737 research outputs found
Orientations of two coupled molecules
Orientation states of two coupled polar molecules controlled by laser pulses
are studied theoretically. By varying the period of a series of periodically
applied laser pulse, transition from regular to chaotic behavior may occur.
Schmidt decomposition is used to measure the degree of entanglement. It is
found that the entanglement can be enhanced by increasing the strength of laser
pulse.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Chem. Phys. Lett.(2004
Test of Factorization Hypothesis from Exclusive Non-leptonic B decays
We investigate the possibility of testing factorization hypothesis in
non-leptonic exclusive decays of B-meson. In particular, we considered the non
factorizable \bar{B^0} -> D^{(*)+} D_s^{(*)-} modes and \bar{B^0} -> D^{(*)+}
(\pi^-, \rho^-) known as well-factorizable modes. By taking the ratios
BR(\bar{B^0}-> D^{(*)+}D_s^{(*)-})/BR(\bar{B^0}-> D^{(*)+}(\pi^-,\rho^-)), we
found that under the present theoretical and experimental uncertainties there's
no evidence for the breakdown of factorization description to heavy-heavy
decays of the B meson.Comment: 11 pages; submitted to PR
Urine albumin/creatinine ratio below 30mg/g is a predictor of incident hypertension and cardiovascular mortality
BackgroundMicroalbuminuria is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality, but whether lower levels of urine albumin excretion similarly predict CVD is uncertain. We investigated associations between urine albumin:creatinine ratio (UACR) <30 mg/g, and incident hypertension, incident diabetes mellitus, and all?cause and CVD mortality, during a maximum of 11 years of follow?up.Methods and ResultsIndividuals (37 091) in a health screening program between 2002 and 2012 with baseline measurements of UACR were studied. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs for incident hypertension, incident diabetes mellitus, and mortality outcomes (lowest UACR quartile as reference) at follow?up. For linear risk trends, the quartile rank was used as a continuous variable in regression models. Nine?hundred sixty?three cases of incident hypertension, 511 cases of incident diabetes mellitus, and 349 deaths occurred during follow?up. In the fully adjusted models, there was a significant HR for the association between UACR and incident hypertension (highest UACR quartile HR 1.95 [95% CI 1.51, 2.53], P?value for trend across UACR quartiles P<0.001). In contrast, the association between UACR and incident diabetes mellitus was not significant (highest UACR quartile, HR 1.15 [95% CI 0.79, 1.66], P?value for trend P=0.20). For CVD mortality, with increasing UACR quartiles, there was a significant increase in HR across quartiles, P=0.029, (for all?cause mortality, P=0.078).ConclusionsLow levels of albuminuria, UACR below 30 mg/g, are associated with increased risk of incident hypertension and CVD mortality at follow?up, but are not associated with increased risk of incident diabetes mellitus
Ptychographic X-ray tomography reveals additive zoning in nanocomposite single crystals
Single crystals containing nanoparticles represent a unique class of nanocomposites whose properties are defined by both their compositions and the structural organization of the dispersed phase in the crystalline host. Yet, there is still a poor understanding of the relationship between the synthesis conditions and the structures of these materials. Here ptychographic X-ray computed tomography is used to visualize the three-dimensional structures of two nanocomposite crystals – single crystals of calcite occluding diblock copolymer worms and vesicles. This provides unique information about the distribution of the copolymer nano-objects within entire, micron-sized crystals with nanometer spatial resolution and reveals how occlusion is governed by factors including the supersaturation and calcium concentration. Both nanocomposite crystals are seen to exhibit zoning effects that are governed by the solution composition and interactions of the additives with specific steps on the crystal surface. Additionally, the size and shape of the occluded vesicles varies according to their location within the crystal, and therefore the solution composition at the time of occlusion. This work contributes to our understanding of the factors that govern nanoparticle occlusion within crystalline materials, where this will ultimately inform the design of next generation nanocomposite materials with specific structure/property relationships
Amplitude to phase conversion of InGaAs pin photo-diodes for femtosecond lasers microwave signal generation
When a photo-diode is illuminated by a pulse train from a femtosecond laser,
it generates microwaves components at the harmonics of the repetition rate
within its bandwidth. The phase of these components (relative to the optical
pulse train) is known to be dependent on the optical energy per pulse. We
present an experimental study of this dependence in InGaAs pin photo-diodes
illuminated with ultra-short pulses generated by an Erbium-doped fiber based
femtosecond laser. The energy to phase dependence is measured over a large
