34,247 research outputs found

    Temporal and Spectral Correlations of Cyg X-1

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    Temporal and spectral properties of X-ray rapid variability of Cyg X-1 are studied by an approach of correlation analysis in the time domain on different time scales. The correlation coefficients between the total intensity in 2-60 keV and the hardness ratio of 13-60 keV to 2-6 keV band on the time scale of about 1 ms are always negative in all states. For soft states, the correlation coefficients are positive on all the time scales from about 0.01 s to 100 s, which is significantly different with that for transition and low states. Temporal structures in high energy band are narrower than that in low energy band in quite a few cases. The delay of high energy photons relative to low energy ones in the X-ray variations has also been revealed by the correlation analysis. The implication of observed temporal and spectral characteristics to the production region and mechanism of Cyg X-1 X-ray variations is discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures included, to appear in Ap

    Effects of finite volume on the KL-KS mass difference

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    Phenomena that involve two or more on-shell particles are particularly sensitive to the effects of finite volume and require special treatment when computed using lattice QCD. In this paper we generalize the results of Lüscher and Lellouch and Lüscher, which determine the leading-order effects of finite volume on the two-particle spectrum and two-particle decay amplitudes to determine the finite-volume effects in the second-order mixing of the K0 and K0¯ states. We extend the methods of Kim, Sachrajda, and Sharpe to provide a direct, uniform treatment of these three, related, finite-volume corrections. In particular, the leading, finite-volume corrections to the KL-KS mass difference ΔMK and the CP-violating parameter εK are determined, including the potentially large effects which can arise from the near degeneracy of the kaon mass and the energy of a finite-volume, two-pion state

    Surface Adsorbate Fluctuations and Noise in Nanoelectromechanical Systems

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    Physisorption on solid surfaces is important in both fundamental studies and technology. Adsorbates can also be critical for the performance of miniature electromechanical resonators and sensors. Advances in resonant nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS), particularly mass sensitivity attaining the single-molecule level, make it possible to probe surface physics in a new regime, where a small number of adatoms cause a detectable frequency shift in a high quality factor (Q) NEMS resonator, and adsorbate fluctuations result in resonance frequency noise. Here we report measurements and analysis of the kinetics and fluctuations of physisorbed xenon (Xe) atoms on a high-Q NEMS resonator vibrating at 190.5 MHz. The measured adsorption spectrum and frequency noise, combined with analytic modeling of surface diffusion and adsorption−desorption processes, suggest that diffusion dominates the observed excess noise. This study also reveals new power laws of frequency noise induced by diffusion, which could be important in other low-dimensional nanoscale systems

    Corrections to the thermodynamics of Schwarzschild-Tangherlini black hole and the generalized uncertainty principle

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    We investigate the thermodynamics of Schwarzschild-Tangherlini black hole in the context of the generalized uncertainty principle. The corrections to the Hawking temperature, entropy and the heat capacity are obtained via the modified Hamilton-Jacobi equation. These modifications show that the GUP changes the evolution of Schwarzschild-Tangherlini black hole. Specially, the GUP effect becomes susceptible when the radius or mass of black hole approach to the order of Planck scale, it stops radiating and leads to black hole remnant. Meanwhile, the Planck scale remnant can be confirmed through the analysis of the heat capacity. Those phenomenons imply that the GUP may give a way to solve the information paradox. Besides, we also investigate the possibilities to observe the black hole at LHC, the results demonstrate that the black hole can not be produced in the recent LHC.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure

    Light meson electromagnetic form factors from three-flavor lattice QCD with exact chiral symmetry

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    We study the chiral behavior of the electromagnetic (EM) form factors of pion and kaon in three-flavor lattice QCD. In order to make a direct comparison of the lattice data with chiral perturbation theory (ChPT), we employ the overlap quark action that has exact chiral symmetry. Gauge ensembles are generated at a lattice spacing of 0.11 fm with four pion masses ranging between M_pi \simeq 290 MeV and 540 MeV and with a strange quark mass m_s close to its physical value. We utilize the all-to-all quark propagator technique to calculate the EM form factors with high precision. Their dependence on m_s and on the momentum transfer is studied by using the reweighting technique and the twisted boundary conditions for the quark fields, respectively. A detailed comparison with SU(2) and SU(3) ChPT reveals that the next-to-next-to-leading order terms in the chiral expansion are important to describe the chiral behavior of the form factors in the pion mass range studied in this work. We estimate the relevant low-energy constants and the charge radii, and find reasonable agreement with phenomenological and experimental results.Comment: 59 pages, 34 figure

    Synergism in Pharmacokinetics of Retagliptin and Metformin Observed during Clinical Trials of their Combination Therapy

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    Purpose: To investigate the safety and potential pharmacokinetic (PK) interaction between retagliptin, a selective inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase-4, and metformin in healthy subjects.Methods: In open-label, randomized, three-period, three-treatment crossover studies, 15 subjects received 100 mg retagliptin, 1500 mg metformin or the combination. The area under the curve from the time of dosing to infinity (AUCinf) and the maximum observed plasma concentration (Cmax) of each drug were measured.Results: The combination of retagliptin and metformin did not result in clinically significant alterations in the pharmacokinetics of SP2086 or metformin. The AUCinf and Cmax of retagliptin co-administered with metformin were 16.49 and 25.88 % higher than for retagliptin alone, respectively, while the AUCinf of metformin co-administered with retagliptin was 22.06 % higher than for metformin alone. The 90 % confidence interval of both glucose-lowering drugs’ AUCinf and Cmax of the geometric mean ratios of SP2086 + metformin fell within the pre-specified interval of 80 - 125 %. No laboratory adverse conditions occurred during the study. Retagliptin appeared generally safe and well-tolerated when administered alone or in combination with  metformin.Conclusion: The results may be an indication that no dose adjustments are likely to be required when retagliptin is given in combination with metformin
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