41,279 research outputs found
Surface roughness influence on the quality factor of high frequency nanoresonators
Surface roughness influences significantly the quality factor of high
frequency nanoresonators for large frequency - relaxation times within the
non-Newtonian regime, where a purely elastic dynamics develops. It is shown
that the influence of sort wavelength roughness, which is expressed by the
roughness exponent H for the case of self-affine roughness, plays significant
role in comparison with the effect of the long wavelength roughness parameters
such as the rms roughness amplitude and the lateral roughness correlation
length. Therefore, the surface morphology can play important role in designing
high-frequency resonators operating within the non-Newtonian regime.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, To appear in J. Appl. Phys. (2008
Pion Interferometry for a Granular Source of Quark-Gluon Plasma Droplets
We examine the two-pion interferometry for a granular source of quark-gluon
plasma droplets. The evolution of the droplets is described by relativistic
hydrodynamics with an equation of state suggested by lattice gauge results.
Pions are assumed to be emitted thermally from the droplets at the freeze-out
configuration characterized by a freeze-out temperature . We find that the
HBT radius decreases if the initial size of the droplets decreases.
On the other hand, depends on the droplet spatial distribution and
is relatively independent of the droplet size. It increases with an increase in
the width of the spatial distribution and the collective-expansion velocity of
the droplets. As a result, the value of can lie close to
for a granular quark-gluon plasma source. The granular model of the emitting
source may provide an explanation to the RHIC HBT puzzle and may lead to a new
insight into the dynamics of the quark-gluon plasma phase transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Acceptor-like deep level defects in ion-implanted ZnO
N-type ZnO samples have been implanted with MeV Zn⁺ ions at room temperature to doses between 1×10⁸ and 2×10¹⁰cm⁻², and the defect evolution has been studied by capacitance-voltage and deep level transient spectroscopy measurements. The results show a dose dependent compensation by acceptor-like defects along the implantation depth profile, and at least four ion-induced deep-level defects arise, where two levels with energy positions of 1.06 and 1.2 eV below the conduction band increase linearly with ion dose and are attributed to intrinsic defects. Moreover, a re-distribution of defects as a function of depth is observed already at temperatures below 400 K.This work was supported by the Norwegian Research
Council through the Frienergi program and the Australian
Research Council through the Discovery projects program
Heavy flavor kinetics at the hadronization transition
We investigate the in-medium modification of the charmonium breakup processes
due to the Mott effect for light (pi, rho) and open-charm (D, D*)
quark-antiquark bound states at the chiral/deconfinement phase transition. The
Mott effect for the D-mesons effectively reduces the threshold for charmonium
breakup cross sections, which is suggested as an explanation of the anomalous
J/psi suppression phenomenon in the NA50 experiment. Further implications of
finite-temperature mesonic correlations for the hadronization of heavy flavors
in heavy-ion collisions are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Contribution to SQM2001 Conference, submitted to
J. Phys.
Bound States of the Klein-Gordon Equation for Woods-Saxon Potential With Position Dependent Mass
The effective mass Klein-Gordon equation in one dimension for the Woods-Saxon
potential is solved by using the Nikiforov-Uvarov method. Energy eigenvalues
and the corresponding eigenfunctions are computed. Results are also given for
the constant mass case.Comment: 13 page
Novel Bose-Einstein Interference in the Passage of a Fast Particle in a Dense Medium
When an energetic particle collides coherently with many medium particles at
high energies, the Bose-Einstein symmetry with respect to the interchange of
the exchanged virtual bosons leads to a destructive interference of the Feynman
amplitudes in most regions of the phase space but a constructive interference
in some other regions of the phase space. As a consequence, the recoiling
medium particles have a tendency to come out collectively along the direction
of the incident fast particle, each carrying a substantial fraction of the
incident longitudinal momentum. Such an interference appearing as collective
recoils of scatterers along the incident particle direction may have been
observed in angular correlations of hadrons associated with a high-
trigger in high-energy AuAu collisions at RHIC.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, invited talk presented at the 35th Symposium on
Nuclear Physics, Cocoyoc, Mexico, January 3, 2012, to be published in IOP
Conference Serie
Interferometry signatures for QCD first-order phase transition in heavy ion collisions at GSI-FAIR energies
Using the technique of quantum transport of the interfering pair we examine
the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) interferometry signatures for the
particle-emitting sources of pions and kaons produced in the heavy ion
collisions at GSI-FAIR energies. The evolution of the sources is described by
relativistic hydrodynamics with the system equation of state of the first-order
phase transition from quark-gluon plasma (QGP) to hadronic matter. We use
quantum probability amplitudes in a path-integral formalism to calculate the
two-particle correlation functions, where the effects of particle decay and
multiple scattering are taken into consideration. We find that the HBT radii of
kaons are smaller than those of pions for the same initial conditions. Both the
HBT radii of pions and kaons increase with the system initial energy density.