range of impinging pulse energies near and above saturation for two typical
detectors, commonly used in optical frequency metrology with femtosecond laser
based optical frequency combs. When scanning the optical pulse energy, the
coefficient which relates phase variations to energy variations is found to
alternate between positive and negative values, with many (for high harmonics
of the repetition rate) vanishing points. By operating the system near one of
these vanishing points, the typical amplitude noise level of commercial-core
fiber-based femtosecond lasers is sufficiently low to generate state-of-the-art
ultra-low phase noise microwave signals, virtually immune to amplitude to phase
conversion related noise.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Applied Physics
Strain- and region-specific gene expression profiles in mouse brain in response to chronic nicotine treatment
A pathway-focused complementary DNA microarray and gene ontology analysis were used to investigate gene expression profiles in the amygdala, hippocampus, nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex (PFC) and ventral tegmental area of C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J mice receiving nicotine in drinking water (100 μg/ml in 2% saccharin for 2 weeks). A balanced experimental design and rigorous statistical analysis have led to the identification of 3.5-22.1% and 4.1-14.3% of the 638 sequence-verified genes as significantly modulated in the aforementioned brain regions of the C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J strains, respectively. Comparisons of differential expression among brain tissues showed that only a small number of genes were altered in multiple brain regions, suggesting presence of a brain region-specific transcriptional response to nicotine. Subsequent principal component analysis and Expression Analysis Systematic Explorer analysis showed significant enrichment of biological processes both in C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J mice, i.e. cell cycle/proliferation, organogenesis and transmission of nerve impulse. Finally, we verified the observed changes in expression using real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for six representative genes in the PFC region, providing an independent replication of our microarray results. Together, this report represents the first comprehensive gene expression profiling investigation of the changes caused by nicotine in brain tissues of the two mouse strains known to exhibit differential behavioral and physiological responses to nicotine. © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
International education: a force for peace and cross-cultural understanding?
This paper discusses the notion that the international sojourn has the potential to transform sojourners into cultural mediators who carry the power to improve global relations. A year-long ethnographic study of the adjustment experiences of international postgraduate students in England revealed a universal early enthusiasm for cross-cultural contact that was matched by a widespread adoption of segregated patterns of interacting. The most common friendship networks were described by bonds with conationals, and yet all students attested to an increase in their cultural learning and mindfulness by the end of the sojourn. Nevertheless, intercultural competence was maximised only in those few students who pursued a multicultural strategy of interaction, leading the researcher to call on Higher Education Institutions to instigate policies to encourage lasting cross-cultural contact
Fear of the unknown: a pre-departure qualitative study of Turkish international students
This paper presents findings from eleven in-depth interviews with Turkish undergraduate students, who were, by the time of data collection, about to spend a semester at a European university under the Erasmus exchange scheme. The students all agreed to be interviewed about their feelings about studying in a foreign culture, and were found to be anxious prior to departure about the quality of accommodation in the new destination, their language ability and the opportunity to form friendships. Fears were expressed about possible misconceptions over Turkey as a Muslim and a developing country. Suggestions are made for HEI interventions to allay student travellers’ concerns
Effect of Quantum Fluctuations in an Ising System on Small-World Networks
We study quantum Ising spins placed on small-world networks. A simple model
is considered in which the coupling between any given pair of spins is a
nonzero constant if they are linked in the small-world network and zero
otherwise. By applying a transverse magnetic field, we have investigated the
effect of quantum fluctuations. Our numerical analysis shows that the quantum
fluctuations do not alter the universality class at the ferromagnetic phase
transition, which is of the mean-field type. The transition temperature is
reduced by the quantum fluctuations and eventually vanishes at the critical
transverse field . With increasing rewiring probability,
is shown to be enhanced.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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