36,650 research outputs found

    Cornell University remote sensing program

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Baryon states with open charm in the extended local hidden gauge approach

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    In this paper we examine the interaction of DND N and DND^* N states, together with their coupled channels, by using an extension of the local hidden gauge formalism from the light meson sector, which is based on heavy quark spin symmetry. The scheme is based on the use of the impulse approximation at the quark level, with the heavy quarks acting as spectators, which occurs for the dominant terms where there is the exchange of a light meson. The pion exchange and the Weinberg-Tomozawa interactions are generalized and with this dynamics we look for states generated from the interaction, with a unitary coupled channels approach that mixes the pseudoscalar-baryon and vector-baryon states. We find two states with nearly zero width which are associated to the Λc(2595)\Lambda_c(2595) and Λc(2625)\Lambda_c(2625). The lower state, with JP=1/2J^P = 1/2^-, couples to DND N and DND^* N, and the second one, with JP=3/2J^P = 3/2^-, to DND^* N. In addition to these two Λc\Lambda_c states, we find four more states with I=0I=0, one of them nearly degenerate in two states of J=1/2, 3/2J=1/2,\ 3/2. Furthermore we find three states in I=1I=1, two of them degenerate in J=1/2,3/2J=1/2, 3/2.Comment: v3: version to appear in Eur.Phys.J.

    Description of ρ(1700)\rho (1700) as a ρKKˉ\rho K \bar{K} system with the fixed center approximation

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    We study the ρKKˉ\rho K\bar{K} system with an aim to describe the ρ(1700)\rho (1700) resonance. The chiral unitary approach has achieved success in a description of systems of the light hadron sector. With this method, the KKˉK \bar{K} system in the isospin sector I=0I=0, is found to be a dominant component of the f0(980)f_0 (980) resonance. Therefore, by regarding the KKˉK\bar{K} system as a cluster, the f0(980)f_0 (980) resonance, we evaluate the ρKKˉ\rho K\bar{K} system applying the fixed center approximation to the Faddeev equations. We construct the ρK\rho K unitarized amplitude using the chiral unitary approach. As a result, we find a peak in the three-body amplitude around 1739 MeV and a width of about 227 MeV. The effect of the width of ρ\rho and f0(980)f_0 (980) is also discussed. We associate this peak to the ρ(1700)\rho (1700) which has a mass of 1720±201720 \pm 20 MeV and a width of 250±100250 \pm 100 MeV

    Cornell University remote sensing program

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Cornell University remote sensing program

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    Aircraft and satellite remote sensing technology were applied in the following areas: (1) evaluation of proposed fly ash disposal sites; (2) development of priorities for drainage improvements; (3) state park analysis for rehabilitation and development; (4) watershed study for water quality planning; and (5) assistance project-landfill site selection. Results are briefly summarized. Other projects conducted include: (1) assessment of vineyard-related problems; (2) LANDSAT analysis for pheasant range management; (3) photo-historic evaluation of Revolutionary War sites; and (4) thermal analysis of building insulation. The objectives, expected benefits and actions, and status of these projects are described

    Stroke Severity Affects Timing: Time From Stroke Code Activation to Initial Imaging is Longer in Patients With Milder Strokes.

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    Optimizing the time it takes to get a potential stroke patient to imaging is essential in a rapid stroke response. At our hospital, door-to-imaging time is comprised of 2 time periods: the time before a stroke is recognized, followed by the period after the stroke code is called during which the stroke team assesses and brings the patient to the computed tomography scanner. To control for delays due to triage, we isolated the time period after a potential stroke has been recognized, as few studies have examined the biases of stroke code responders. This code-to-imaging time (CIT) encompassed the time from stroke code activation to initial imaging, and we hypothesized that perception of stroke severity would affect how quickly stroke code responders act. In consecutively admitted ischemic stroke patients at The Mount Sinai Hospital emergency department, we tested associations between National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale scores (NIHSS), continuously and at different cutoffs, and CIT using spline regression, t tests for univariate analysis, and multivariable linear regression adjusting for age, sex, and race/ethnicity. In our study population, mean CIT was 26 minutes, and mean presentation NIHSS was 8. In univariate and multivariate analyses comparing CIT between mild and severe strokes, stroke scale scores4

    Chemical analysis by X-ray spectroscopy near phase transitions in the solid state

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    The methods discussed in this work show that the types of changes which may be observed, by precise XAS measurements of Absorbance A versus temperature, across a phase transition are: the changes in the relaxation time of the final states due to fluctuations near a phase transition; the detection of the anomalous Bragg condition coupled to phonon modes XAS enhancement that identifies the temperature interval where the phonon modes are active, the symmetry changes which introduce new allowed transitions to finite states below an element edge, near Tc indicate what symmetry changes occur, and the method of XTDAFST0 = XAFS(T) - XAFS(T0), allows the precise measurement of the progressive changes in the Debye-Waller factor versus T near a phase transition, and identify (when no other structural changes occur, except in the vibrational modes of a specific bond) the bond responsible for the transition. The methods have been applied to the superconducting transition in layer cuprates and the metal to insulator transition in NiS2-xSex

    Timing of vessel imaging for suspected large vessel occlusions does not affect groin puncture time in transfer patients with stroke.

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    BACKGROUND: Access to endovascular therapy (ET) in cases of acute ischemic stroke may be limited, and rapid transfer of eligible patients to hospitals with endovascular capability is needed. OBJECTIVE: To determine the optimal timing of diagnostic CT angiography to confirm large vessel occlusion (LVO). METHODS: Of 57 emergency department transfers to Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH) for possible ET from January 2015 through March 2016, 39 (68%) underwent ET, among whom 22 (56%) had CT angiography before transfer and 17 (44%) had CT angiography on arrival. We compared mean outside hospital arrival to groin puncture (OTG) time between the two groups using t-tests and Wilcoxon rank sum tests. OTG was defined as the difference between groin puncture and outside hospital arrival time minus ambulance travel time. RESULTS: Average age was 73±13 years and average National Institute of Health Stroke Scale score was 19±5. There was no difference in average OTG time between the two groups (191 min for CT angiography at outside hospital vs 190 min for CT angiography at MSH (p=0.99 for t-test and 0.69 for rank sum test)). Among the 18 patients who were transferred but did not receive ET, 10 had no LVO, 5 had large established infarcts on arrival and 3 had post-tissue plasminogen activator hemorrhage. In 9/10 patients without LVO, CT angiography was not performed before transfer. CONCLUSIONS: CT angiography timing in the transfer process does not affect OTG time, but 90% of patients without LVO had not had CT angiography before transfer. Hence, it might be beneficial to obtain a CT angiogram at the outside hospital, if it can be acquired and read rapidly, to avoid the cost and potential clinical deterioration associated with unnecessary transfers
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