10 research outputs found
Microscopic Study of Superdeformed Rotational Bands in 151Tb
Structure of eight superdeformed bands in the nucleus 151Tb is analyzed using
the results of the Hartree-Fock and Woods-Saxon cranking approaches. It is
demonstrated that far going similarities between the two approaches exist and
predictions related to the structure of rotational bands calculated within the
two models are nearly parallel. An interpretation scenario for the structure of
the superdeformed bands is presented and predictions related to the exit spins
are made. Small but systematic discrepancies between experiment and theory,
analyzed in terms of the dynamical moments, J(2), are shown to exist. The
pairing correlations taken into account by using the particle-number-projection
technique are shown to increase the disagreement. Sources of these systematic
discrepancies are discussed -- they are most likely related to the yet not
optimal parametrization of the nuclear interactions used.Comment: 32 RevTeX pages, 15 figures included, submitted to Physical Review
N-Acetylcysteine protects the peritoneum from the injury induced by hypertonic dialysis solution
Background: Oxidative stress has been implicated in the development of peritoneal damage. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) in a rat peritoneal infusion model. Methods: Eighteen male Wistar rats were divided in 3 groups: (i) control group; (ii) HDS group, receiving peritoneal dialysis solution (PDS); and (iii) HDS+NAC group, receiving PDS and oral NAC. Six weeks later they were evaluated for dialysate to plasma urea ratio (D/P), ratio of glucose concentration in peritoneal fluid (G1/G0), thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in plasma and urine and histology of peritoneal membrane. Results: The HDS+NAC group presented a lower increase in solute transport (D/P 0.51 +/- 0.1, and G1/GO 0.35 +/- 0.06) in comparison with the HDS group (D/P 0.67 +/- 0.1; p=0.03, and G1/G0 0.27 +/- 0.07; p=0.01). The HDS+NAC group showed lower thiobarbituric acid reactive substance concentrations compared with the HDS group. In the treated group, the peritoneal membrane presented lower thickness. Conclusions: Functional and histological peritoneal changes were significantly reduced by the treatment with NAC
Noise in multiterminal diffusive conductors : universality, nonlocality, and exchange effects
We study noise and transport in multiterminal diffusive conductors. Using a Boltzmann-Langevin equation approach we reduce the calculation of shot-noise correlators to the solution of diffusion equations. Within this approach we prove the universality of shot noise in multiterminal diffusive conductors of arbitrary shape and dimension for purely elastic scattering as well as for hot electrons. We show that shot noise in multiterminal conductors is a nonlocal quantity and that exchange effects can occur in the absence of quantum phase coherence even at zero electron temperature; It is also shown that the exchange effect measured in one contact is always negative - in agreement with the Pauli principle. We discuss a new phenomenon in which current noise is induced by thermal transport. We propose a possible experiment to measure locally the effective noise temperature. Concrete numbers for shot noise are given that can be tested experimentally