11,595 research outputs found

    Scaling Law for Baryon Coupling to its Current and its possible applications

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    The baryon- coupling to its current (λB\lambda_{B}), in conventional QCD sum rule calculations (QCDSR), is shown to scale as the cubic power of the baryon mass, MBM_B. Some theoretical justification for it comes from a simple light-cone model and also general scaling arguments for QCD. But more importantly, taken as a phenomenological ansatz for the present, this may find very good use in current explorations of possible applications of QCDSR to baryon physics both at temperature T=0T = 0, T0T \ne 0 and/or density ρ=0\rho = 0, ρ0\rho \ne 0.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 tex picture and 1 ps pictur

    Phase transition between non-extremal and extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes

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    We discuss the phase transition between non-extremal and extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes. This transition is considered as the T0T \to 0 limit of the transition between the non-extremal and near-extremal black holes. We show that an evaporating process from non-extremal black hole to extremal one is possible to occur, but its reverse process is not possible to occur because of the presence of the maximum temperature. Furthermore, it is shown that the Hawking-Page phase transition between small and large black holes unlikely occurs in the AdS Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, version to appear in MPL

    A model finding a new Richardson potential with different scales for confinement and asymptotic freedom, by fitting the properties of {\D}^{++} and {\Om}^{-}

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    Phenomenological Richardson potential has built in asymptotic freedom (AF in short) and confinement, with only one parameter \La in the potential. But it is known that the scales of AF and confinement are not the same. In the present work a relativistic mean field calculation for baryons is tried out with two parameters \La and \La^\prime for AF and confinement respectively .To test the two parameter potential we calculate the energies and the magnetic moments, of the triple u - quark system ({\D}^{++}) and the triple s - quark system ({\Om}^{-}) and found good values for \La=100 MeV and \La^\prime ~= 350 MeV. So we believe that the modified Richardson potential should have AF scale \La ~= 100 MeV and the confinement scale \La^\prime ~= 350 MeV.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nuclear Physics

    Incompressibility of strange matter

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    Strange stars calculated from a realistic equation of state (EOS), that incorporate chiral symmetry restoration as well as deconfinement at high density show compact objects in the mass radius curve. We compare our calculations of incompressibility for this EOS with that of nuclear matter. One of the nuclear matter EOS has a continuous transition to ud-matter at about five times normal density. Another nuclear matter EOS incorporates density dependent coupling constants. From a look at the consequent velocity of sound, it is found that the transition to ud-matter seems necessary.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys Lett

    Control of beam propagation in optically written waveguides beyond the paraxial approximation

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    Beam propagation beyond the paraxial approximation is studied in an optically written waveguide structure. The waveguide structure that leads to diffractionless light propagation, is imprinted on a medium consisting of a five-level atomic vapor driven by an incoherent pump and two coherent spatially dependent control and plane-wave fields. We first study propagation in a single optically written waveguide, and find that the paraxial approximation does not provide an accurate description of the probe propagation. We then employ coherent control fields such that two parallel and one tilted Gaussian beams produce a branched waveguide structure. The tilted beam allows selective steering of the probe beam into different branches of the waveguide structure. The transmission of the probe beam for a particular branch can be improved by changing the width of the titled Gaussian control beam as well as the intensity of the spatially dependent incoherent pump field.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure

    The role of the immune system in brain metastasis

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    Metastatic brain tumors are the most common brain tumors in adults. With numerous successful advancements in systemic treatment of most common cancer types, brain metastasis is becoming increasingly important in the overall prognosis of cancer patients. Brain metastasis of peripheral tumor is the result of complex interplay of primary tumor, immune system and central nervous system microenvironment. Once formed, brain metastases hide behind the blood brain barrier and become inaccessible to chemotherapies that are otherwise successful in targeting systemic cancer. The approval of immune checkpoint inhibitors for several common cancers such as advanced melanoma and lung cancers brings with it the opportunity and obligation to further understand the mechanisms of immunosuppression by tumors that spread to the brain as well as the interaction between the brain environment and tumor microenvironment. In this review paper we define the central role of the immune system in the development of brain metastases. We performed a comprehensive review of the literature to outline the molecular mechanisms of immunosuppression used by tumors and how the immune system interacts with the central nervous system to facilitate brain metastasis. In particular we discuss the tumor-type-specific mechanisms of metastasis of cancers that preferentially metastasize to the brain as well as the therapies that effectively modulate the immune response, such as immune checkpoint inhibitors and vaccines

    A Channel Coding Perspective of Collaborative Filtering

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    We consider the problem of collaborative filtering from a channel coding perspective. We model the underlying rating matrix as a finite alphabet matrix with block constant structure. The observations are obtained from this underlying matrix through a discrete memoryless channel with a noisy part representing noisy user behavior and an erasure part representing missing data. Moreover, the clusters over which the underlying matrix is constant are {\it unknown}. We establish a sharp threshold result for this model: if the largest cluster size is smaller than C1log(mn)C_1 \log(mn) (where the rating matrix is of size m×nm \times n), then the underlying matrix cannot be recovered with any estimator, but if the smallest cluster size is larger than C2log(mn)C_2 \log(mn), then we show a polynomial time estimator with diminishing probability of error. In the case of uniform cluster size, not only the order of the threshold, but also the constant is identified.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
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