18,275 research outputs found
Symmetry breaking and clustering in a vibrated granular gas with several macroscopically connected compartments
The spontaneous symmetry breaking in a vibro-fluidized low-density granular
gas in three connected compartments is investigated. When the total number of
particles in the system becomes large enough, particles distribute themselves
unequally among the three compartments. Particles tend to concentrate in one of
the compartments, the other two having the (relatively small) same average
number of particles. A hydrodynamical model that accurately predicts the
bifurcation diagram of the system is presented. The theory can be easily
extended to the case of an arbitrary number of connected compartments
Chiral Symmetry and s-wave Low-Lying Meson-Baryon Resonances
The wave meson-baryon scattering is analyzed for the isospin-strangeness
and sectors, in a Bethe-Salpeter coupled channel
formalism incorporating Chiral Symmetry. For both sectors, four channels have
been considered: , , , and ,
, , , respectively. The needed two particle
irreducible matrix amplitudes are taken from lowest order Chiral Perturbation
Theory in a relativistic formalism. There appear undetermined low energy
constants, as a consequence of the renormalization of the amplitudes, which are
obtained from fits to the available data: elastic phase-shifts, and cross sections and to
mass-spectrum, the elastic and
--matrices and to the
cross section data. The position and residues of the complex poles in the
second Riemann sheet of the scattering amplitude determine masses, widths and
branching ratios of the (1535) and (1650) and
(1405) and (1670) resonances, in reasonable agreement with
experiment. A good overall description of data, from threshold up to around 2
GeV is achieved despite the fact that three-body channels have not been
explicitly included.Comment: 5 Pages, 2 figures, invited contribution to Focus Session on Nature
of Threshold N*, to be published in Proceedings of Nstar 2002, Pittsburgh,
USA, October 9-12, 2002 (World Scientific
Electronic Raman Scattering in Twistronic Few-Layer Graphene
We study electronic contribution to the Raman scattering signals of two-,
three- and four-layer graphene with layers at one of the interfaces twisted by
a small angle with respect to each other. We find that the Raman spectra of
these systems feature two peaks produced by van Hove singularities in moir\'{e}
minibands of twistronic graphene, one related to direct hybridization of Dirac
states, and the other resulting from band folding caused by moir\'{e}
superlattice. The positions of both peaks strongly depend on the twist angle,
so that their detection can be used for non-invasive characterization of the
twist, even in hBN-encapsulated structures.Comment: 7 pages (including 4 figures) + 10 pages (3 figures) supplemen
ICNS Proceedings
The night has been the subject of multiple readings by the social and human sciences, as well as it has inspired multiple narratives throughout history, literature and popular culture. However, the study of nightlife, practices, and actors only gained attention in recent years.
The appearance of “mayors of the night” with the intention of improving urban governance during this period and thus guaranteeing needs, rights and services is the result of a progressive change in the local political paradigm, which begins to face this space-time as a “new” opportunity for its economic, social and cultural development. We could say that the night and the activities that take place in it begin to be projected as forms of tourist attraction, whether for their leisure activities such as discos, parties or other forms of fun; or because of its cultural potential, such as the White Nights.
Contemporary urban night implies having active professionals, capable of reacting to any incident, such as the case of health professionals, but also maintaining those professions – often illegal – that tend to be considered problematic or hidden as could be prostitution. Surveillance and control during this period is also a good example of active professions, such as the case of the police, surveillance companies, video-doorman, or firefighters.
It has never been so easy to commute in the urban space, public transport normally meets the needs of users, and the emergence of new forms of transport resulting from the circular economy, both of people and goods, completes the demand, not without controversy.
