6,343 research outputs found
Study to Assess the Prevalence of Soft Drinking and its Determinants among the School going Children of Gwalior city
Background: Over the time there has been spectrum of changes in the universe. It may be at physical, chemical and cultural level. People have adopted newer life styles like their working style, clothing’s, food habits and so on. One of the pertinent example of this newer food habits is rising consumption of soft drinks rather than traditional home made drinks. This study was aimed to find out various determinants responsible for this rising trend of soft drinking so that effective intervention can be undertaken to overcome this creeping problem. Objectives: To find out the prevalence of soft drinking consumption among the students and to assess the determinants of soft drink consumption among the students. Materials and methods: It was a cross sectional study. A sample of 200 students was selected from the both govt. and private schools by stratified random sampling. Then they all were interviewed by using pre tested, semi structured proforma. Later on data was analyzed manually and by using suitable statistical software. Results: Frequent drinking of soft drinks was found more among the students of private schools than govt. (p < 0.05). A significant association was found between pocket money, TV watching and frequency of soft drinking (p< 0.05).Other reasons which were found to be responsible by far for frequent soft drinking like lack of awareness regarding hazards, frequent TV watching, desire of new taste, lack of health education from the parents side etc. Conclusion: Soft drinking consumption is creeping day by day amongst the children with out knowing their hazards. And they are the future of any country so there should be effective intervention from both sides govt. as well as parents to get rid of it at earliest
Long-range interactions of hydrogen atoms in excited states. III. nS-1S interactions for n >= 3
The long-range interaction of excited neutral atoms has a number of
interesting and surprising properties, such as the prevalence of long-range,
oscillatory tails, and the emergence of numerically large can der Waals C_6
coefficients. Furthermore, the energetically quasi-degenerate nP states require
special attention and lead to mathematical subtleties. Here, we analyze the
interaction of excited hydrogen atoms in nS states (3 <= n <= 12) with
ground-state hydrogen atoms, and find that the C_6 coefficients roughly grow
with the fourth power of the principal quantum number, and can reach values in
excess of 240,000 (in atomic units) for states with n = 12. The nonretarded van
der Waals result is relevant to the distance range R << a_0/alpha, where a_0 is
the Bohr radius and alpha is the fine-structure constant. The Casimir-Polder
range encompasses the interatomic distance range a_0/alpha << R << hbar c/L,
where L is the Lamb shift energy. In this range, the contribution of
quasi-degenerate excited nP states remains nonretarded and competes with the
1/R^2 and 1/R^4 tails of the pole terms which are generated by lower-lying mP
states with 2 <= m <= n-1, due to virtual resonant emission. The dominant pole
terms are also analyzed in the Lamb shift range R >> hbar c/L. The familiar
1/R^7 asymptotics from the usual Casimir-Polder theory is found to be
completely irrelevant for the analysis of excited-state interactions. The
calculations are carried out to high precision using computer algebra in order
to handle a large number of terms in intermediate steps of the calculation, for
highly excited states.Comment: 17 pages; RevTe
Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in bulk and thin-film CuMnAs for antiferromagnetic memory applications
CuMnAs with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy is proposed as an active
material for antiferromagnetic memory. Information can be stored in the
antiferromagnetic domain state, while writing and readout can rely on the
existence of the surface magnetization. It is predicted, based on
first-principles calculations, that easy-axis anisotropy can be achieved in
bulk CuMnAs by substituting a few percent of As atoms by Ge, Si, Al, or B. This
effect is attributed to the changing occupation of certain electronic bands
near the Fermi level induced by the hole doping. The calculated temperature
dependence of the magnetic anisotropy does not exhibit any anomalies. Thin
CuMnAs(001) films are also predicted to have perpendicular magnetic anisotropy.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figure
Mef2 induction of the immediate early gene Hr38/Nr4a is terminated by Sirt1 to promote ethanol tolerance.
Drug naïve animals given a single dose of ethanol show changed responses to subsequent doses, including the development of ethanol tolerance and ethanol preference. These simple forms of behavioral plasticity are due in part to changes in gene expression and neuronal properties. Surprisingly little is known about how ethanol initiates changes in gene expression or what the changes do. Here we demonstrate a role in ethanol plasticity for Hr38, the sole Drosophila homolog of the mammalian Nr4a1/2/3 class of immediate early response transcription factors. Acute ethanol exposure induces transient expression of Hr38 and other immediate early neuronal activity genes. Ethanol activates the Mef2 transcriptional activator to induce Hr38, and the Sirt1 histone/protein deacetylase is required to terminate Hr38 induction. Loss of Hr38 decreases ethanol tolerance and causes precocious but short-lasting ethanol preference. Similarly, reduced Mef2 activity in all neurons or specifically in the mushroom body α/β neurons decreases ethanol tolerance; Sirt1 promotes ethanol tolerance in these same neurons. Genetically decreasing Hr38 expression levels in Sirt1 null mutants restores ethanol tolerance, demonstrating that both induction and termination of Hr38 expression are important for behavioral plasticity to proceed. These data demonstrate that Hr38 functions as an immediate early transcription factor that promotes ethanol behavioral plasticity
Virtual Resonant Emission and Oscillatory Long-Range Tails in van der Waals Interactions of Excited States: QED Treatment and Applications
We report on a quantum electrodynamic (QED) investigation of the interaction
between a ground state atom with another atom in an excited state. General
expressions, applicable to any atom, are indicated for the long-range tails
which are due to virtual resonant emission and absorption into and from vacuum
modes whose frequency equals the transition frequency to available lower-lying
atomic states. For identical atoms, one of which is in an excited state, we
also discuss the mixing term which depends on the symmetry of the two-atom wave
function (these evolve into either the gerade or the ungerade state for close
approach), and we include all nonresonant states in our rigorous QED treatment.
In order to illustrate the findings, we analyze the fine-structure resolved van
der Waals interaction for nD-1S hydrogen interactions with n=8,10,12 and find
surprisingly large numerical coefficients.Comment: 6 pages; RevTe
Duality in matrix lattice Boltzmann models
The notion of duality between the hydrodynamic and kinetic (ghost) variables
of lattice kinetic formulations of the Boltzmann equation is introduced. It is
suggested that this notion can serve as a guideline in the design of matrix
versions of the lattice Boltzmann equation in a physically transparent and
computationally efficient way.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
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