2,011 research outputs found
Paired galaxies with different activity levels and their supernovae
We investigate the influence of close neighbor galaxies on the properties of
supernovae (SNe) and their host galaxies using 56 SNe located in pairs of
galaxies with different levels of star formation (SF) and nuclear activity. The
statistical study of SN hosts shows that there is no significant difference
between morphologies of hosts in our sample and the larger general sample of SN
hosts in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 8 (DR8). The mean
distance of type II SNe from nuclei of hosts is greater by about a factor of 2
than that of type Ibc SNe. The distributions and mean distances of SNe are
consistent with previous results compiled with the larger sample. For the first
time it is shown that SNe Ibc are located in pairs with significantly smaller
difference of radial velocities between components than pairs containing SNe Ia
and II. We consider this as a result of higher star formation rate (SFR) of
these closer systems of galaxies. SN types are not correlated with the
luminosity ratio of host and neighbor galaxies in pairs. The orientation of SNe
with respect to the preferred direction toward neighbor galaxy is found to be
isotropic and independent of kinematical properties of the galaxy pair.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 5 tables, online data, published in Astrophysics
and Space Scienc
May Measurement Month 2017: an analysis of blood pressure screening results in Armenia-Europe
Elevated blood pressure (BP) is a growing burden worldwide, leading to over 10 million deaths each year. May Measurement Month (MMM) is a global initiative aimed at raising awareness of high BP and to act as a temporary solution to the lack of screening programmes worldwide. An opportunistic cross-sectional survey of volunteers aged ≥18 was carried out in May 2017. Blood pressure measurement, the definition of hypertension and statistical analysis followed the standard MMM protocol. The study was conducted in public areas (14 sites in Yerevan and 18 in regions), both indoor and outdoor, as well as in 42 primary care centres. A total of 9199 individuals were screened during MMM17 of which 9186 had three BP measurements available. The mean age of screened individuals was 50 ± 16.7 years, 57.3% was female. At the time of screening 17.9% were on antihypertensive medication. After imputation, a percentage of participants with hypertension was 33.9%, and 52.9% of them were on treatment. Of those treated, 77.0% had uncontrolled BP. MMM17 was the largest BP screening campaign undertaken in Armenia. We found that in Armenia, untreated hypertension is common, as is not adequately treated hypertension
An analysis of blood pressure screening of 21 112 participants in Armenia: May Measurement Month 2018.
Elevated blood pressure (BP) is a growing burden worldwide and is the leading cause of mortality and disability-adjusted life years all over the world. May Measurement Month (MMM) is a global initiative aimed to raise awareness of high BP and to act as a temporary solution to the lack of screening programmes worldwide. An opportunistic cross-sectional survey of volunteers aged ≥18 was carried out in May to July 2018. Blood pressure measurement, the definition of hypertension (HTN) and statistical analysis followed the standard MMM protocol. The study was conducted in public areas (17 sites in Yerevan and 22 in regions), both indoor and outdoor, as well as in 78 primary care centres. A total of 21 112 individuals were screened during MMM18, of which 20 732 had three BP measurements available. The mean age of screened individuals was 46.2 ± 17.3 years, 57.8% were female. At the time of screening, 26.1% were on antihypertensive medication. After imputation, the percentage of participants with HTN was 38.7%, and 76.7% of them were aware of their high BP. Of participants receiving treatment, 47.1% had a controlled BP. MMM18 was the largest BP screening campaign undertaken in Armenia. We found that the proportion of HTN is substantial in Armenia, which may be a vital contributor to the growing burden of non-communicable diseases. Our results also suggest that untreated HTN is common and when treated still not adequately controlled in Armenia. The current situation, with an insufficient control rate of HTN, must be changed as soon as possible
Quantum oscillator as 1D anyon
It is shown that in one spatial dimension the quantum oscillator is dual to
the charged particle situated in the field described by the superposition of
Coulomb and Calogero-Sutherland potentials.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
Spin-1/2 frustrated antiferromagnet on a spatially anisotopic square lattice: contribution of exact diagonalizations
The phase diagram of a spin-1/2 model is investigated by means of
exact diagonalizations on finite samples. This model is a generalization of the
model on the square lattice with two different nearest-neighbor
couplings and may be also viewed as an array of coupled Heisenberg
