitude improvement over the previous
model-independent bound of 6.3 GeV.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Acute hemodynamic effects of norepinephrine inhibition in patients with severe chronic congestive heart failure
AbstractThe pathophysiologic role of high levels of circulating catecholamines in patients with congestive heart failure remains unclear. To assess the hemodynamic contribution of circulating catecholamines, metyrosine (alpha-methylp-tyrosine), an inhibitor of catecholamine synthesis, was administered to nine patients with acutely decompensated chronic congestive heart failure. Baseline left ventricular ejection fraction averaged 23.3 ± 9.9%, whereas cardiac output averaged 3.69 ± 1.03 liters/min, with a pulmonary wedge pressure of 27.4 ± 8.5 mm Hg.After 48 h of metyrosine administration, plasma norepinephrine concentration decreased from 919.4 ± 810.6 to 335.4 ± 143.1 pg/ml (p < 0.05). Plasma epinephrine concentration averaged 176.4 ± 166.0 pg/ml at baseline, and was unchanged during metyrosine administration. Despite the significant decrease in circulating norepinephrine, no significant hemodynamic changes were observed during metyrosine administration.These results suggest that high levels of circulating norepinephrine may be more a marker of severe congestive heart failure than an important contributor to the underlying pathophysiology at this advanced stage of the disease process
Superhydrophobic Thin Films Fabricated by Reactive Layer-by-Layer Assembly of Azlactone-Functionalized Polymers
We report an approach to the fabrication of superhydrophobic thin films that is based on the reactive layer-by-layer assembly of azlactone-containing polymer multilayers. We demonstrate that films fabricated from alternating layers of the azlactone functionalized polymer poly(2-vinyl- 4,4-dimethylazlactone) (PVDMA) and poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) exhibit micro- and nanoscale surface features that result in water contact angles in excess of 150°. Our results reveal that the formation of these surface features is (i) dependent upon film thickness (i.e., the number of layers of PEI and PVDMA deposited) and (ii) that it is influenced strongly by the presence (or absence) of cyclic azlactone-functionalized oligomers that can form upon storage of the 2-vinyl-4,4-dimethylazlactone (VDMA) used to synthesize PVDMA. For example, films fabricated using polymers synthesized in the presence of these oligomers exhibited rough, textured surfaces and superhydrophobic behavior (i.e., advancing contact angles in excess of 150°). In contrast, films fabricated from PVDMA polymerized in the absence of this oligomer (e.g., using freshly distilled monomer) were smooth and only moderately hydrophobic (i.e., advancing contact angles of ̃75°). The addition of authentic, independently synthesized oligomer to samples of distilled VDMA at specified and controlled concentrations permitted reproducible fabrication of superhydrophobic thin films on the surfaces of a variety of different substrates. The surfaces of these films were demonstrated to be superhydrophobic immediately after fabrication, but they became hydrophilic after exposure to water for 6 days. Additional experiments demonstrated that it was possible to stabilize and prolong the superhydrophobic properties of these films (e.g., advancing contact angles in excess of 150° even after complete submersion in water for at least 6 weeks) by exploiting the reactivity of residual azlactones to functionalize the surfaces of the films using hydrophobic amines (e.g., aliphatic or semifluorinated aliphatic amines). Our results demonstrate a straightforward and substrate-independent approach to the design of superhydrophobic and reactive polymer-based coatings of potential use in a broad range of fundamental and applied contexts
A survey of X-ray emission from 100 kpc radio jets
We have completed a Chandra snapshot survey of 54 radio jets that are
extended on arcsec scales. These are associated with flat spectrum radio
quasars spanning a redshift range z=0.3 to 2.1. X-ray emission is detected from
the jet of approximately 60% of the sample objects. We assume minimum energy
and apply conditions consistent with the original Felten-Morrison calculations
in order to estimate the Lorentz factors and the apparent Doppler factors. This
allows estimates of the enthalpy fluxes, which turn out to be comparable to the
radiative luminosities.Comment: Conference Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 313, Extragalactic jets from
every angle, pp. 219-224, 4 figure
Detection of skewed X-chromosome inactivation in Fragile X syndrome and X chromosome aneuploidy using quantitative melt analysis.
