26,134 research outputs found
Chiral order and fluctuations in multi-flavour QCD
Multi-flavour (N_f>=3) Chiral Perturbation Theory (ChPT) may exhibit
instabilities due to vacuum fluctuations of sea q-bar q pairs. Keeping the
fluctuations small would require a very precise fine-tuning of the low-energy
constants L_4 and L_6 to L_4[crit](M_rho) = - 0.51 * 10^(-3), and
L_6[crit](M_rho) = - 0.26 * 10^(-3). A small deviation from these critical
values -- like the one suggested by the phenomenology of OZI-rule violation in
the scalar channel -- is amplified by huge numerical factors inducing large
effects of vacuum fluctuations. This would lead in particular to a strong
N_f-dependence of chiral symmetry breaking and a suppression of multi-flavour
chiral order parameters. A simple resummation is shown to cure the instability
of N_f>=3 ChPT, but it modifies the standard expressions of some O(p^2) and
O(p^4) low-energy parameters in terms of observables. On the other hand, for
r=m_s/m > 15, the two-flavour condensate is not suppressed, due to the
contribution induced by massive vacuum s-bar s pairs. Thanks to the latter, the
standard two-flavour ChPT is protected from multi-flavour instabilities and
could provide a well-defined expansion scheme in powers of non-strange quark
masses.Comment: Published versio
Climbing Atop the Shoulders of Giants: The Impact of Institutions on Cumulative Research
While the cumulative nature of knowledge is recognized as central to economic growth, the microeconomic foundations of cumulativeness are less understood. This paper investigates the impact of a research-enhancing institution on cumulativeness, highlighting two effects. First, a selection effect may result in a high correlation between "high-quality" institutions and knowledge of high intrinsic quality. Second, an institution may have a marginal impact -- an incremental influence on cumulativeness, conditional on the type and quality of knowledge considered. This paper distinguishes these effects in the context of a specific institution, biological resource centers (BRCs). BRCs are "living libraries" that authenticate, preserve, and offer independent access to biological materials, such as cells, cultures, and specimens. BRCs may enhance the cumulativeness of knowledge by reducing the marginal cost to researchers of drawing on prior research efforts. We exploit three key aspects of the environment in which BRCs operate to evaluate how they affect the cumulativeness of knowledge: (a) the impact of scientific knowledge is reflected in future scientific citations, (b) deposit into BRCs often occurs with a substantial lag after initial research is completed and published, and (c) "lagged" deposits often result from shocks unrelated to the characteristics of the materials themselves. Employing a difference-in-differences estimator linking specific materials deposits to journal articles, we find evidence for both selection effects and the marginal impact of BRCs on the cumulativeness of knowledge associated with deposited materials. Moreover, the marginal impact increases with time and varies with the economic and institutional conditions in which deposit occurs.
Vection-induced gastric dysrhythmias and motion sickness
Gastric electrical and mechanical activity during vection-induced motion sickness was investigated. The contractile events of the antrum and gastric myoelectric activity in healthy subjects exposed to vection were measured simultaneously. Symptomatic and myoelectric responses of subjects with vagotomy and gastric resections during vection stimuli were determined. And laboratory based computer systems for analysis of the myoelectric signal were developed. Gastric myoelectric activity was recorded from cutaneous electrodes, i.e., electrogastrograms (EGGs), and antral contractions were measured with intraluminal pressure transducers. Vection was induced by a rotating drum. gastric electromechanical activity was recorded during three periods: 15 min baseline, 15 min drum rotation (vection), and 15 to 30 min recovery. Preliminary results showed that catecholamine responses in nauseated versus symptom-free subjects were divergent and pretreatment with metoclopramide HC1 (Reglan) prevented vection-induced nausea and reduced tachygastrias in two previously symptomatic subjects
Capacitance of Gated GaAs/AlGaAs Heterostructures Subject to In-plane Magnetic Fields
A detailed analysis of the capacitance of gated GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures
is presented. The nonlinear dependence of the capacitance on the gate voltage
and in-plane magnetic field is discussed together with the capacitance quantum
steps connected with a population of higher 2D gas subbands. The results of
full self-consistent numerical calculations are compared to recent experimental
data.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex. 4 PostScript figures in an uuencoded compressed file
available upon request. Phys. Rev.B, in pres
Analysis and interpretation of new low-energy Pi-Pi scattering data
The recently published E865 data on charged K_e4 decays and Pi-Pi phases are
reanalyzed to extract values of the two S-wave scattering lengths, of the
subthreshold parameters alpha and beta, of the low-energy constants l3-bar and
l4-bar as well as of the main two-flavour order parameters: and F_pi
in the limit m_u = m_d = 0 taken at the physical value of the strange quark
mass. Our analysis is exclusively based on direct experimental information on
Pi-Pi phases below 800 MeV and on the new solutions of the Roy equations by
Ananthanarayan et al. The result is compared with the theoretical prediction
relating 2 a_0^0 - 5 a_0^2 and the scalar radius of the pion, which was
obtained in two-loop Chiral Perturbation Theory. A discrepancy at the 1-sigma
level is found and commented upon.Comment: Published version, to appear in Eur. Phys. J.
Eskimos, Reindeer, and Land
The following report is based on an interdisciplinary research study undertaken to investigate the social, economic, and cultural aspects of reindeer herding in northwestern Alaska. The primary purpose of the research project was to gather data on the past and present reindeer herding practices of the region, but also to seek information on herding and land uses, the future potential of this essentially Native industry, and its impacts on the people and economy of the area.National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, and carried out by staff of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks
- âŠ