60,061 research outputs found
Warm Asymmetric Nuclear Matter and Proto-Neutron Star
Asymmetric nuclear matter equation of state at finite temperature is studied
in SU(2) chiral sigma model using mean field approximation. The effect of
temperature on effective mass, entropy, and binding energy is discussed.
Treating the system as one with two conserved charges the liquid-gas phase
transition is investigated. We have also discussed the effect of proton
fraction on critical temperature with and without -meson contribution. We
have extended our work to study the structure of proto-neutron star with
neutron free charge-neutral matter in beta-equilibrium. We found that the mass
and radius of the star decreases as it cools from the entropy per baryon S = 2
to S = 0 and the maximum temperature of the core of the star is about 62 MeV
for S = 2.Comment: 25 pages, 16 figure
VISHNU hybrid model for viscous QCD matter at RHIC and LHC energies
In this proceeding, we briefly describe the viscous hydrodynamics + hadron
cascade hybrid model VISHNU for relativistic heavy ion collisions and report
the current status on extracting the QGP viscosity from elliptic flow data.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, the proceedings of 7th International Workshop on
Critical Point and Onset of Deconfinement, Wuhan, China, Nov. 7-11, 201
Dissipative hydrodynamics for viscous relativistic fluids
Explicit equations are given for describing the space-time evolution of
non-ideal (viscous) relativistic fluids undergoing boost-invariant longitudinal
and arbitrary transverse expansion. The equations are derived from the
second-order Israel-Stewart approach which ensures causal evolution. Both
azimuthally symmetric (1+1)-dimensional and non-symmetric (2+1)-dimensional
transverse expansion are discussed. The latter provides the formal basis for
the hydrodynamic computation of elliptic flow in relativistic heavy-ion
collisions including dissipative effects.Comment: 12 pages, no figures. Submitted to Physical Review
Asymmetry of localised states in a single quantum ring: polarization dependence of excitons and biexcitons
We performed spectroscopic studies of a single GaAs quantum ring with an
anisotropy in the rim height. The presence of an asymmetric localised state was
suggested by the adiabatic potential. The asymmetry was investigated in terms
of the polarization dependence of excitons and biexcitons, where a large energy
di erence (0.8 meV) in the exciton emission energy for perpendicular
polarizations was observed and the oscillator strengths were also compared
using the photoluminescence decay rate. For perpendicular polarizations the
biexciton exhibits twice the energy di erence seen for the exciton, a fact that
may be attributed to a possible change in the selection rules for the lowered
symmetry.Comment: accepted in Applied physics Letter
On Horizontal and Vertical Separation in Hierarchical Text Classification
Hierarchy is a common and effective way of organizing data and representing
their relationships at different levels of abstraction. However, hierarchical
data dependencies cause difficulties in the estimation of "separable" models
that can distinguish between the entities in the hierarchy. Extracting
separable models of hierarchical entities requires us to take their relative
position into account and to consider the different types of dependencies in
the hierarchy. In this paper, we present an investigation of the effect of
separability in text-based entity classification and argue that in hierarchical
classification, a separation property should be established between entities
not only in the same layer, but also in different layers. Our main findings are
the followings. First, we analyse the importance of separability on the data
representation in the task of classification and based on that, we introduce a
"Strong Separation Principle" for optimizing expected effectiveness of
classifiers decision based on separation property. Second, we present
Hierarchical Significant Words Language Models (HSWLM) which capture all, and
only, the essential features of hierarchical entities according to their
relative position in the hierarchy resulting in horizontally and vertically
separable models. Third, we validate our claims on real-world data and
demonstrate that how HSWLM improves the accuracy of classification and how it
provides transferable models over time. Although discussions in this paper
focus on the classification problem, the models are applicable to any
information access tasks on data that has, or can be mapped to, a hierarchical
structure.Comment: Full paper (10 pages) accepted for publication in proceedings of ACM
SIGIR International Conference on the Theory of Information Retrieval
(ICTIR'16
Parity violation in low energy neutron deuteron scattering
Parity violating effects for low energy elastic neutron deuteron scattering
are calculated for DDH and EFT-type of weak potentials in a Distorted Wave Born
Approximation, using realistic hadronic strong interaction wave functions,
obtained by solving three-body Faddeev equations in configuration space. The
results of relation between physical observables and low energy constants can
be used to fix low energy constants from experiments. Potential model
dependencies of parity violating effects are discussed.Comment: version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Sensitivity of Ru(bpy)_2dppz^(2+) Luminescence to DNA Defects
The luminescent characteristics of Ru(bpy)_2dppz^(2+) (dppz = dipyrido[3,2-a:2′,3′-c]phenazine), a DNA light switch, were investigated in the presence of oligonucleotides containing single base mismatches or an abasic site. In water, the ruthenium luminescence is quenched, but, bound to well matched duplex DNA, the Ru complex luminesces. Here we show that with DNAs containing a defect, rac-, Δ-, and Λ-Ru(bpy)_2dppz^(2+) exhibit significant luminescent enhancements above that with well matched DNA. In the presence of a single base mismatch, large luminescent enhancements are evident for the Δ-Ru isomer; the Λ-isomer shows particularly high luminescence bound to an oligonucleotide containing an abasic site. Similar increases are not evident with two common DNA-binding organic fluorophores, ethidium bromide and TO-PRO-3. Titrations with hairpin oligonucleotides containing a variable mismatch site show correlation between the level of luminescent enhancement and the thermodynamic destabilization associated with the mismatch. This correlation is reminiscent of that found earlier for a bulky rhodium complex that binds mismatched DNA sites through metalloinsertion, where the complex binds the DNA from the minor groove side, ejecting the mismatched bases into the major groove. Differential quenching studies with minor and major groove quenchers and time-resolved emission studies support this metalloinsertion mode for the dppz complex at the defect site. Certainly these data underscore the utility of Ru(bpy)_2dppz^(2+) as a sensitive luminescent reporter of DNA and its defects
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