chains. The results suggest that the resonnating valence bond state predicted
by Nersesyan and Tsvelik [Phys. Rev. B {\bf 67}, 024422 (2003)] for is realized and extends beyond the limit of small interchain coupling
along a curve nearly coincident with the line where the energy per spin is
maximum. This line is likely bordered on both side by a columnar dimer long
range order. This columnar order could extends for which correspond
to the model.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures, final versio
Superconformal Yang-Mills quantum mechanics and Calogero model with OSp(N|2,R) symmetry
In spacetime dimension two, pure Yang-Mills possesses no physical degrees of
freedom, and consequently it admits a supersymmetric extension to couple to an
arbitrary number, N say, of Majorana-Weyl gauginos. This results in (N,0) super
Yang-Mills. Further, its dimensional reduction to mechanics doubles the number
of supersymmetries, from N to N+N, to include conformal supercharges, and leads
to a superconformal Yang-Mills quantum mechanics with symmetry group
OSp(N|2,R). We comment on its connection to AdS_2 \times S^{N-1} and reduction
to a supersymmetric Calogero model.Comment: 1+28 pages, no figure; Refs added. To appear in JHE
Measurement of Charged-Pion Production in Deep-Inelastic Scattering Off Nuclei with the CLAS Detector
Background: Energetic quarks in nuclear deep-inelastic scattering propagate through the nuclear medium. Processes that are believed to occur inside nuclei include quark energy loss through medium-stimulated gluon bremsstrahlung and intranuclear interactions of forming hadrons. More data are required to gain a more complete understanding of these effects.
Purpose: To test the theoretical models of parton transport and hadron formation, we compared their predictions for the nuclear and kinematic dependence of pion production in nuclei.
Methods: We have measured charged-pion production in semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering off D, C, Fe, and Pb using the CLAS detector and the CEBAF 5.014-GeV electron beam. We report results on the nuclear-to-deuterium multiplicity ratio for π+ and π− as a function of energy transfer, four-momentum transfer, and pion energy fraction or transverse momentum—the first three-dimensional study of its kind.
Results: The π+ multiplicity ratio is found to depend strongly on the pion fractional energy z and reaches minimum values of 0.67 ± 0.03, 0.43 ± 0.02, and 0.27 ± 0.01 for the C, Fe, and Pb targets, respectively. The z dependencies of the multiplicity ratios for π+ and π− are equal within uncertainties for C and Fe targets but show differences at the level of 10% for the Pb-target data. The results are qualitatively described by the GiBUU transport model, as well as with a model based on hadron absorption, but are in tension with calculations based on nuclear fragmentation functions.
Conclusions: These precise results will strongly constrain the kinematic and flavor dependence of nuclear effects in hadron production, probing an unexplored kinematic region. They will help to reveal how the nucleus reacts to a fast quark, thereby shedding light on its color structure and transport properties and on the mechanisms of the hadronization process
Charge Fluctuations in \pi^{+}\rp and \rK^{+}\rp Collisions at 250 GeV/
We report on measurements of event-by-event charge fluctuations in
\pi^{+}\rp and \rK^{+}\rp collisions at 250 GeV/. The dependence of
these fluctuations on the size of the rapidity windows are presented for the
first time in the full phase space domain. The corrections for the influence of
global charge conservation and leading-particle stopping are tested by the
data. The discrepancy due to incomplete correction given by STAR and PHENIX are
estimated. The dependence of the fluctuations on the position of the rapidity
bin and on the multiplicity at different rapidity windows are also presented.Comment: 4pages, 3figure
Rapidity, azimuthal, and multiplicity dependence of mean transverse momentum and transverse momentum correlations in and collisions in =22 GeV
Rapidity, azimuthal and multiplicity dependence of mean transverse momentum and transverse momentum correlations of charged particles is studied in pi/sup positive and K/sup positive collisions at 250 GeV/c incident beam momentum. For the first time, it is found that the rapidity dependence of the two-particle transverse momentum correlation is different from that of the mean transverse momentum, but both have similar multiplicity dependence. In particular, the transverse momentum correlations are boost invariant. This is similar to the recently found boost invariance of the charge balance function. A strong azimuthal dependence of the transverse momentum correlations originates from the constraint of energy-momentum conservation. The results are compared with those from the PYTHIA Monte Carlo generator. The similarities to and differences with the results from current heavy ion experiments are discussed
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