285 research outputs found
Vortex pinning and flux flow microwave studies of coated conductors
Demanding microwave applications in a magnetic field require the material
optimization not only in zero-field but, more important, in the in-field flux
motion dominated regime. However, the effect of artificial pinning centers
(APC) remains unclear at high frequency. Moreover, in coated conductors the
evaluation of the high frequency material properties is difficult due to the
complicated electromagnetic problem of a thin superconducting film on a
buffered metal substrate. In this paper we present an experimental study at 48
GHz of 150-200 nm YBaCuO coated conductors, with and without
APCs, on buffered Ni-5at%W tapes. By properly addressing the electromagnetic
problem of the extraction of the superconductor parameters from the measured
overall surface impedance , we are able to extract and to comment on the
London penetration depth, the flux flow resistivity and the pinning constant,
highlighting the effect of artificial pinning centers in these samples.Comment: 5 pages, IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond., accepted for publication
(2019
MOD derived pyrochlore films as buffer layer for all-chemical YBCO coated conductors
We report a detailed study performed on La2Zr2O7 (LZO) pyrochlore material
grown by Metal-Organic Decomposition (MOD) method as buffer layers for
YBa2Cu3O7-x (YBCO) coated conductors. High quality epitaxial LZO thin films
have been obtained on single crystal (SC) and Ni-5%at.W substrates. In order to
evaluate structural and morphological properties, films have been characterized
by means of X-ray diffraction analyses (XRD), atomic force microscope (AFM) and
scanning electron microscope (SEM). Precursors solutions and heat treatments
have been studied by thermogravimetric analyses (TG-DTA-DTG) and infrared
spectra (FT-IR) with the aim of optimizing the annealing process. Thin films of
YBCO have been deposited by pulsed laser ablation (PLD) on this buffer layers.
The best results obtained on SC showed YBCO films with critical temperature
values above 90 K, high self field critical current density values (Jc > 1
MA/cm2) and high irreversibility field values (8.3 T) at 77 K together with a
rather high depinning frequency vp (0.5 T, 77 K)>44 GHz as determined at
microwaves. The best results on Ni-5%at.W has been obtained introducing in the
heat treatment a pyrolysis process at low temperature in air in order to remove
the residual organic part of the precursor solution
Switching Power Converters - Advanced Design Methodologies and Control Techniques
L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen
Vaccine hesitancy among healthcare workers in Europe: A qualitative study.
Healthcare workers (HCWs) are often referred to as the most trusted source of vaccine-related information for their patients. However, the evidence suggests that a number of HCWs are vaccine-hesitant. This study consists of 65 semi-structured interviews with vaccine providers in Croatia, France, Greece, and Romania to investigate concerns HCWs might have about vaccination. The results revealed that vaccine hesitancy is present in all four countries among vaccine providers. The most important concern across all countries was the fear of vaccine side effects. New vaccines were singled out due to perceived lack of testing for vaccine safety and efficacy. Furthermore, while high trust in health authorities was expressed by HCWs, there was also strong mistrust of pharmaceutical companies due to perceived financial interests and lack of communication about side effects. The notion that it is a doctor's responsibility to respond to hesitant patients was reported in all countries. Concerns were also seen to be country- and context-specific. Strategies to improve confidence in vaccines should be adapted to the specific political, social, cultural and economic context of countries. Furthermore, while most interventions focus on education and improving information about vaccine safety, effectiveness, or the need for vaccines, concerns raised in this study identify other determinants of hesitancy that need addressing. The representativeness of the views of the interviewed HCWs must be interpreted with caution. This a qualitative study with a small sample size that included geographical areas where vaccination uptake was lower or where hesitancy was more prevalent and it reflects individual participants' beliefs and attitudes toward the topic. As HCWs have the potential of influencing patient vaccination uptake, it is crucial to improve their confidence in vaccination and engage them in activities targeting vaccine hesitancy among their patients
The Lasso with general Gaussian designs with applications to hypothesis testing
The Lasso is a method for high-dimensional regression, which is now commonly
used when the number of covariates is of the same order or larger than the
number of observations . Classical asymptotic normality theory is not
applicable for this model due to two fundamental reasons: The regularized
risk is non-smooth; The distance between the estimator and the true parameters vector cannot be
neglected. As a consequence, standard perturbative arguments that are the
traditional basis for asymptotic normality fail.
On the other hand, the Lasso estimator can be precisely characterized in the
regime in which both and are large, while is of order one. This
characterization was first obtained in the case of standard Gaussian designs,
and subsequently generalized to other high-dimensional estimation procedures.
Here we extend the same characterization to Gaussian correlated designs with
non-singular covariance structure. This characterization is expressed in terms
of a simpler ``fixed design'' model. We establish non-asymptotic bounds on the
distance between distributions of various quantities in the two models, which
hold uniformly over signals in a suitable sparsity class,
and values of the regularization parameter.
As applications, we study the distribution of the debiased Lasso, and show
that a degrees-of-freedom correction is necessary for computing valid
confidence intervals
Road traffic pollution and childhood leukemia: a nationwide case-control study in Italy
Background The association of childhood leukemia with traffic pollution was considered in a number of studies from 1989 onwards, with results not entirely consistent and little information regarding subtypes. Aim of the study We used the data of the Italian SETIL case-control on childhood leukemia to explore the risk by leukemia subtypes associated to exposure to vehicular traffic. Methods We included in the analyses 648 cases of childhood leukemia (565 Acute lymphoblastic–ALL and 80 Acute non lymphoblastic-AnLL) and 980 controls. Information on traffic exposure was collected from questionnaire interviews and from the geocoding of house addresses, for all periods of life of the children. Results We observed an increase in risk for AnLL, and at a lower extent for ALL, with indicators of exposure to traffic pollutants. In particular, the risk was associated to the report of closeness of the house to traffic lights and to the passage of trucks (OR: 1.76; 95% CI 1.03–3.01 for ALL and 6.35; 95% CI 2.59–15.6 for AnLL). The association was shown also in the analyses limited to AML and in the stratified analyses and in respect to the house in different period of life. Conclusions Results from the SETIL study provide some support to the association of traffic related exposure and risk for AnLL, but at a lesser extent for ALL. Our conclusion highlights the need for leukemia type specific analyses in future studies. Results support the need of controlling exposure from traffic pollution, even if knowledge is not complete
- …
