3,634 research outputs found
Recursive relations for a quiver gauge theory
We study the recursive relations for a quiver gauge theory with the gauge
group with bifundamental fermions transforming as
. We work out the recursive relation for the amplitudes
involving a pair of quark and antiquark and gluons of each gauge group. We
realize directly in the recursive relations the invariance under the order
preserving permutations of the gluons of the first and the second gauge group.
We check the proposed relations for MHV, 6-point and 7-point amplitudes and
find the agreements with the known results and the known relations with the
single gauge group amplitudes. The proposed recursive relation is much more
efficient in calculating the amplitudes than using the known relations with the
amplitudes of the single gauge group.Comment: 33 pages and 2 figures, minor correction
Late-onset bloodstream infection and perturbed maturation of the gastrointestinal microbiota in premature infants
Late-onset bloodstream infection (LO-BSI) is a common complication of prematurity, and lack of timely diagnosis and treatment can have life-threatening consequences. We sought to identify clinical characteristics and microbial signatures in the gastrointestinal microbiota preceding diagnosis of LO-BSI in premature infants.Daily faecal samples and clinical data were collected over two years from 369 premature neonates (<32 weeks gestation). We analysed samples from 22 neonates who developed LO-BSI and 44 matched control infants. Next-generation sequencing of 16S rRNA gene regions amplified by PCR from total faecal DNA was used to characterise the microbiota of faecal samples preceding diagnosis from infants with LO-BSI and controls. Culture of selected samples was undertaken, and bacterial isolates identified using MALDI-TOF. Antibiograms from bloodstream and faecal isolates were compared to explore strain similarity.From the week prior to diagnosis, infants with LO-BSI had higher proportions of faecal aerobes/facultative anaerobes compared to controls. Risk factors for LO-BSI were identified by multivariate analysis. Enterobacteriaceal sepsis was associated with antecedent multiple lines, low birth weight and a faecal microbiota with prominent Enterobacteriaceae. Staphylococcal sepsis was associated with Staphylococcus OTU faecal over-abundance, and the number of days prior to diagnosis of mechanical ventilation and of the presence of centrally-placed lines. In 12 cases, the antibiogram of the bloodstream isolate matched that of a component of the faecal microbiota in the sample collected closest to diagnosis.The gastrointestinal tract is an important reservoir for LO-BSI organisms, pathogens translocating across the epithelial barrier. LO-BSI is associated with an aberrant microbiota, with abundant staphylococci and Enterobacteriaceae and a failure to mature towards predominance of obligate anaerobes
Design of a ferrite rod antenna for harvesting energy from medium wave broadcast signals
Radio frequency (RF) energy harvesting is an emerging technology that has the potential to eliminate the need for batteries and reduce maintenance costs of sensing applications. The antenna is one of the critical components that determines its performance and while antenna design has been well researched for the purpose of communication, the design for RF energy harvesting applications has not been widely addressed. The authors present an optimised design for such an antenna for harvesting energy from medium wave broadcast transmissions. They derive and use a model for computing the optimal antenna configuration given application requirements on output voltage and power, material costs and physical dimensions. Design requirements for powering autonomous smart meters have been considered. The proposed approach was used to obtain the antenna configuration that is able to deliver 1 mW of power to 1 kΩ load at a distance of up to 9 km, sufficient to replace batteries on low-power sensing applications. Measurements using a prototype device have been used to verify the authors simulations
Delocalization and conductance quantization in one-dimensional systems
We investigate the delocalization and conductance quantization in finite
one-dimensional chains with only off-diagonal disorder coupled to leads. It is
shown that the appearence of delocalized states at the middle of the band under
correlated disorder is strongly dependent upon the even-odd parity of the
number of sites in the system. In samples with inversion symmetry the
conductance equals for odd samples, and is smaller for even parity.
