845 research outputs found
A note on fermions in holographic QCD
We study the fermionic sector of a probe D8-brane in the supergravity
background made of D4-branes compactified on a circle with supersymmetry broken
explicitly by the boundary conditions. At low energies the dual field theory is
effectively four-dimensional and has proved surprisingly successful in
recovering qualitative and quantitative properties of QCD. We investigate
fluctuations of the fermionic fields on the probe D8-brane and interpret these
as mesinos (fermionic superpartners of mesons). We demonstrate that the masses
of these modes are comparable to meson masses and show that their interactions
with ordinary mesons are not suppressed.Comment: 21+1 pp, 1 figure; v2: typos corrected, refs. adde
Racial Differences in the Association Between Sex Hormone–Binding Globulin and Adiposity in Premenopausal Women: The BioCycle study
Stewardship mapping and assessment project: a framework for understanding community-based environmental stewardship
The Stewardship Mapping and Assessment Project (STEW-MAP) is designed to answer who, where, why, and how environmental stewardship groups are caring for our urbanized landscapes. This report is intended to be a guide for those who wish to start STEW-MAP in their own city. It contains step-by-step directions for how to plan and implement a STEW-MAP project. STEW-MAP is both an empirical study of a city’s or region’s civic environmental stewardship resources and a publicly available online database to help support environmental stewardship broadly in these cities. The project adds a social layer of information to biophysical and urban geographic information on green infrastructure in cities. STEW-MAP highlights existing stewardship gaps and overlaps in order to strengthen organizational capacities, enhance citizen monitoring, promote broader public engagement with on-the-ground environmental work, and build effective partnerships among stakeholders involved in urban sustainabilit
Stakeholder Theory and Marketing: Moving from a Firm-Centric to a Societal Perspective
This essay is inspired by the ideas and research examined in the special section on “Stakeholder Marketing” of the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing in 2010. The authors argue that stakeholder marketing is slowly coalescing with the broader thinking that has occurred in the stakeholder management and ethics literature streams during the past quarter century. However, the predominant view of stakeholders that many marketers advocate is still primarily pragmatic and company centric. The position advanced herein is that stronger forms of stakeholder marketing that reflect more normative, macro/societal, and network-focused orientations are necessary. The authors briefly explain and justify these characteristics in the context of the growing “prosociety” and “proenvironment” perspectives—orientations that are also in keeping with the public policy focus of this journal. Under the “hard form” of stakeholder theory, which the authors endorse, marketing managers must realize that serving stakeholders sometimes requires sacrificing maximum profits to mitigate outcomes that would inflict major damage on other stakeholders, especially society
Intradermal Anti-Loxosceles Fab Fragments Attenuate Dermonecrotic Arachnidism
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73371/1/j.1553-2712.1999.tb00133.x.pd
Heidegger on creativity: From boredom to re-engagement with the world
Experimental psychologists have discussed whether boredom can help us become more creative. At first blush, this would seem to be rather unlikely. When we are bored, we are disengaged; we cannot be bothered and nothing seems worthwhile; we have no interest in the world around us. Such a condition, surely, is not conducive to creativity (Haager et al. 2018). Yet some psychologists disagree (Gasper and Middlewood 2014). Boredom, they explain, breaks down entrenched routines and thought-patterns and provides us with an opportunity to think again and anew. Respondents in “approach-oriented states” such as boredom engage in more “associative thought” than those in “avoidance-oriented affective states.” This is how boredom comes to encourage “the quest for meaning and exploration” (Gasper and Middlewood 2014, pp. 53–55...2-s2.0-8508440789
The Single-Particle density of States, Bound States, Phase-Shift Flip, and a Resonance in the Presence of an Aharonov-Bohm Potential
Both the nonrelativistic scattering and the spectrum in the presence of the
Aharonov-Bohm potential are analyzed. The single-particle density of states
(DOS) for different self-adjoint extensions is calculated. The DOS provides a
link between different physical quantities and is a natural starting point for
their calculation. The consequences of an asymmetry of the S matrix for the
generic self-adjoint extension are examined.
I. Introduction
II. Impenetrable flux tube and the density of states
III. Penetrable flux tube and self-adjoint extensions
IV. The S matrix and scattering cross sections
V. The Krein-Friedel formula and the resonance
VI. Regularization
VII. The R --> 0 limit and the interpretation of self-adjoint extensions
VIII. Energy calculations
IX. The Hall effect in the dilute vortex limit
X. Persistent current of free electrons in the plane pierced by a flux tube
XI. The 2nd virial coefficient of nonrelativistic interacting anyons
XII. Discussion of the results and open questionsComment: 68 pages, plain latex, 7 figures, 3 references and one figure added
plus a few minor text correction
Disentangling the Relationship between Nonprofit and Social Capital: The Role of Social Cooperatives and Social Welfare Associations in the Development of Networks of Strong and Weak Ties
Continuum-mechanical, Anisotropic Flow model for polar ice masses, based on an anisotropic Flow Enhancement factor
A complete theoretical presentation of the Continuum-mechanical, Anisotropic
Flow model, based on an anisotropic Flow Enhancement factor (CAFFE model) is
given. The CAFFE model is an application of the theory of mixtures with
continuous diversity for the case of large polar ice masses in which induced
anisotropy occurs. The anisotropic response of the polycrystalline ice is
described by a generalization of Glen's flow law, based on a scalar anisotropic
enhancement factor. The enhancement factor depends on the orientation mass
density, which is closely related to the orientation distribution function and
describes the distribution of grain orientations (fabric). Fabric evolution is
governed by the orientation mass balance, which depends on four distinct
effects, interpreted as local rigid body rotation, grain rotation, rotation
recrystallization (polygonization) and grain boundary migration (migration
recrystallization), respectively. It is proven that the flow law of the CAFFE
model is truly anisotropic despite the collinearity between the stress deviator
and stretching tensors.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
Hospital contacts for injuries and musculoskeletal diseases among seamen and fishermen: A population-based cohort study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We studied musculoskeletal diseases (MSD) and injuries among fishermen and seamen with focus on low back disorders, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), rotator cuff syndrome and arthrosis.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Cohorts of all male Danish seamen (officers and non-officers) and fishermen employed 1994 and 1999 with at least six months employment history were linked to the Occupational Hospitalisation Register. We calculated standardised incidence ratios (SIR) for the two time periods, using rates for the entire Danish workforce as a reference.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Among fishermen, we found high SIRs for knee arthrosis, thoraco-lumbar disc disorders, injuries and statistically significant SIRs above 200 were seen for both rotator cuff syndrome and CTS. The SIR was augmented for injuries and reduced for hip arthrosis between the two time periods. The SIRs for injuries and CTS were high for non-officers. A sub-analysis revealed that the highest risk for CTS was found among male non-officers working as deck crew, SIR 233 (95% CI: 166–317) based on 40 cases. Among officers, the SIRs for injuries and MSDs were low. The number of employed Danish fishermen declined with 25% 1994–1999 to 3470. Short-term employments were common. None of the SIRs increased with increasing length of employment.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Both fishermen and non-officers have high SIRs for injuries and fishermen also for MSD. Only the SIR for injuries among fishermen was augmented between 1994 and 1999. Our findings suggest an association between the incidence of rotator cuff syndrome and CTS and work within fishery. Long-term cumulative effects of employment were not shown for any of the disease outcomes. Other conditions may play a role.</p
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