2,216 research outputs found
Velocity statistics from spectral line data: effects of density-velocity correlations, magnetic field, and shear
In a previous work Lazarian and Pogosyan suggested a technique to extract
velocity and density statistics, of interstellar turbulence, by means of
analysing statistics of spectral line data cubes. In this paper we test that
technique, by studying the effect of correlation between velocity and density
fields, providing a systematic analysis of the uncertainties arising from the
numerics, and exploring the effect of a linear shear. We make use of both
compressible MHD simulations and synthetic data to emulate spectroscopic
observations and test the technique. With the same synthetic spectroscopic
data, we also studied anisotropies of the two point statistics and related
those anisotropies with the magnetic field direction. This presents a new
technique for magnetic field studies. The results show that the velocity and
density spectral indices measured are consistent with the analytical
predictions. We identified the dominant source of error with the limited number
of data points along a given line of sight. We decrease this type of noise by
increasing the number of points and by introducing Gaussian smoothing. We argue
that in real observations the number of emitting elements is essentially
infinite and that source of noise vanishes.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Reduction of the Casimir force using aerogels
By using silicon oxide based aerogels we show numerically that the Casimir
force can be reduced several orders of magnitude, making its effect negligible
in nanodevices. This decrease in the Casimir force is also present even when
the aerogels are deposited on metallic substrates. To calculate the Casimir
force we model the dielectric function of silicon oxide aerogels using an
effective medium dielectric function such as the Clausius-Mossotti
approximation. The results show that both the porosity of the aerogel and its
thickness can be use as control parameters to reduce the magnitude of the
Casimir force.Comment: to appear J. Appl. Phy
Indications for pediatric liver transplantation
Two hundred fifty pediatric (<18 years of age) patients underwent orthotopic liver transplantation because of end-stage liver disease and were given combination therapy with cyclosporine and prednisone. The most common indications for transplantation in decreasing order of frequency were biliary atresia, inborn errors of metabolism, and postnecrotic cirrhosis. The 5-year actuarial survival for the entire group was 69.2%. Age and diagnosis did not influence survival. Infections were the most common cause of death, followed by liver failure and cerebrovascular accident. The impact of retransplantation on survival depends on the indication. The survival is better when retransplantation is carried out after rejection than because of technical complications, and the latter has a better survival than does primary graft nonfunction. The difference in survival among these groups is statistically significant. The quality of life for 164 of 173 survivors is good to excellent; only nine children are currently experiencing medical problems. A persistent problem in pediatric transplantation is the scarcity of small donors. © 1987 The C. V. Mosby Company
Liver transplantation before 1 year of age
Since 1981, 20 infants younger than 1 year of age received 26 orthotopic liver transplants. Immunosuppression was with cyclosporine and corticosteroids. Thirteen (65%) of the reciplents were discharged from the hospital. To date, 12 (60%) of the 20 reciplents are surviving, with follow-up of 1 to 56 months (average 14 months). The 5-year acluarial survival is 53.8%. The allograft liver function in the majority of surviving infants is excellent. The predominant causes of mortality were primary nonfunction of the allograft (three patients) and sepsis (three). Major morbidity was caused by hepatic artery thrombosis (five patients), gastrointestinal complications (six), biliary tract complications (five), and bacterial and viral infections (13). Six patients underwent retransplantation; three of these six survived. Results could be improved by prevention of hepatic artery thrombosis, by decreasing the incidence of sepsis, and by procurement of more and better suited pediatric donors. © 1987 The C. V. Mosby Company
Computation of Casimir forces for dielectrics or intrinsic semiconductors based on the Boltzmann transport equation
The interaction between drifting carriers and traveling electromagnetic waves
is considered within the context of the classical Boltzmann transport equation
to compute the Casimir-Lifshitz force between media with small density of
charge carriers, including dielectrics and intrinsic semiconductors. We expand
upon our previous work [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 101}, 163203 (2008)] and derive
in some detail the frequency-dependent reflection amplitudes in this theory and
compute the corresponding Casimir free energy for a parallel plate
configuration. We critically discuss the the issue of verification of the
Nernst theorem of thermodynamics in Casimir physics, and explicity show that
our theory satisfies that theorem. Finally, we show how the theory of drifting
carriers connects to previous computations of Casimir forces using spatial
dispersion for the material boundaries.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; Contribution to Proceedings of "60 Years of the
Casimir Effect", Brasilia, June 200
High-multipolar effects on the Casimir force: the non-retarded limit
We calculate exactly the Casimir force or dispersive force, in the
non-retarded limit, between a spherical nanoparticle and a substrate beyond the
London's or dipolar approximation. We find that the force is a non-monotonic
function of the distance between the sphere and the substrate, such that, it is
enhanced by several orders of magnitude as the sphere approaches the substrate.
Our results do not agree with previous predictions like the Proximity theorem
approach.Comment: 7 pages including 2 figures. Submitted to Europjysics Letter
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