42 research outputs found

    Microscopic Description of Super Heavy Nuclei

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    The results of extensive microscopic Relativistic Mean Field (RMF) calculations for the nuclei appearing in the alpha - decay chains of recently discovered superheavy elements with Z = 109 to 118 are presented and discussed. The calculated ground state properties like total binding energies, Q values, deformations, radii and densities closely agree with the corresponding experimental data, where available. The double folding (t-rho-rho) approximation is used to calculate the interaction potential between the daughter and the alpha, using RMF densities along with the density dependent nucleon - nucleon interaction (M3Y). This in turn, is employed within the WKB approximation to estimate the half lives without any additional parameter for alpha - decay. The half lives are highly sensitive to the Q values used and qualitatively agree with the corresponding experimental values. The use of experimental Q values in the WKB approximation improves the agreement with the experiment, indicating that the resulting interaction potential is reliable and can be used with confidence as the real part of the optical potential in other scattering and reaction processes.Comment: Accepted for publication in Annals of Physics (NY

    Search for New Physics Using Quaero: A General Interface to - D0 Event Data

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    We describe Quaero, a method that i) enables the automatic optimization of searches for physics beyond the standard model, and ii) provides a mechanism for making high energy collider data generally available. We apply Quaero to searches for standard model WW, ZZ, and ttbar production, and to searches for these objects produced through a new heavy resonance. Through this interface, we make three data sets collected by the D0 experiment at sqrt(s)=1.8 TeV publicly available

    Validation of the IBIS breast cancer risk evaluator for women with lobular carcinoma in-situ.

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    BACKGROUND: Management advice for women with lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS) is hampered by the lack of accurate personalised risk estimates for subsequent invasive breast cancer (BC). Prospective validation of the only tool that estimates individual BC risk for a woman with LCIS, the International Breast Cancer Intervention Study Risk Evaluation Tool (IBIS-RET), is lacking. METHODS: Using population-based cancer registry data for 732 women with LCIS, the calibration and discrimination accuracy of IBIS-RET Version 7.2 were assessed. RESULTS: The mean observed 10-year risk of invasive BC was 14.1% (95% CI:11.3%-17.5%). IBIS-RET overestimated invasive BC risk (p = 0.0003) and demonstrated poor discriminatory accuracy (AUC 0.54, 95% CI: 0.48 - 0.62). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians should understand that IBIS-RET Version 7.2 may overestimate 10-year invasive BC risk for Australian women with LCIS. The newer IBIS-RET Version 8.0, released September 2017, includes mammographic density and may perform better, but validation is needed

    An Estimate of Avian Mortality at Communication Towers in the United States and Canada

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    Avian mortality at communication towers in the continental United States and Canada is an issue of pressing conservation concern. Previous estimates of this mortality have been based on limited data and have not included Canada. We compiled a database of communication towers in the continental United States and Canada and estimated avian mortality by tower with a regression relating avian mortality to tower height. This equation was derived from 38 tower studies for which mortality data were available and corrected for sampling effort, search efficiency, and scavenging where appropriate. Although most studies document mortality at guyed towers with steady-burning lights, we accounted for lower mortality at towers without guy wires or steady-burning lights by adjusting estimates based on published studies. The resulting estimate of mortality at towers is 6.8 million birds per year in the United States and Canada. Bootstrapped subsampling indicated that the regression was robust to the choice of studies included and a comparison of multiple regression models showed that incorporating sampling, scavenging, and search efficiency adjustments improved model fit. Estimating total avian mortality is only a first step in developing an assessment of the biological significance of mortality at communication towers for individual species or groups of species. Nevertheless, our estimate can be used to evaluate this source of mortality, develop subsequent per-species mortality estimates, and motivate policy action

    The nail under fungal siege in patients with type II diabetes mellitus.

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    Few studies have examined the prevalence of onychomycosis among diabetic patients. Given the morbidity linked to onychomycosis, and the ever-growing size of the diabetic population, a better recognition of this nail infection is welcome. To revisit the relative prevalence of dermatophyte, yeast and non-dermatophytic mould onychomycoses in diabetic adults in a prospective study using combined histomycology and cultures. Toenail clippings were collected for 3 years in 190 type II diabetic patients (136 men and 54 women) and from an age- and gender-matched group of non-diabetic subjects. All sampled nails showed clinical alterations reminiscent of onychomycosis. Histomycology and cultures were performed on each sample to distinguish onychomycosis from non-infectious onychodystrophy. Compared to non-diabetic subjects with nail alterations, diabetics showed a higher proportion of onychomycosis relative to non-fungal onychodystrophy. Diabetic men suffered more frequently from onychomycosis and onychodystrophy than diabetic women. When considering the nature of the fungal pathogens, dermatophytes predominated largely over yeast and non-dermatophytic moulds, both in diabetic and non-diabetic patients. Diabetic patients, particularly men, are at increased risk of developing onychomycosis. The morbidity linked to this disorder, and its impact on the foot status in diabetic subjects merit to be better appreciated by clinicians

    Personal Journeys, Professional Paths: Persistence in Navigating the Crossroads of a Research Career

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    Persistence in a research career can be readily understood within the trainee models that have emerged from undergraduate and graduate instruction. These models offer a common language for discussing training processes, serve as guides for assessing trainee needs, promise to render training programs that are more comprehensive and attentive than are current programs to the factors that contribute to academic and scientific persistence, and enable us to measure with greater precision, internal consistency, and generalizability the elements that logically belong in research career development programs
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