11,650 research outputs found
Tuning the Resonance in High Temperature Superconducting Terahertz Metamaterials
In this Letter we present resonance properties in terahertz metamaterials
consisting of a split-ring resonator array made from high temperature
superconducting films. By varying the temperature, we observed efficient
metamaterial resonance switching and frequency tuning with some features not
revealed before. The results were well reproduced by numerical simulations of
metamaterial resonance using the experimentally measured complex conductivity
of the superconducting film. We developed a theoretical model that explains the
tuning features, which takes into account the resistive resonance damping and
additional split-ring inductance contributed from both the real and imaginary
parts of the temperature-dependent complex conductivity. The theoretical model
further predicted more efficient resonance switching and frequency shifting in
metamaterials consisting of a thinner superconducting split-ring resonator
array, which were also verified in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Width and Partial Widths of Unstable Particles in the Light of the Nielsen Identities
Fundamental properties of unstable particles, including mass, width, and
partial widths, are examined on the basis of the Nielsen identities (NI) that
describe the gauge dependence of Green functions. In particular, we prove that
the pole residues and associated definitions of branching ratios and partial
widths are gauge independent to all orders. A simpler, previously discussed
definition of branching ratios and partial widths is found to be gauge
independent through next-to-next-to-leading order. It is then explained how it
may be modified in order to extend the gauge independence to all orders. We
also show that the physical scattering amplitude is the most general
combination of self-energy, vertex, and box contributions that is gauge
independent for arbitrary s, discuss the analytical properties of the NI
functions, and exhibit explicitly their one-loop expressions in the Z-gamma
sector of the Standard Model.Comment: 20 pages (Latex); minor changes included, accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
Patient experiences of swallowing exercises after head and neck cancer:A qualitative study examining barriers and facilitators using behaviour change theory
Poor patient adherence to swallowing exercises is commonly reported in the dysphagia literature on patients treated for head and neck cancer. Establishing the effectiveness of exercise interventions for this population may be undermined by patient non-adherence. The purpose of this study was to explore the barriers and facilitators to exercise adherence from a patient perspective, and to determine the best strategies to reduce the barriers and enhance the facilitators. In-depth interviews were conducted on thirteen patients. We used a behaviour change framework and model [Theoretical domains framework and COM-B (Capability-opportunity-motivation-behaviour) model] to inform our interview schedule and structure our results, using a content analysis approach. The most frequent barrier identified was psychological capability. This was highlighted by patient reports of not clearly understanding reasons for the exercises, forgetting to do the exercises and not having a system to keep track. Other barriers included feeling overwhelmed by information at a difficult time (lack of automatic motivation) and pain and fatigue (lack of physical capability). Main facilitators included having social support from family and friends, the desire to prevent negative consequences such as long-term tube feeding (reflective motivation), having the skills to do the exercises (physical capability), having a routine or trigger and receiving feedback on the outcome of doing exercises (automatic motivation). Linking these findings back to the theoretical model allows for a more systematic selection of theory-based strategies that may enhance the design of future swallowing exercise interventions for patients with head and neck cancer
Low dose influenza virus challenge in the ferret leads to increased virus shedding and greater sensitivity to oseltamivir
Ferrets are widely used to study human influenza virus infection. Their airway physiology and cell receptor distribution makes them ideal for the analysis of pathogenesis and virus transmission, and for testing the efficacy of anti-influenza interventions and vaccines. The 2009 pandemic influenza virus (H1N1pdm09) induces mild to moderate respiratory disease in infected ferrets, following inoculation with 106 plaque-forming units (pfu) of virus. We have demonstrated that reducing the challenge dose to 102 pfu delays the onset of clinical signs by 1 day, and results in a modest reduction in clinical signs, and a less rapid nasal cavity innate immune response. There was also a delay in virus production in the upper respiratory tract, this was up to 9-fold greater and virus shedding was prolonged. Progression of infection to the lower respiratory tract was not noticeably delayed by the reduction in virus challenge. A dose of 104 pfu gave an infection that was intermediate between those of the 106 pfu and 102 pfu doses. To address the hypothesis that using a more authentic low challenge dose would facilitate a more sensitive model for antiviral efficacy, we used the well-known neuraminidase inhibitor, oseltamivir. Oseltamivir-treated and untreated ferrets were challenged with high (106 pfu) and low (102 pfu) doses of influenza H1N1pdm09 virus. The low dose treated ferrets showed significant delays in innate immune response and virus shedding, delayed onset of pathological changes in the nasal cavity, and reduced pathological changes and viral RNA load in the lung, relative to untreated ferrets. Importantly, these observations were not seen in treated animals when the high dose challenge was used. In summary, low dose challenge gives a disease that more closely parallels the disease parameters of human influenza infection, and provides an improved pre-clinical model for the assessment of influenza therapeutics, and potentially, influenza vaccines
Supercritical antisolvent precipitation of amorphous copper–zinc georgeite and acetate precursors for the preparation of ambient‐pressure water‐gas‐shift copper/zinc oxide catalysts
A series of copper-zinc acetate and zincian georgeite precursors have been produced by supercritical CO2 anti-solvent (SAS) precipitation as precursors to Cu/ZnO catalysts for the water gas shift (WGS) reaction. The amorphous materials were prepared by varying the water/ethanol volumetric ratio in the initial metal acetate solutions. Water addition promoted georgeite formation at the expense of mixed metal acetates, which are formed in the absence of the water co-solvent. Optimum SAS precipitation occurs without water to give high surface areas, whilst a high water content gives inferior surface areas and copper-zinc segregation. Calcination of the acetates is exothermic, producing a mixture of metal oxides with high crystallinity. However, thermal decomposition of zincian georgeite resulted in highly dispersed CuO and ZnO crystallites with poor structural order. The georgeite-derived catalysts give superior WGS performance in comparison to the acetate-derived catalysts, which is attributed to enhanced copper-zinc interactions that originate from the precursor
The Two-Loop Pinch Technique in the Electroweak Sector
The generalization of the two-loop Pinch Technique to the Electroweak Sector
of the Standard Model is presented. We restrict ourselves to the case of
conserved external currents, and provide a detailed analysis of both the
charged and neutral sectors. The crucial ingredient for this construction is
the identification of the parts discarded during the pinching procedure with
well-defined contributions to the Slavnov-Taylor identity satisfied by the
off-shell one-loop gauge-boson vertices; the latter are nested inside the
conventional two-loop self-energies. It is shown by resorting to a set of
powerful identities that the two-loop effective Pinch Technique self-energies
coincide with the corresponding ones computed in the Background Feynman gauge.
The aforementioned identities are derived in the context of the
Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism, a fact which enables the individual treatment of
the self-energies of the photon and the -boson. Some possible
phenomenological applications are briefly discussed.Comment: 50 pages, uses axodra
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