4,199 research outputs found

    An off-shell I.R. regularization strategy in the analysis of collinear divergences

    Full text link
    We present a method for the analysis of singularities of Feynman amplitudes based on the Speer sector decomposition of the Schwinger parametric integrals combined with the Mellin-Barnes transform. The sector decomposition method is described in some details. We suggest the idea of applying the method to the analysis of collinear singularities in inclusive QCD cross sections in the mass-less limit regularizing the forward amplitudes by an off-shell choice of the initial particle momenta. It is shown how the suggested strategy works in the well known case of the one loop corrections to Deep Inelastic Scattering.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figure

    Proteção de camundongos atímicos BALB/c (Nu/Nu) contra Plasmodium berghei por esplenócitos oriundos de camundongos normais BALB/c (Nu/+)

    Get PDF
    Camundongos atímicos BALB/c (Nu/Nu) sucumbem entre 7-13 dias após a inoculação (DAI) da cepa NK65 de Plasmodium berghei. Todavia, seus singenêicos heterozigotos (Nu/+) morrem em 7-8 DAI. Camundongos nude (Nu/Nu) reconstituídos com 2xl0(7) esplenócitos de camundongos heterozigotos singenêicos normais não infectados (Nu/+) 20 dias antes da inoculação a (DBI) do parasita, sucumbem 2 dias antes que os animais controles. Camundongos nude reconstituídos 10 ou 2 DBI, vivem 2-4 dias a mais que os animais controles e alguns deles sobrevivem. Esses achados indicam que a cepa NK65 de P. berghei induz, no mínimo, dois imunofenômenos dependentes de linfócitos T; um supressivo e outro estimulatório. A reconstituição de camundongos nude com células T de camundongos BALB/c (Nu/+) parece reduzir ou "By-pass" a atividade supressora das células T, o qual leva à formação de uma resposta imune protetora por alguns dos camundongos nude.Athymic BALB/c (Nu/Nu) mice died at 7-13 days after inoculation (DAI) of Plasmodium berghei NK65, whereas their heterozygous (Nu/+) littermates died at 7-8 DAI. Nude (Nu/Nu) mice, reconstituted with 2 x 10(7) splenocytes from uninfected heterozygous (Nu/+) littermates at 20 days before parasite inoculation (DBI), died about 2 days earlier than control nude mice; nude mice reconstituted at 10 or 2 DBI lived 2 to 4 days longer than control nudes; and nude mice reconstituted 2 DAI lived even longer and some survived. These findings indicate that P. berghei NK65 induces at least two T-cell dependent immune phenomena, one suppressive and the other stimulatory. Reconstitution of nude mice with T-cells from BALB/c (Nu/+) mice appeared to reduce or bypass suppressive T-cell activities which allowed the formation of a protective immune response by some of the nude mice

    The blockage problem

    Full text link
    We investigate the totally asymmetric exclusion process on Z, with the jump rate at site i given by r_i=1 for i nonzero, r_0=r. It is easy to see that the maximal stationary current j(r) is nondecreasing in r and that j(r)=1/4 for r>=1; it is a long outstanding problem to determine whether or not the critical value r_c of r such that j(r)=1/4 for r>r_c is strictly less than 1. Here we present a heuristic argument, based on the analysis of the first sixteen terms in a formal power series expansion of j(r) obtained from finite volume systems, that r_c=1 and that for r less than 1 and near 1, j(r) behaves as 1/4-\gamma\exp[-{a/(1-r)}] with a approximately equal to 2. We also give some new exact results about this system; in particular we prove that j(r)=J_max(r), with J_max(r) the hydrodynamic maximal current defined by Seppalainen, and thus establish continuity of j(r). Finally we describe a related exactly solvable model, a semi-infinite system in which the site i=0 is always occupied. For that system, the critical r is 1/2 and the analogue j_s(r) of j(r) satisfies j_s(r)=r(1-r) for r<=1/2; j_s(r) is the limit of finite volume currents inside the curve |r(1-r)|=1/4 in the complex r plane and we suggest that analogous behavior may hold for the original system.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure

    Research Notes : Australia : Designation of a core collection of perennial Glycine

    Get PDF
    Over the last decade, a large germplasm collection of the 12 currently recognized perennial species of Glycine has been assembled. This collection, now numbering more than 1400 accessions, is held in Canberra, Australia, and is recognized by the International Board of Plant Genetic Resources as the world base collection for perennial Glycine. The 12 species include five that have been described recently

    Unfinished Business: a Review of the Implementation of the Provisions of United Nations General Assembly Resolutions 61/105 and 64/72, Related to the Management of Bottom Fisheries in Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction

    Get PDF
    In 2006 the General Assembly adopted resolution 61/105, based on a compromise proposal offered by deep-sea fishing nations, which committed States and regional fisheries management organisations [RFMOs] to take specific measures to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems [VMEs] from the adverse impacts of bottom fisheries in the high seas and to ensure the longterm sustainability of deep-sea fish stocks. These measures included conducting impact assessments to determine whether significant adverse impacts[SAIs] to VMEs would occur, managing fisheries to prevent SAIs on VMEs, and closing areas of the high seas to bottom fishing where VMEs are known or likely to occur, unless regulations are in place to prevent SAIs and to manage sustainably deep-sea fish stocks. Based on a review in 2009 of the actions taken by States and RFMOS, the UNGA adoptedresolution 64/72 that reaffirmed resolution 61/105 and strengthened the call for action through committing States, inter alia, to ensure that vessels do not engage in bottom fishing until impact assessments have been carried out and to not authorise bottom fishing activities until the measures in resolutions 64/72 and 61/105 have been adopted andimplemented

    Phase diagram of a generalized ABC model on the interval

    Full text link
    We study the equilibrium phase diagram of a generalized ABC model on an interval of the one-dimensional lattice: each site i=1,...,Ni=1,...,N is occupied by a particle of type \a=A,B,C, with the average density of each particle species N_\a/N=r_\a fixed. These particles interact via a mean field non-reflection-symmetric pair interaction. The interaction need not be invariant under cyclic permutation of the particle species as in the standard ABC model studied earlier. We prove in some cases and conjecture in others that the scaled infinite system N\rw\infty, i/N\rw x\in[0,1] has a unique density profile \p_\a(x) except for some special values of the r_\a for which the system undergoes a second order phase transition from a uniform to a nonuniform periodic profile at a critical temperature Tc=3rArBrC/2πT_c=3\sqrt{r_A r_B r_C}/2\pi.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure

    Correlations in two-component log-gas systems

    Full text link
    A systematic study of the properties of particle and charge correlation functions in the two-dimensional Coulomb gas confined to a one-dimensional domain is undertaken. Two versions of this system are considered: one in which the positive and negative charges are constrained to alternate in sign along the line, and the other where there is no charge ordering constraint. Both systems undergo a zero-density Kosterlitz-Thouless type transition as the dimensionless coupling Γ:=q2/kT\Gamma := q^2 / kT is varied through Γ=2\Gamma = 2. In the charge ordered system we use a perturbation technique to establish an O(1/r4)O(1/r^4) decay of the two-body correlations in the high temperature limit. For Γ2+\Gamma \rightarrow 2^+, the low-fugacity expansion of the asymptotic charge-charge correlation can be resummed to all orders in the fugacity. The resummation leads to the Kosterlitz renormalization equations.Comment: 39 pages, 5 figures not included, Latex, to appear J. Stat. Phys. Shortened version of abstract belo

    Spontaneous symmetry breaking: exact results for a biased random walk model of an exclusion process

    Full text link
    It has been recently suggested that a totally asymmetric exclusion process with two species on an open chain could exhibit spontaneous symmetry breaking in some range of the parameters defining its dynamics. The symmetry breaking is manifested by the existence of a phase in which the densities of the two species are not equal. In order to provide a more rigorous basis to these observations we consider the limit of the process when the rate at which particles leave the system goes to zero. In this limit the process reduces to a biased random walk in the positive quarter plane, with specific boundary conditions. The stationary probability measure of the position of the walker in the plane is shown to be concentrated around two symmetrically located points, one on each axis, corresponding to the fact that the system is typically in one of the two states of broken symmetry in the exclusion process. We compute the average time for the walker to traverse the quarter plane from one axis to the other, which corresponds to the average time separating two flips between states of broken symmetry in the exclusion process. This time is shown to diverge exponentially with the size of the chain.Comment: 42 page

    Seismic analysis of the Roman Temple of Évora, Portugal

    Get PDF
    The Roman temple of Évora dates back to the 1st century AD and has undergone several changes throughout history, including various additions, which have been removed. Several archaeological studies have recently been carried out, but the structural safety of the temple is unknown. Of particular concern is the temple’s seismic resistance, as it is located in a region subjected to a moderate seismic hazard. The main purpose of this paper is to ascertain the temple’s behaviour under seismic excitation through limit analysis and discrete element analysis. Both analysis techniques will use the assumption that the structure is composed of rigid blocks connected with dry joints. Geometric information has been derived from a recent laser scanning surveying, while calibration undertaken using in-situ results from GPR and dynamic identification tests. The main results are presented and discussed in detail as well as the need for possible repair works within the framework of the ICARSAH guidelines
    corecore