226 research outputs found
Inelastic nucleon contributions in nuclear response functions
We estimate the contribution of inelastic nucleon excitations to the
inclusive cross section in the CEBAF kinematic range.
Calculations are based upon parameterizations of the nucleon structure
functions measured at SLAC. Nuclear binding effects are included in a
vector-scalar field theory, and are assumed have a minimal effect on the
nucleon excitation spectrum. We find that for q\lsim 1 GeV the elastic and
inelastic nucleon contributions to the nuclear response functions are
comparable, and can be separated, but with roughly a factor of two uncertainty
in the latter from the extrapolation from data. In contrast, for q\rsim 2 GeV
this uncertainty is greatly reduced but the elastic nucleon contribution is
heavily dominated by the inelastic nucleon background.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures available from the authors at Department of
Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester, Rochester NY 1462
A sensorless initial rotor position's estimation for permanent magnet synchronous machines
Permanent magnet synchronous motors for the effective start require information about the initial position of a rotor. In this regard, most systems use position sensors, which substantially increase entirely a cost of an electrical drive [1-3]. The aim of this article is to develop a new method, allowing determining the absolute angular position of the permanent magnet synchronous motors' rotor [4,5]. With a certain voltage pulses applied to the motor, its stator is magnetized by currents leakage in the windings. This allows using a special algorithm to calculate the absolute position of the rotor without using any motor parameters [6]. Simulation results prove the simplicity and efficiency of this method for determining an initial position of the permanent magnet synchronous motors' rotor. Thus, this method can be widely used in the electrical industry
Dependence of pp->pp pi0 near Threshold on the Spin of the Colliding Nucleons
A polarized internal atomic hydrogen target and a stored, polarized beam are
used to measure the spin-dependent total cross section Delta_sigma_T/sigma_tot,
as well as the polar integrals of the spin correlation coefficient combination
A_xx-A_yy, and the analyzing power A_y for pp-> pp pi0 at four bombarding
energies between 325 and 400 MeV. This experiment is made possible by the use
of a cooled beam in a storage ring. The polarization observables are used to
study the contribution from individual partial waves.Comment: 6 pages, 1 table, 4 figures, corrected equations 2 and
Spin correlations in pion production near threshold
A first measurement of longitudinal as well as transverse spin correlation
coefficients for the reaction was made using a
polarized proton target and a polarized proton beam. We report kinematically
complete measurements for this reaction at 325, 350, 375 and 400 MeV beam
energy. The spin correlation coefficients and the analyzing power as well as angular
distributions for and the polarization observables
were extracted. Partial wave cross sections for dominant
transition channels were obtained from a partial wave analysis that included
the transitions with final state angular momenta of . The measurements
of the polarization observables are compared
with the predictions from the J\"ulich meson exchange model. The agreement is
very good at 325 MeV, but it deteriorates increasingly for the higher energies.