This result suggests that this even-odd behaviour found previously in the
presence of electron correlations may be unrelated to charging effects in the
sample.Comment: submitted to PR
Isospin dependence of relative yields of and mesons at 1.528 AGeV
Results on and meson production in Ru +
Ru and Zr + Zr collisions at a beam kinetic
energy of 1.528 GeV, measured with the FOPI detector at GSI-Darmstadt, are
investigated as a possible probe of isospin effects in high density nuclear
matter. The measured double ratio ()/() is
compared to the predictions of a thermal model and a Relativistic Mean Field
transport model using two different collision scenarios and under different
assumptions on the stiffness of the symmetry energy. We find a good agreement
with the thermal model prediction and the assumption of a soft symmetry energy
for infinite nuclear matter while more realistic transport simulations of the
collisions show a similar agreement with the data but also exhibit a reduced
sensitivity to the symmetry term.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Determination of Leptospira borgpetersenii serovar Javanica and Leptospira interrogans serovar Bataviae as the persistent Leptospira serovars circulating in the urban rat populations in peninsular Malaysia
Background: Leptospirosis is an emerging infectious disease of global significance, and is endemic in tropical countries, including Malaysia. Over the last decade, a dramatic increase of human cases was reported; however, information on the primary vector, the rat, and the Leptospira serovars circulating among the rat population is limited. Therefore, the present study was undertaken to isolate Leptospira and characterise the serovars circulating in the urban rat populations from selected main cities in Peninsular Malaysia. Methods: Rat trappings were carried out between October 2011 to February 2014 in five urban cities which were chosen as study sites to represent different geographical locations in Peninsular Malaysia. Microscopic agglutination test (MAT) and PCR were carried out to identify the Leptospiral serogroup and determine the pathogenic status of the isolates, respectively while pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD)-PCR were used to characterize the isolates. Results: Three rat species were identified from the three hundred and fifty seven rats captured with Rattus rattus, being the dominant rat species (285, 80 %) followed by Rattus norgevicus (53, 15 %) and Rattus exulans (19, 5 %). Only 39 samples (11.0 %) were positive by culture and further confirmed as pathogenic Leptospira by PCR. Significant associations were shown between host infection with locality, season, host-age and species. Based on MAT, two serogroups were identified in the population namely; L. borgpetersenii serogroup Javanica (n = 16) and L. interrogans serogroup Bataviae (n = 23). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) distinguished the two serovars in the urban rat populations: L. borgpetersenii serovar Javanica (41 %), and L. interrogans serovar Bataviae (59 %). RAPD-PCR yielded 14 distinct patterns and was found to be more discriminative than PFGE. Conclusions: This study confirms two Leptospira serovars circulating among the urban rats population in Peninsular Malaysia namely; L. borgpetersenii serovar Javanica and L. interrogans serovars Bataviae. Despite the low number of isolates obtained from the rat population, this study suggests that rodent control programs and disease surveillance may help to reduce the possible risk of disease transmission
Two-proton small-angle correlations in central heavy-ion collisions: a beam-energy and system-size dependent study
Small-angle correlations of pairs of protons emitted in central collisions of
Ca + Ca, Ru + Ru and Au + Au at beam energies from 400 to 1500 MeV per nucleon
are investigated with the FOPI detector system at SIS/GSI Darmstadt.
Dependences on system size and beam energy are presented which extend the
experimental data basis of pp correlations in the SIS energy range
substantially. The size of the proton-emitting source is estimated by comparing
the experimental data with the output of a final-state interaction model which
utilizes either static Gaussian sources or the one-body phase-space
distribution of protons provided by the BUU transport approach. The trends in
the experimental data, i.e. system-size and beam energy dependences, are well
reproduced by this hybrid model. However, the pp correlation function is found
rather insensitive to the stiffness of the equation of state entering the
transport model calculations.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted at Eur. Phys. Journ.
Charged pion production in Ru+Ru collisions at 400A and 1528A MeV
We present transverse momentum and rapidity spectra of charged pions in
central Ru + Ru collisions at 400 and 1528 MeV. The data exhibit enhanced
production at low transverse momenta compared to the expectations from the
thermal model that includes the decay of -resonances and thermal
pions. Modification of the -spectral function and the Coulomb
interaction are necessary to describe the detailed shape of the transverse
momentum spectra. Within the framework of the thermal model, the freeze-out
radii of pions are similar at both beam energies. The IQMD model reproduces the
shapes of the transverse momentum and rapidity spectra of pions, but the
predicted absolute yields are larger than in the measurements, especially at
lower beam energy.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Excitation function of elliptic flow in Au+Au collisions and the nuclear matter equation of state
We present measurements of the excitation function of elliptic flow at
midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at beam energies from 0.09 to 1.49 GeV per
nucleon. For the integral flow, we discuss the interplay between collective
expansion and spectator shadowing for three centrality classes. A complete
excitation function of transverse momentum dependence of elliptic flow is
presented for the first time in this energy range, revealing a rapid change
with incident energy below 0.4 AGeV, followed by an almost perfect scaling at
the higher energies. The equation of state of compressed nuclear matter is
addressed through comparisons to microscopic transport model calculations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures, submitted for publication. Data files will
be available at http://www.gsi.de/~fopiwww/pub
Strange meson production in Al+Al collisions at 1.9A GeV
The production of K, K and (1020) mesons is studied in Al+Al
collisions at a beam energy of 1.9A GeV which is close or below the production
threshold in NN reactions. Inverse slopes, anisotropy parameters, and total
emission yields of K mesons are obtained. A comparison of the ratio of
kinetic energy distributions of K and K mesons to the HSD transport
model calculations suggests that the inclusion of the in-medium modifications
of kaon properties is necessary to reproduce the ratio. The inverse slope and
total yield of mesons are deduced. The contribution to K production
from meson decays is found to be [17 3 (stat) (syst)]
%. The results are in line with previous K and data obtained for
different colliding systems at similar incident beam energies.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
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