6,608 research outputs found
Two- and three-body problem with Floquet-driven zero-range interactions
We study the two-body scattering problem in the zero-range approximation with
a sinusoidally driven scattering length and calculate the relation between the
mean value and amplitude of the drive for which the effective scattering
amplitude is resonantly enhanced. In this manner we arrive at a family of
curves along which the effective scattering length diverges but the nature of
the corresponding Floquet-induced resonance changes from narrow to wide.
Remarkably, on these curves the driving does not induce heating. In order to
study the effect of these resonances on the three-body problem we consider one
light and two heavy particles with driven heavy-light interaction in the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation and find that the Floquet driving can be used to
tune the three-body and inelasticity parameters.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Search for Dust Emission from (24) Themis Using the Gemini-North Telescope
We report the results of a search for a dust trail aligned with the orbit
plane of the large main-belt asteroid (24) Themis, which has been reported to
have water ice frost on its surface. Observations were obtained with the GMOS
instrument on the Gemini-North Observatory in imaging mode, where we used a
chip gap to block much of the light from the asteroid, allowing us to take long
exposures while avoiding saturation by the object. No dust trail is detected
within 2' of Themis to a 3-sigma limiting surface brightness magnitude of 29.7
mag/arcsec^2, as measured along the expected direction of the dust trail.
Detailed consideration of dust ejection physics indicates that particles large
enough to form a detectable dust trail were unlikely to be ejected as a result
of sublimation from an object as large as Themis. We nonetheless demonstrate
that our observations would have been capable of detecting faint dust emission
as close as 20" from the object, even in a crowded star field. This approach
could be used to conduct future searches for sublimation-generated dust
emission from Themis or other large asteroids closer to perihelion than was
done in this work. It would also be useful for deep imaging of collisionally
generated dust emission from large asteroids at times when the visibility of
dust features are expected to be maximized, such as during orbit plane
crossings, during close approaches to the Earth, or following detected impact
events.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Aspects of oviposition in the fowl
Each part of the hen's oviduct possesses to some extent, the properties of secretion and. moti- lity. Those secretions of the oviduct which contri bute to egg formation have been studied by several authors but the mechanics of egg formation have so far received little attention. The oviduct may be considered to show two types of movement: relatively slow, propulsive movements by means of which the egg is moved as far as the uterus, and relatively quick, expulsive movements which constitute the process of oviposition. The object of this work is to describe some aspects of the physiology of these latter movements, to suggest possible ways in which they are controlled and to compare them with similar movements observed during mammalian parturition
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Differences in clinicopathologic variables between Borrelia C6 antigen seroreactive and Borrelia C6 seronegative glomerulopathy in dogs.
BackgroundRapidly progressive glomerulonephritis has been described in dogs that seroreact to Borrelia burgdorferi, but no studies have compared clinicopathologic differences in Lyme-seroreactive dogs with protein-losing nephropathy (PLN) versus dogs with Borrelia-seronegative PLN.Hypothesis/objectivesDogs with Borrelia C6 antigen-seroreactive PLN have distinct clinicopathologic findings when compared to dogs with Borrelia seronegative PLN.AnimalsForty dogs with PLN and Borrelia C6 antigen seroreactivity and 78 C6-seronegative temporally matched dogs with PLN.MethodsRetrospective prevalence case-control study. Clinical information was retrieved from records of dogs examined at the University of California, Davis, Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital. Histopathologic findings in renal tissue procured by biopsy or necropsy of dogs with PLN were reviewed.ResultsRetrievers and retriever mixes were overrepresented in seroreactive dogs (P < .001). Seroreactive dogs were more likely to have thrombocytopenia (P < .001), azotemia (P = .002), hyperphosphatemia (P < .001), anemia (P < .001), and neutrophilia (P = .003). Hematuria, glucosuria, and pyuria despite negative urine culture were more likely in seroreactive dogs (all P ≤ .002). Histopathologic findings were consistent with immune-complex glomerulonephritis in 16 of 16 case dogs and 7 of 23 control dogs (P = 006). Prevalence of polyarthritis was not different between groups (P = .17).Conclusions and clinical importanceC6 seroreactivity in dogs with PLN is associated with a clinicopathologically distinct syndrome when compared with other types of PLN. Early recognition of this syndrome has the potential to improve outcomes through specific aggressive and early treatment
A derivative formula for the free energy function
We consider bond percolation on the lattice. Let be the
number of open clusters in . It is well known that converges to the free energy function at the zero field.
In this paper, we show that converges to
.Comment: 8 pages 1 figur
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