1,722 research outputs found
Electron correlations in two-dimensional small quantum dots
We consider circular and elliptic quantum dots with parabolic external
confinement, containing 0 - 22 electrons and with values of r_s in the range 0
< r_s < 3. We perform restricted and unrestricted Hartree-Fock calculations,
and further take into account electron correlations using second-order
perturbation theory. We demonstrate that in many cases correlations
qualitatively change the spin structure of the ground state from that obtained
under Hartree-Fock and spin-density-functional calculations. In some cases the
correlation effects destroy Hund's rule. We also demonstrate that the
correlations destroy static spin-density waves observed in Hartree-Fock and
spin-density-functional calculations.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. This replacement contains new content. Results
have been recalculated for dots with zero effective thickness (true 2D). For
6 electrons, results have been compared with configuration interaction
results from the literatur
Development of the Lymphoedema Genito-Urinary Cancer Questionnaire
The aim of this study was to develop a patient self-report tool to
detect symptoms of genital and lower limb lymphoedema in male
survivors of genitourinary cancer. The study incorporated the views
of patients and subject specialists (lymphoedema and urology) in the
design of a patient questionnaire based on the literature. Views on
comprehensiveness, relevance of content, ease of understanding and
perceived acceptability to patients were collated. The findings informed
the development of the next iteration of the questionnaire. The overall
view of participants was that the development and application of
such a tool was of great clinical value and the Lymphoedema Genito-
Urinary Cancer Questionnaire (LGUCQ) has significant potential for
further development as a research tool to inform prevalence of this
under-reported condition
Results from the third Scottish National Prevalence Survey: is a population health approach now needed to prevent healthcare-associated infections?
Summary Background Healthcare associated infections (HAI) are a major public health concern and a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. A robust and current evidence base that is specific to local, national and Europe-wide settings is necessary to inform the development of strategies to reduce HAI and contain antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Aim To measure the prevalence of HAI and antimicrobial prescribing and identify key priority areas for interventions to reduce the burden of infection. Methods A national rolling PPS in National Health Service (NHS) acute, NHS non-acute, NHS paediatric and independent hospitals was carried out between September and November 2016 using the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control protocol designed for the European PPS. Findings The prevalence of HAI was 4.6%, 2.7% and 3.2% in acute adults, paediatric and non-acute patient groups, respectively. The most common HAI types reported in adult patients were urinary tract infection and pneumonia. The prevalence of antimicrobial prescribing was 35.7%, 29.3% and 13.8% in acute adults, paediatric and non-acute patient groups, respectively. Respiratory, skin and soft tissue, gastrointestinal and urinary tract infections were the most common infections being treated at the time of survey. Conclusion HAI continues to be a public health concern in Scotland. UTI and pneumonia continue to place a significant burden on patients and on healthcare delivery, including those that develop in the community and require hospital admission. A broader population health approach which focuses on reducing the risk of infection upstream would reduce these infections in both community and hospital settings
Development of gaze aversion as disengagement from visual information
Older children, but not younger children, were found to look away more from the face of an interlocutor when answering difficult as opposed to easy questions. Similar results were found in earlier work with adults, who often avert their gaze during cognitively difficult tasks (A.M. Glenberg, J.L. Schroeder, & D.A. Robertson, 1998). Twenty-five 8-year-olds and 26 5-year-olds answered verbal reasoning and arithmetic questions of varying difficulty. The older children increased gaze aversion from the face of the adult questioner in response to both difficult verbal reasoning questions and difficult arithmetic questions. In contrast, younger children (5-year-olds) responded less consistently to cognitive difficulty. It is concluded that adultlike patterns of gaze aversion in response to cognitive difficulty are certainly acquired by 8 years of age. The implications of appropriate gaze aversion for children’s management of cognitive resources are considered
Weapon Size Versus Body Size as a Predictor of Winning in Fights Between Shore Crabs, Carcinus maenas (L.)
Relative body size (carapace width) and weapon size (chela length) were used as indicators of resource holding potential (RHP) in the agonistic behaviour of male shore crabs, Carcinus maenas (L.). Weapon size was found to be a more reliable predictor of the outcome of pairwise fights than body size. Crabs with longer chelae than their opponents were more likely to win fights than crabs with relatively larger bodies. Body size had less influence on the outcome of fights. Relative body and weapon size did not influence initiation of contests but did affect the likelihood of winning; however, this was significant only for weapon size. Winning crabs had heavier claws with greater surface area than losing crabs. There was no relationship between relative size and fight duration. The frequency of cheliped display increased with chela length and winners performed significantly more displays than losers
Hard collinear gluon radiation and multiple scattering in a medium
The energy loss of hard jets produced in the Deep-Inelastic scattering (DIS)
off a large nucleus is considered in the collinear limit. In particular, the
single gluon emission cross section due to multiple scattering in the medium is
calculated. Calculations are carried out in the higher-twist scheme, which is
extended to include contributions from multiple transverse scatterings on both
the produced quark and the radiated gluon. The leading length enhanced parts of
these power suppressed contributions are resummed. Various interferences
between such diagrams lead to the Landau-Pomeranchuk-Migdal (LPM) effect. We
resum the corrections from an arbitrary number of scatterings and isolate the
leading contributions which are suppressed by one extra power of the hard scale
. All powers of the emitted gluon forward momentum fraction are
retained. We compare our results with the previous calculation of single
scattering per emission in the higher-twist scheme as well as with multiple
scattering resummations in other schemes. It is found that the leading
() contribution to the double differential gluon production cross
section, in this approach, is equivalent to that obtained from the single
scattering calculation once the transverse momentum of the final quark is
integrated out. We comment on the generalization of this formalism to
Monte-Carlo routines.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, revtex4, typos correcte
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