4,783 research outputs found
Dynamics in the deep Canada Basin, Arctic Ocean, inferred by thermistor chain time series
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 37 (2007): 1066–1076, doi:10.1175/JPO3032.1.A 50-day time series of high-resolution temperature in the deepest layers of the Canada Basin in the Arctic Ocean indicates that the deep Canada Basin is a dynamically active environment, not the quiet, stable basin often assumed. Vertical motions at the near-inertial (tidal) frequency have amplitudes of 10– 20 m. These vertical displacements are surprisingly large considering the downward near-inertial internal wave energy flux typically observed in the Canada Basin. In addition to motion in the internal-wave frequency band, the measurements indicate distinctive subinertial temperature fluctuations, possibly due to intrusions of new water masses
Small polarons in dilute gas Bose-Einstein condensates
A neutral impurity atom immersed in a dilute Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC)
can have a bound ground state in which the impurity is self-localized. In this
small polaron-like state, the impurity distorts the density of the surrounding
BEC, thereby creating the self-trapping potential minimum. We describe the
self-localization in a strong coupling approach
Exploring the causes of adverse events in hospitals and potential prevention strategies
Objectives
To examine the causes of adverse events
(AEs) and potential prevention strategies to minimise the
occurrence of AEs in hospitalised patients.
Methods
For the 744 AEs identified in the patient record
review study in 21 Dutch hospitals, trained reviewers
were asked to select all causal factors that contributed
to the AE. The results were analysed together with data
on preventability and consequences of AEs. In addition,
the reviewers selected one or more prevention strategies
for each preventable AE. The recommended prevention
strategies were analysed together with four general
causal categories: technical, human, organisational and
patient-related factors.
Results
Human causes were predominantly involved in
the causation of AEs (in 61% of the AEs), 61% of those
being preventable and 13% leading to permanent
disability. In 39% of the AEs, patient-related factors were
involved, in 14% organisational factors and in 4%
technical factors. Organisational causes contributed
relatively often to preventable AEs (93%) and AEs
resulting in permanent disability (20%). Recommended
strategies to prevent AEs were quality assurance/peer
review, evaluation of safety behaviour, training and
procedures. For the AEs with human and patient-related
causes, reviewers predominantly recommended quality
assurance/peer review. AEs caused by organisational
factors were considered preventable by improving
procedures.
Discussion
Healthcare interventions directed at human
causes are recommended because these play a large
role in AE causation. In addition, it seems worthwhile to
direct interventions on organisational causes because the
AEs they cause are nearly always believed to be
preventable. Organisational factors are thus relatively
easy to tackle. Future research designs should allow
researchers to interview healthcare providers that were
involved in the event, as an additional source of
information on contributing factors.
Renormalization of One-Pion Exchange and Power Counting
The renormalization of the chiral nuclear interactions is studied. In leading
order, the cutoff dependence is related to the singular tensor interaction of
the one-pion exchange potential. In S waves and in higher partial waves where
the tensor force is repulsive this cutoff dependence can be absorbed by
counterterms expected at that order. In the other partial waves additional
contact interactions are necessary. The implications of this finding for the
effective-field-theory program in nuclear physics are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figure
Modulational instability criteria for two-component Bose-Einstein condensates
The stability of colliding Bose-Einstein condensates is investigated. A set
of coupled Gross-Pitaevskii equations is thus considered, and analyzed via a
perturbative approach. No assumption is made on the signs (or magnitudes) of
the relevant parameters like the scattering lengths and the coupling
coefficients. The formalism is therefore valid for asymmetric as well as
symmetric coupled condensate wave states. A new set of explicit criteria is
derived and analyzed. An extended instability region, in addition to an
enhanced instability growth rate is predicted for unstable two component
bosons, as compared to the individual (uncoupled) state.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Schiff Theorem and the Electric Dipole Moments of Hydrogen-Like Atoms
The Schiff theorem is revisited in this work and the residual - and
-odd electron--nucleus interaction, after the shielding takes effect, is
completely specified. An application is made to the electric dipole moments of
hydrogen-like atoms, whose qualitative features and systematics have important
implication for realistic paramagnetic atoms.Comment: 3 pages. Contribution to PANIC05, Particles and Nuclei International
Conference, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Oct. 24-28, 200
Degenerate fermion gas heating by hole creation
Loss processes that remove particles from an atom trap leave holes behind in
the single particle distribution if the trapped gas is a degenerate fermion
system. The appearance of holes increases the temperature and we show that the
heating is (i) significant if the initial temperature is well below the Fermi
temperature , and (ii) increases the temperature to
after half of the system's lifetime, regardless of the initial temperature. The
hole heating has important consequences for the prospect of observing
Cooper-pairing in atom traps.Comment: to be published in PR
Comment on ``Validity of certain soft-photon amplitudes''
The criteria suggested by Welsh and Fearing (nucl-th/9606040) to judge the
validity of certain soft-photon amplitudes are examined. We comment on aspects
of their analysis which lead to incorrect conclusions about published
amplitudes and point out important criteria which were omitted from their
analysis.Comment: 6 pages plus 1 postscript figure, Revte
Fermi-Bose quantum degenerate ^40 K - ^87 Rb mixture with attractive interaction
We report on the achievement of simultaneous quantum degeneracy in a mixed
gas of fermionic ^40 K and bosonic ^87 Rb. Potassium is cooled to 0.3 times the
Fermi temperature by means of an efficient thermalization with evaporatively
cooled rubidium. Direct measurement of the collisional cross-section confirms a
large interspecies attraction. This interaction is shown to affect the
expansion of the Bose-Einstein condensate released form the magnetic trap,
where it is immersed in the Fermi sea.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, replaced one figure plus some change
Chiral two-pion exchange and proton-proton partial-wave analysis
The chiral two-pion exchange component of the long-range pp interaction is
studied in an energy-dependent partial-wave analysis. We demonstrate its
presence and importance, and determine the chiral parameters c_i (i=1,3,4). The
values agree well with those obtained from pion-nucleon amplitudes.Comment: 13 pages, no figure
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