The HBT lifetimes of the pion and kaon sources are sensitive to the initial
energy density. They are significantly prolonged when the initial energy
density is tuned to the phase boundary between the QGP and mixed phase. This
prolongations of the HBT lifetimes of pions and kaons may likely be observed in
the heavy ion collisions with an incident energy in the GSI-FAIR energy range.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Pauli susceptibility of nonadiabatic Fermi liquids
The nonadiabatic regime of the electron-phonon interaction leads to behaviors
of some physical measurable quantities qualitatively different from those
expected from the Migdal-Eliashberg theory. Here we identify in the Pauli
paramagnetic susceptibility one of such quantities and show that the
nonadiabatic corrections reduce with respect to its adiabatic limit. We
show also that the nonadiabatic regime induces an isotope dependence of ,
which in principle could be measured.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, euromacr.tex, europhys.sty. Replaced with
accepted version (Europhysics Letters
Exploring Early Parton Momentum Distribution with the Ridge from the Near-Side Jet
In a central nucleus-nucleus collision at high-energies, medium partons
kicked by a near-side jet acquire a momentum along the jet direction and
subsequently materialize as the observed ridge particles. They carry direct
information on the early parton momentum distribution which can be extracted by
using the ridge data for central AuAu collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}}=200 GeV. The
extracted parton momentum distribution has a thermal-like transverse momentum
distribution but a non-Gaussian, relatively flat rapidity distribution at
mid-rapidity with sharp kinematic boundaries at large rapidities that depend on
the transverse momentum.Comment: In Proceedings of 20th International Conference on Ultra-Relativistic
Nucleus Nucleus Collisions, Jaipur, India, Feb. 4-10, 200
Protocol for an HTA report: Does therapeutic writing help people with long-term conditions? Systematic review, realist synthesis and economic modelling
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/Introduction: Long-term medical conditions (LTCs) cause reduced health-related quality of life and considerable health service expenditure. Writing therapy has potential to improve physical and mental health in people with LTCs, but its effectiveness is not established. This project aims to establish the clinical and cost-effectiveness of therapeutic writing in LTCs by systematic review and economic evaluation, and to evaluate context and mechanisms by which it might work, through realist synthesis.
Methods: Included are any comparative study of therapeutic writing compared with no writing, waiting list, attention control or placebo writing in patients with any diagnosed LTCs that report at least one of the following: relevant clinical outcomes; quality of life; health service use; psychological, behavioural or social functioning; adherence or adverse events. Searches will be conducted in the main medical databases including MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, The Cochrane Library and Science Citation Index. For the realist review, further purposive and iterative searches through snowballing techniques will be undertaken. Inclusions, data extraction and quality assessment will be in duplicate with disagreements resolved through discussion. Quality assessment will include using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria. Data synthesis will be narrative and tabular with meta-analysis where appropriate. De novo economic modelling will be attempted in one clinical area if sufficient evidence is available and performed according to the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) reference case.National Institute for Health Research
Health Technology Assessment (NIHR HTA) Programm
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