Methylation of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) exon 1/intron 1 boundary positioned fragile X related epigenetic element 2 (FREE2), reveals skewed X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) in fragile X syndrome full mutation (FM: CGGÂ >Â 200) females. XCI skewing has been also linked to abnormal X-linked gene expression with the broader clinical impact for sex chromosome aneuploidies (SCAs). In this study, 10 FREE2 CpG sites were targeted using methylation specific quantitative melt analysis (MS-QMA), including 3 sites that could not be analysed with previously used EpiTYPER system. The method was applied for detection of skewed XCI in FM females and in different types of SCA. We tested venous blood and saliva DNA collected from 107 controls (CGGÂ <Â 40), and 148 FM and 90 SCA individuals. MS-QMA identified: (i) most SCAs if combined with a Y chromosome test; (ii) locus-specific XCI skewing towards the hypomethylated state in FM females; and (iii) skewed XCI towards the hypermethylated state in SCA with 3 or more X chromosomes, and in 5% of the 47,XXY individuals. MS-QMA output also showed significant correlation with the EpiTYPER reference method in FM males and females (PÂ <Â 0.0001) and SCAs (PÂ <Â 0.05). In conclusion, we demonstrate use of MS-QMA to quantify skewed XCI in two applications with diagnostic utility
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Usual and Unusual Care: Existing Practice Control Groups in Randomized Controlled Trials of Behavioral Interventions
Objective: To evaluate the use of existing practice control groups in randomized controlled trials of behavioral interventions and the role of extrinsic health care services in the design and conduct of behavioral trials.
Method: Selective qualitative review.
Results: Extrinsic health care services, also known as nonstudy care, have important but under-recognized effects on the design and conduct of behavioral trials. Usual care, treatment-as-usual, standard of care, and other existing practice control groups pose a variety of methodological and ethical challenges, but they play a vital role in behavioral intervention research.
Conclusions: This review highlights the need for a scientific consensus statement on control groups in behavioral trials
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Losing life and livelihood: A systematic review and meta-analysis of unemployment and all-cause mortality
Unemployment rates in the United States remain near a 25-year high and global unemployment is rising. Previous studies have shown that unemployed persons have an increased risk of death, but the magnitude of the risk and moderating factors have not been explored. The study is a random effects meta-analysis and meta-regression designed to assess the association between unemployment and all-cause mortality among working-age persons. We extracted 235 mortality risk estimates from 42 studies, providing data on more than 20 million persons. The mean hazard ratio (HR) for mortality was 1.63 among HRs adjusted for age and additional covariates. The mean effect was higher for men than for women. Unemployment was associated with an increased mortality risk for those in their early and middle careers, but less for those in their late career. The risk of death was highest during the first 10 years of follow-up, but decreased subsequently. The mean HR was 24% lower among the subset of studies controlling for health-related behaviors. Public health initiatives could target unemployed persons for more aggressive cardiovascular screening and interventions aimed at reducing risk-taking behaviors
Top-tagging: A Method for Identifying Boosted Hadronic Tops
A method is introduced for distinguishing top jets (boosted, hadronically
decaying top quarks) from light quark and gluon jets using jet substructure.
The procedure involves parsing the jet cluster to resolve its subjets, and then
imposing kinematic constraints. With this method, light quark or gluon jets
with pT ~ 1 TeV can be rejected with an efficiency of around 99% while
retaining up to 40% of top jets. This reduces the dijet background to heavy
t-tbar resonances by a factor of ~10,000, thereby allowing resonance searches
in t-tbar to be extended into the all-hadronic channel. In addition,
top-tagging can be used in t-tbar events when one of the tops decays
semi-leptonically, in events with missing energy, and in studies of b-tagging
efficiency at high pT.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; v2: separate quark and gluon efficiencies
included, figure on helicity angle added, and physics discussion extende
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