11,401 research outputs found
The crystal structures of some methyleneamino and cyclopentadienyl complexes of main group metals
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Excess nitrogen leaching and C/N decline in the Tillingbourne catchment, southern England: INCA process modelling for current and historic time series
Measurements of nitrate deposition and streamwater chemistry in the Tillingbourne Catchment, in Southern England, made in 1979-1982 and 1999-2001 show a 216% increase in Nitrogen leaching despite a reduction in N inputs. Both the historical and current data sets have been modelled using the Integrated Nitrogen Model in Catchments (INCA). The process-based model is shown to reproduce the historical patterns of N release from the catchment. However, modelling the increased leaching of N during recent years required an increase of the mineralisation control parameter in the model, suggesting enhanced mineralisation rates. Comparing historic and current soils data for C/N ratios shows that there has been a reduction in C/N from 38 to 26% in the humus layer and a reduction from 33 to 26% in the mineral soil horizon. This significant fall in C/N is consistent with the increase in N saturation in the H and Ah horizons of the major catchment soil.</p> <p style='line-height: 20px;'><b>Keywords: </b>acid deposition, recovery, nitrogen, Carbon-Nitrogen ratios, Tillingbourne, Thames, catchment studies, nutrient leaching, modelling</p
Toward New Therapeutic Mechanisms in Bipolar Disorder: Analog Investigation of Self-Compassion and Nonattachment to Self
There is growing interest in psychological processes that might be targeted in treatments for bipolar disorder (BD). One such process is a vulnerability at the level of self-concept, characterized by presence of, and fluctuations between positive and negative self-concept. The aim of the present study was to advance this literature by investigating the role of two emerging meta-cognitive processes – self-compassion and nonattachment to self – which have potential to therapeutically modulate this unstable self-concept in BD. Using an analog design, it was hypothesized that both variables would mediate the relationship between bipolar tendencies and psychological distress in a general population sample. Participants (N = 372 Australian university students) completed self-report measures of manic and depressive tendencies, selfcompassion, nonattachment to self and psychological distress. To investigate the specificity of the two hypothesized mediators, a better-researched psychological variable – rumination – was also included in mediation analyses. Bivariate analyses found tendencies toward mania and depression to be associated with diminished self-compassion and nonattachment to self, while both psychological processes were negatively associated with psychological distress. Mediation analyses showed, as expected, self-compassion and nonattachment to self mediated the relationship between bipolar tendencies and psychological distress after controlling for the effects of rumination. The present findings add incrementally to this literature by demonstrating that two meta-cognitive processes – self-compassion and nonattachment to self – act as mediators, and may be modifiable mechanisms linking bipolar vulnerability to negative mood outcomes. Future research should tackle longstanding conceptual issues in this domain, including the relationship between contents of self-concept (an established focus of BD research) and the person’s meta-cognitive approach to their self-concept (the focus here)
Letting Go of Self: The Creation of the Nonattachment to Self Scale
The Buddhist notion of nonattachment relates to an engagement with experience with flexibility and without fixation on achieving specified outcomes. The present study sought to define, create and validate a new measure of nonattachment as it applies to notions of the self. A new construct of “nonattachment to self” (NTS) was developed, defined the absence of fixation on self-related concepts, thoughts and feelings, and a capacity to flexibly interact with these concepts, thoughts and feelings without trying to control them. Two studies were conducted in the development of the new scale. With expert consultation, study 1 (n = 445) established a single factor, internally consistent 7-item scale via exploratory factor analysis. Study 2 (n = 388, n = 338) confirmed the factor structure of the new 7-item scale using confirmatory factor analyses. Study 2 also found the new scale to be internally consistent, with evidence supporting its test-retest reliability, criterion, and construct validity. Nonattachment to self-emerged as a unique way of relating to the self, distinct from general nonattachment, that aligned with higher levels of well-being and adaptive functioning
Effective Interaction Techniques for the Gamow Shell Model
We apply a contour deformation technique in momentum space to the newly
developed Gamow shell model, and study the drip-line nuclei 5He, 6He and 7He. A
major problem in Gamow shell-model studies of nuclear many-body systems is the
increasing dimensionality of many-body configurations due to the large number
of resonant and complex continuum states necessary to reproduce bound and
resonant state energies. We address this problem using two different effective
operator approaches generalized to the complex momentum plane. These are the
Lee-Suzuki similarity transformation method for complex interactions and the
multi-reference perturbation theory method. The combination of these two
approaches results in a large truncation of the relevant configurations
compared with direct diagonalization. This offers interesting perspectives for
studies of weakly bound systems.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figs, Revtex
Theory of Linear Spin Wave Emission from a Bloch Domain Wall
We report an analytical theory of linear emission of exchange spin waves from
a Bloch domain wall, excited by a uniform microwave magnetic field. The problem
is reduced to a one-dimensional Schr\"odinger-like equation with a
P\"oschl-Teller potential and a driving term of the same profile. The emission
of plane spin waves is observed at excitation frequencies above a threshold
value, as a result of a linear process. The height-to-width aspect ratio of the
P\"oschl-Teller profile for a domain wall is found to correspond to a local
maximum of the emission efficiency. Furthermore, for a tailored P\"oschl-Teller
potential with a variable aspect ratio, particular values of the latter can
lead to enhanced or even completely suppressed emission.Comment: added ancillary file
Search for the second forbidden beta decay of 8B to the ground state of 8Be
A significant decay branch of 8B to the ground state of 8Be would extend the
solar neutrino spectrum to higher energies than anticipated in the standard
solar models. These high-energy neutrinos would affect current neutrino
oscillation results and also would be a background to measurements of the hep
process. We have measured the delayed alpha particles from the decay of 8B,
with the goal of observing the two 46-keV alpha particles arising from the
ground-state decay. The 8B was produced using an in-flight radioactive beam
technique. It was implanted in a silicon PIN-diode detector that was capable of
identifying the alpha-particles from the 8Be ground state. From this
measurement we find an upper limit (at 90% confidence level) of 7.3 x 10^{-5}
for the branching ratio to the ground state. In addition to describing this
measurement, we present a theoretical calculation for this branching ratio.Comment: One reference corrected. Minor edits in tex
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