There are many different ways to approach the night, but here we collect some of the
communications that participated during the I International Conference on Night Studies, that took place
on-line, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, on July 2 -4, 2020. These communications are also on-line
on the official account of the conference.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
A Cholinergic Synaptically Triggered Event Participates in the Generation of Persistent Activity Necessary for Eye Fixation
An exciting topic regarding integrative properties of the nervous system is how transient motor commands or brief sensory stimuli are able to evoke persistent neuronal changes, mainly as a sustained, tonic action potential firing. A persisting firing seems to be necessary for postural maintenance after a previous movement. We have studied in vitro and in vivo the generation of the persistent neuronal activity responsible for eye fixation after spontaneous eye movements. Rat sagittal brainstem slices were used for the intracellular recording of prepositus hypoglossi (PH) neurons and their synaptic activation from nearby paramedian pontine reticular formation (PPRF) neurons. Single electrical pulses applied to the PPRF showed a monosynaptic glutamatergic projection on PH neurons, acting on AMPA-kainate receptors. Train stimulation of the PPRF area evoked a sustained depolarization of PH neurons exceeding (by hundreds of milliseconds) stimulus duration. Both duration and amplitude of this sustained depolarization were linearly related to train frequency. The train-evoked sustained depolarization was the result of interaction between glutamatergic excitatory burst neurons and cholinergic mesopontine reticular fibers projecting onto PH neurons, because it was prevented by slice superfusion with cholinergic antagonists and mimicked by cholinergic agonists. As expected, microinjections of cholinergic antagonists in the PH nucleus of alert behaving cats evoked a gaze-holding deficit consisting of a re-centering drift of the eye after each saccade. These findings suggest that a slow, cholinergic, synaptically triggered event participates in the generation of persistent activity characteristic of PH neurons carrying eye position signals
Faint emission lines in the Galactic H II regions M16, M20 and NGC 3603
We present deep echelle spectrophotometry of the Galactic {\hii} regions M16,
M20 and NGC 3603. The data have been taken with the Very Large Telescope
Ultraviolet-Visual Echelle Spectrograph in the 3100 to 10400 \AA range. We have
detected more than 200 emission lines in each region. Physical conditions have
been derived using different continuum and line intensity ratios. We have
derived He, C and O abundances from pure recombination
lines as well as abundances from collisionally excited lines for a large number
of ions of different elements. We have obtained consistent estimations of the
temperature fluctuation parameter, {\ts}, using different methods. We also
report the detection of deuterium Balmer lines up to D (M16) and to
D (M20) in the blue wings of the hydrogen lines, which excitation
mechanism seems to be continuum fluorescence. The temperature fluctuations
paradigm agree with the results obtained from optical CELs and the more
uncertain ones from far IR fine structure CELs in NGC 3603, although, more
observations covering the same volume of the nebula are necessary to obtain
solid conclusions.Comment: 22 pages, 13 Tables, 7 Figures. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Analysis of the genetic variability and structure of Ochlerotatus taeniorhynchus (Diptera: Culicidae) populations from the Colombian Atlantic coast on the basis of random amplified polymorphic DNA markers
Ochlerotatus taeniorhynchus (Diptera: Culicidae) is a mosquito, which is an efficient vector of the virus causing epidemic-epizootic Venezuelan equine encephalitis in Colombia. This study used 9 random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to analyze the mosquito's genetic variability and genetic structure of 122 specimens in 7 populations from the Colombian Atlantic coast. Assuming that all loci were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, diversity statistics and analyses were performed. The average number of amplified fragments for each primer was 8.3, and the size of these fragments ranged from 350 to 3600 bp. The expected average heterozygosity was 0.358 ± 0.103. The genetic heterogeneity among the populations studied was small (GST = 0.05 ± 0.01); meanwhile, the gene flow estimates (Nm = 7.32 ± 1.35) were high. In an identical way, the Nei's genetic distances obtained yielded very small values amongst the populations that were studied in this Colombian region. Furthermore, a spatial autocorrelation analysis with Moran's I index revealed a very weak, or inexistent, spatial genetic structure among these populations. The comparison of these results with those performed for other markers (isoenzymes and microsatellites) in populations of this same mosquito from the Colombian Atlantic coast was discussed. The results of our RAPD analysis showed scarce genetic differentiation among the mosquito populations on the Colombian Atlantic coast, which was probably determined by high gene flow levels. © FUNPEC-RP
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