At all energies agreement with the model is better than for the reaction
.Comment: Preprint, 21 pp, submitted to Phys. Rev. C. Keywords: Mesons,
Polarization, Spin Correlations, Few body system
Effect of Specific Immunoglobulin E Response and Comorbidities on Effectiveness of MP-AzeFlu in a Real-Life Study
Acknowledgements: We would like to thank the subjects who participated in the trial. Funding Sources: This study was supported by MEDA Pharma GmbH & Co. KG (a Mylan Company), Bad Homburg, Germany. Technical, editorial, and medical writing assistance were provided under the direction of the authors by Strategix, an affiliate of The Lynx Group, LLC. This assistance was supported by MEDA Pharma GmbH & Co. KG (a Mylan Company).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Chicken Yolk Sac IgY Receptor, a Mammalian Mannose Receptor Family Member, Transcytoses IgY across Polarized Epithelial Cells
In mammals the transfer of passive immunity from mother to young is mediated by the MHC-related receptor FcRn, which transports maternal IgG across epithelial cell barriers. In birds, maternal IgY in egg yolk is transferred across the yolk sac to passively immunize chicks during gestation and early independent life. The chicken yolk sac IgY receptor (FcRY) is the ortholog of the mammalian phospholipase A2 receptor, a mannose receptor family member, rather than an FcRn or MHC homolog. FcRn and FcRY both exhibit ligand binding at the acidic pH of endosomes and ligand release at the slightly basic pH of blood. Here we show that FcRY expressed in polarized mammalian epithelial cells functioned in endocytosis, bidirectional transcytosis, and recycling of chicken FcY/IgY. Confocal immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that IgY binding and endocytosis occurred at acidic but not basic pH, mimicking pH-dependent uptake of IgG by FcRn. Colocalization studies showed FcRY-mediated internalization via clathrin-coated pits and transport involving early and recycling endosomes. Disruption of microtubules partially inhibited apical-to-basolateral and basolateral-to-apical transcytosis, but not recycling, suggesting the use of different trafficking machinery. Our results represent the first cell biological evidence of functional equivalence between FcRY and FcRn and provide an intriguing example of how evolution can give rise to systems in which similar biological requirements in different species are satisfied utilizing distinct protein folds
Dynamical coupled channel calculation of pion and omega meson production
A dynamical coupled channel approach is used to study and
--meson production induced by pions and photons scattering from the
proton. Six intermediate channels including , , ,
, and are employed to describe unpolarized and
polarized data. Bare parameters in an effective hadronic Lagrangian are
determined in a fit to data for , , , and reactions at center-of-mass
energies from threshold to GeV. The matrix determined in these
fits is used to calculate the photon beam asymmetry for -meson
production and the total cross section and
scattering lengths.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. C; corrected typos,
added references, minor revisions, same results/fig
Pion Excess, Nuclear Correlations, and the Interpretation of () Spin Transfer Experiments
Conventional theories of nuclear interactions predict a net increase in the
distribution of virtual pions in nuclei relative to free nucleons. Analysis of
data from several nuclear experiments has led to claims of evidence against
such a pion excess. These conclusions are usually based on a collective theory
(RPA) of the pions, which may be inadequate. The issue is the energy dependence
of the nuclear response, which differs for theories with strong NN correlations
from the RPA predictions. In the present paper, information about the energy
dependence is extracted from sum rules, which are calculated for such a
correlated, noncollective nuclear theory. The results lead to much reduced
sensitivity of nuclear reactions to the correlations that are responsible for
the pion excess. The primary example is spin transfer, for
which the expected effects are found to be smaller than the experimental
uncertainties. The analysis has consequences for Deep Inelastic Scattering
(DIS) experiments as well.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Distorted wave impulse approximation analysis for spin observables in nucleon quasi-elastic scattering and enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response
We present a formalism of distorted wave impulse approximation (DWIA) for
analyzing spin observables in nucleon inelastic and charge exchange reactions
leading to the continuum. It utilizes response functions calculated by the
continuum random phase approximation (RPA), which include the effective mass,
the spreading widths and the \Delta degrees of freedom. The Fermi motion is
treated by the optimal factorization, and the non-locality of the
nucleon-nucleon t-matrix by an averaged reaction plane approximation. By using
the formalism we calculated the spin-longitudinal and the spin-transverse cross
sections, ID_q and ID_p, of 12C, 40Ca (\vec{p},\vec{n}) at 494 and 346 MeV. The
calculation reasonably reproduced the observed ID_q, which is consistent with
the predicted enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response function R_L.
However, the observed ID_p is much larger than the calculated one, which was
consistent with neither the predicted quenching nor the spin-transverse
response function R_T obtained by the (e,e') scattering. The Landau-Migdal
parameter g'_N\Delta for the N\Delta transition interaction and the effective
mass at the nuclear center m^*(r=0) are treated as adjustable parameters. The
present analysis indicates that the smaller g'_{N\Delta}(\approx 0.3) and
m^*(0) \approx 0.7 m are preferable. We also investigate the validity of the
plane wave impulse approximation (PWIA) with the effective nucleon number
approximation for the absorption, by means of which R_L and R_T have
conventionally been extracted.Comment: RevTex 3, 29 pages, 2 tables, 8 figure
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