15,842 research outputs found
Altitude distribution, origin and flux of sodium in the atmosphere
Sodium equilibrium altitude distribution, origin, and flux calculated for earth atmospher
Effect of electron corelation on superconducting pairing symmetry
The role of electron correlation on different pairing symmetries are
discussed in details where the electron correlation has been treated within the
slave boson formalism. It is shown that for a pure or pure wave pairing
symmetry, the electronic correlation suppresses the wave gap magnitude (as
well as the ) at a faster rate than that for the wave gap. On the
otherhand, a complex order parameter of the form () shows anomalous
temperature dependence. For example, if the temperature () at which
the wave component of the complex order parameter vanishes happens to be
larger than that for the wave component () then the growth of the
wave component is arrested with the onset of the wave component of the
order parameter. In this mixed phase however, we find that the suppression in
different components of the gap as well as the corresponding due to
coulomb correlation are very sensitive to the relative pairing strengths of
and channels as well as the underlying lattice. Interestingly enough, in
such a scenario (for a case of ) the gap magnitude of the
wave component increases with electron correlation but not for
certain values of electron correlation. However, this never happens in case of
the wave component. We also calculate the temperature dependence of the
superconducting gap along both the high symmetry directions ( - M and
- X) in a mixed symmetry pairing state and the thermal
variation of the gap anisotropy () with electron correlation. The results are discussed with reference to
experimental observations.Comment: 22 pages, latex, 12 figures (attached in ps /eps) Journal : Accepted
for publication in Euro. J. Phys
Baryon Self-Energy With QQQ Bethe-Salpeter Dynamics In The Non-Perturbative QCD Regime: n-p Mass Difference
A qqq BSE formalism based on DB{\chi}S of an input 4-fermion Lagrangian of
`current' u,d quarks interacting pairwise via gluon-exchange-propagator in its
{\it non-perturbative} regime, is employed for the calculation of baryon
self-energy via quark-loop integrals. To that end the baryon-qqq vertex
function is derived under Covariant Instantaneity Ansatz (CIA), using Green's
function techniques. This is a 3-body extension of an earlier q{\bar q}
(2-body) result on the exact 3D-4D interconnection for the respective BS wave
functions under 3D kernel support, precalibrated to both q{\bar q} and qqq
spectra plus other observables. The quark loop integrals for the neutron (n) -
proton (p) mass difference receive contributions from : i) the strong SU(2)
effect arising from the d-u mass difference (4 MeV); ii) the e.m. effect of the
respective quark charges. The resultant n-p difference comes dominantly from
d-u effect (+1.71 Mev), which is mildly offset by e.m.effect (-0.44), subject
to gauge corrections. To that end, a general method for QED gauge corrections
to an arbitrary momentum dependent vertex function is outlined, and on on a
proportionate basis from the (two-body) kaon case, the net n-p difference works
out at just above 1 MeV. A critical comparison is given with QCD sum rules
results.Comment: be 27 pages, Latex file, and to be published in IJMPA, Vol 1
Lepton Masses in a Minimal Model with Triplet Higgs Bosons and Flavor Symmetry
Viable neutrino and charged lepton masses and mixings are obtained by
imposing a flavor symmetry in a model with a few
additional Higgs. We use two triplet Higgs which are arranged as a
doublet of , and standard model singlet Higgs which are also put as
doublets of . We break the symmetry in this minimal model by giving
vacuum expectation values (VEV) to the additional Higgs fields. Dictated by the
minimum condition for the scalar potential, we obtain certain VEV alignments
which allow us to maintain symmetry in the neutrino sector, while
breaking it maximally for the charged leptons. This helps us to simultaneously
explain the hierarchical charged lepton masses, and the neutrino masses and
mixings. In particular, we obtain maximal and zero .
We allow for a mild breaking of the symmetry for the neutrinos and
study the phenomenology. We give predictions for and the CP
violating Jarlskog invariant , as a function of the symmetry
breaking parameter. We also discuss possible collider signatures and
phenomenology associated with lepton flavor violating processes.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures. Version to be appeared in PRD. Phenomenology of
Lepton flavor violation and possible collider signatures of this model have
been include
Age-related reversal of postural adjustment characteristics during motor imagery
Physical and imagined movements show similar behavioral constraints and neurophysiological activation patterns. An inhibition mechanism is thought to suppress overt movement during m otor imagery, but it does not effectively suppress autonomic or postural adjustments. Inhibitory processes and postural stability both deteriorate with age. Thus, older people’s balance is potentially vulnerable to interference from postural adjustments in duced by thoughts about past or future actions. Here, young and older adults stood upright and executed or imagined manual reaching movements. Reported arm movement time (MT) of all participants increased with target distance. Older participants reported longer MT than young participants when executing arm movements, but not when imagining them. Older adults’ anteroposterior (AP) and mediolateral (ML) postural sway was higher than young adults’ at baseline, but their AP sway fell below their baseline level during manual imagery. In contrast, young adults’ AP sway increased during imagery relative to their baseline. A similar tendency to reduce sway in the ML direction was also observed in older adults during imagery in a challenging stance. These results suggest that postural response during manual motor imagery reverses direction with age. Motor imagery and action planning are ubiquitous tasks, and older people are likely to spend more time engaged in them. The shift toward restricting body sway during these tasks is akin to a postural threat response with the potential to interfere with balance during activities of daily living
Kind of Aromatherapy Use and Smoking Habits Were Influence the Alteration of the Driver's Pulse Rate
The condition of sickness or health problems decreases the ability to work physically, being weak the sharpness of thinking to make quick and precise decisions, and decreases alertness and accuracy with the consequences of the worker concerned vulnerable to the occurrence of accidents This study aims to determine the relationship between aromatherapy type dominant to changes in pulse rate controlled by age variables, smoking habits, sleep duration, history of heart disease, fatigue, working hours of driver
The research method using Quasy Experiment research design with non equivalent control group design is pre-test and post-test in experiment and control group with 40 samples taken by purposive sampling by considering inclusion criteria. The test used in this study is Paired T Test.
The conclusion of this study is the using of aromatherapy does not affect the pulse. Type of giving atomatherapy , the time of giving is a factor confounding controlled
The Economic Lives of People with Disabilities in Vietnam
Through a series of focus group discussions conducted in northern and central Vietnam, this study gives voice to the lived economic experience of families with disabilities and how they manage the economic challenges associated with disability. The dynamic of low and unstable income combined with on-going health care and other disability-related costs gives rise to a range of coping mechanisms (borrowing, reducing and foregoing expenditures, drawing upon savings and substituting labour) that helps to maintain living standards in the short-run yet threatens the longer-term welfare of both the individual with disability and their household. Current social protection programs were reported as not accessible to all and while addressing some immediate economic costs of disability, do not successfully meet current needs nor accommodate wider barriers to availing benefits
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