17,205 research outputs found

    Growth suppression of antibiotic-resistant Salmonella typhimurium DT104 by a non-DT104 strain in vitro

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    Growth suppression of antibiotic-resistant Salmonella typhimurium DT104 by a non-DT104 strain was investigated in vitro. Chromosomal mutants of eight antibiotic-resistant DT104 strains were generated by sub-culturing on desoxycholate hydrogen sulfide lactose agar containing 25 µg/ml of nalidixic acid. Low counts of each of these mutants (designated as “minority cultures”) were inoculated into 24-h cultures of a non-DT104 S. typhimurium strain (designated as “majority culture”) to test the ability of the majority culture to suppress the multiplication of the minority culture. Multiplication of small numbers of the antibiotic-resistant DT104 strains was significantly (P < 0.05) prevented when the DT104s were added to 24-h brain heart infusion cultures of the non-DT104 strain. This observation has practical implications for the control of the menacing antibiotic-resistant Salmonella typhimurium DT104

    Nonlinear response for external field and perturbation in the Vlasov system

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    A nonlinear response theory is provided by use of the transient linearization method in the spatially one-dimensional Vlasov systems. The theory inclusively gives responses to external fields and to perturbations for initial stationary states, and is applicable even to the critical point of a second order phase transition. We apply the theory to the Hamiltonian mean-field model, a toy model of a ferromagnetic body, and investigate the critical exponent associated with the response to the external field at the critical point in particular. The obtained critical exponent is nonclassical value 3/2, while the classical value is 3. However, interestingly, one scaling relation holds with another nonclassical critical exponent of susceptibility in the isolated Vlasov systems. Validity of the theory is numerically confirmed by directly simulating temporal evolutions of the Vlasov equation.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E, Lemma 2 is correcte

    Landau like theory for universality of critical exponents in quasistatioary states of isolated mean-field systems

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    An external force dynamically drives an isolated mean-field Hamiltonian system to a long-lasting quasistationary state, whose lifetime increases with population of the system. For second order phase transitions in quasistationary states, two non-classical critical exponents have been reported individually by using a linear and a nonlinear response theories in a toy model. We provide a simple way to compute the critical exponents all at once, which is an analog of the Landau theory. The present theory extends universality class of the non-classical exponents to spatially periodic one-dimensional systems, and shows that the exponents satisfy a classical scaling relation inevitably by using a key scaling of momentum.Comment: 7 page

    A Theory of Optimum Tariff Under Revenue Constraint.

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    This paper analyzes the revenue-constrained optimum tariff problem. When a fixed level of tax revenue has to be collected only from tariffs, an efficient resource allocation can not be achieved by any tariff structure. Thus we need to find the optimum tariff structure as the second best resource allocation.TAXATION ; TRADE ; ECONOMIC THEORY

    Non-mean-field Critical Exponent in a Mean-field Model : Dynamics versus Statistical Mechanics

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    The mean-field theory tells that the classical critical exponent of susceptibility is the twice of that of magnetization. However, the linear response theory based on the Vlasov equation, which is naturally introduced by the mean-field nature, makes the former exponent half of the latter for families of quasistationary states having second order phase transitions in the Hamiltonian mean-field model and its variances. We clarify that this strange exponent is due to existence of Casimir invariants which trap the system in a quasistationary state for a time scale diverging with the system size. The theoretical prediction is numerically confirmed by NN-body simulations for the equilibrium states and a family of quasistationary states.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Energy Centroids of Spin II States by Random Two-body Interactions

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    In this paper we study the behavior of energy centroids (denoted as EIˉ\bar{E_I}) of spin II states in the presence of random two-body interactions, for systems ranging from very simple systems (e.g. single-jj shell for very small jj) to very complicated systems (e.g., many-jj shells with different parities and with isospin degree of freedom). Regularities of EIˉ\bar{E_I}'s discussed in terms of the so-called geometric chaoticity (or quasi-randomness of two-body coefficients of fractional parentage) in earlier works are found to hold even for very simple systems in which one cannot assume the geometric chaoticity. It is shown that the inclusion of isospin and parity does not "break" the regularities of EIˉ\bar{E_I}'s.Comment: four figures. to appear in Physical Review

    Structural analysis of hollow blades: Torsional stress analysis of hollow fan blades for aircraft jet engines

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    A torsional stress analysis of hollow fans blades by the finite element method is presented. The fans are considered to be double circular arc blades, hollowed 30 percent, and twisted by a component of the centrifugal force by the rated revolution. The effects of blade hollowing on strength and rigidity are discussed. The effects of reinforcing webs, placed in the hollowed section in varying numbers and locations, on torsional rigidity and the convergence of stresses, are reported. A forecast of the 30 percent hollowing against torsional loadings is discussed

    Commissioning Status Of The KEKB Linac

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