15,424 research outputs found
Angular momentum evolution in Dark Matter haloes: a study of the Bolshoi and Millennium simulations
We use three different cosmological dark matter simulations to study how the
orientation of the angular momentum vector (AM) in dark matter haloes evolve
with time. We find that haloes in this kind of simulations are constantly
affected by a spurious change of mass, which translates into an artificial
change in the orientation of the AM. After removing the haloes affected by
artificial mass change, we found that the change in the orientation of the AM
vector is correlated with time. The change in its angle and direction (i.e. the
angle subtended by the AM vector in two consecutive timesteps) that affect the
AM vector has a dependence on the change of mass that affects a halo, the time
elapsed in which the change of mass occurs and the halo mass. We create a
Monte-Carlo simulation that reproduces the change of angle and direction of the
AM vector. We reproduce the angular separation of the AM vector since a look
back time of 8.5 Gyrs to today ( ) with an accuracy of
approximately 0.05 in . We are releasing this Monte-Carlo
simulation together with this publication. We also create a Monte Carlo
simulation that reproduces the change of the AM modulus. We find that haloes in
denser environments display the most dramatic evolution in their AM direction,
as well as haloes with a lower specific AM modulus. These relations could be
used to improve the way we follow the AM vector in low-resolution simulations.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
Ghosts in asymmetric brane gravity and the decoupled stealth limit
We study the spectrum of gravitational perturbations around a vacuum de
Sitter brane in a 5D asymmetric braneworld model, with induced curvature on the
brane. This generalises the stealth acceleration model proposed by Charmousis,
Gregory and Padilla (CGP) which realises the Cardassian cosmology in which
power law cosmic acceleration can be driven by ordinary matter. Whenever the
bulk has infinite volume we find that there is always a perturbative ghost
propagating on the de Sitter brane, in contrast to the Minkowski brane case
analysed by CGP. We discuss the implication of this ghost for the stealth
acceleration model, and identify a limiting case where the ghost decouples as
the de Sitter curvature vanishes.Comment: 21 page
FTMP (Fault Tolerant Multiprocessor) programmer's manual
The Fault Tolerant Multiprocessor (FTMP) computer system was constructed using the Rockwell/Collins CAPS-6 processor. It is installed in the Avionics Integration Research Laboratory (AIRLAB) of NASA Langley Research Center. It is hosted by AIRLAB's System 10, a VAX 11/750, for the loading of programs and experimentation. The FTMP support software includes a cross compiler for a high level language called Automated Engineering Design (AED) System, an assembler for the CAPS-6 processor assembly language, and a linker. Access to this support software is through an automated remote access facility on the VAX which relieves the user of the burden of learning how to use the IBM 4381. This manual is a compilation of information about the FTMP support environment. It explains the FTMP software and support environment along many of the finer points of running programs on FTMP. This will be helpful to the researcher trying to run an experiment on FTMP and even to the person probing FTMP with fault injections. Much of the information in this manual can be found in other sources; we are only attempting to bring together the basic points in a single source. If the reader should need points clarified, there is a list of support documentation in the back of this manual
Genes de virulencia y bacteriocinas en cepas de Enterococcus faecalis aisladas desde diferentes muestras clínicas en la Región del Maule, Chile
Padilla, C (reprint author), Univ Talca, Dept Microbiol, Talca, Chile.The presence of virulence genes (VG) and bacteriocins from different clinical samples was studied in Enterococcus faecalis isolated from urinary tract infections (UTI), bacteremia and endodontitis and was correlated with haemolysin and gelatinase activity. We evaluated the presence of VG by PCR in 150 strains of E. faecalis including cylA, aggA, efaA, eep, gelE, esp, as-48, bac31, entL50 A/B, entA, ent P, entB, enlA and ent1071. Haemolysin and gelatinase activity was studied. gelE and cylA genes expressed hemolysin and gelatinase, respectively. This activity was observed in some strains of bacteremia, UTI and endodontitis. The highest number of VG was detected in bacteremic strains, being aggA and entA genes the most frequent. efaA, esp, entA, entL50A/B were associated with their clinical origin (p <0.05). The most common genetic profile was aggA-eep-enlA-entL50A/B. E. faecalis from UTI, bacteremia and endodontitis presented different gene combinations. Some of the genes studied were related to their clinical origin. The results obtained in this study are similar to those reported in other countries
Assimilation and emerging health disparities among new generations of U.S. children
This article shows that the prevalence of four common child health conditions increases across generations (from first-generation immigrant children to second-generation U.S.-born children of immigrants to third-and-higher-generation children) within each of four major U.S. racial/ethnic groups. In the third-plus generation, black and Hispanic children have higher rates of nearly all conditions. Health care, socioeconomic status, parents’ health, social support, and neighborhood conditions influence child health and help explain third-and-higher-generation racial/ethnic disparities. However, these factors do not explain the generational pattern. The generational pattern may reflect cohort changes, selective ethnic attrition, unhealthy assimilation, or changing responses to survey questions among immigrant groups.assimilation, child health, disparities, immigration, race/ethnicity
Stealth Acceleration and Modified Gravity
We show how to construct consistent braneworld models which exhibit late time
acceleration. Unlike self-acceleration, which has a de Sitter vacuum state, our
models have the standard Minkowski vacuum and accelerate only in the presence
of matter, which we dub ``stealth-acceleration''. We use an effective action
for the brane which includes an induced gravity term, and allow for an
asymmetric set-up. We study the linear stability of flat brane vacua and find
the regions of parameter space where the set-up is stable. The 4-dimensional
graviton is only quasi-localised in this set-up and as a result gravity is
modified at late times. One of the two regions is strongly coupled and the
scalar mode is eaten up by an extra symmetry that arises in this limit. Having
filtered the well-defined theories we then focus on their cosmology. When the
graviton is quasi-localised we find two main examples of acceleration. In each
case, we provide an illustrative model and compare it to LambdaCDM.Comment: 32 pages, 5 figure
Summary and Outlook of the International Workshop on Aging Phenomena in Gaseous Detectors (DESY, Hamburg, October, 2001)
High Energy Physics experiments are currently entering a new era which
requires the operation of gaseous particle detectors at unprecedented high
rates and integrated particle fluxes. Full functionality of such detectors over
the lifetime of an experiment in a harsh radiation environment is of prime
concern to the involved experimenters. New classes of gaseous detectors such as
large-scale straw-type detectors, Micro-pattern Gas Detectors and related
detector types with their own specific aging effects have evolved since the
first workshop on wire chamber aging was held at LBL, Berkeley in 1986. In
light of these developments and as detector aging is a notoriously complex
field, the goal of the workshop was to provide a forum for interested
experimentalists to review the progress in understanding of aging effects and
to exchange recent experiences. A brief summary of the main results and
experiences reported at the 2001 workshop is presented, with the goal of
providing a systematic review of aging effects in state-of-the-art and future
gaseous detectors.Comment: 14 pages, 2 pictures. Presented at the IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium
and Medical Imaging Conference, November 4-10, 2001, San Diego, USA.
Submitted to IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci (IEEE-TNS
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