768 research outputs found
Adaptive reflection and focusing of Bose-Einstein condensates
We report adjustable magnetic `bouncing' and focusing of a dilute Rb
Bose gas. Both the condensate production and manipulation are realised using a
particularly straight-forward apparatus. The bouncing region is comprised of
approximately concentric ellipsoidal magnetic equipotentials with a centre that
can be adjusted vertically. We extend, and discuss the limitations of, simple
Thomas-Fermi and Monte-Carlo theoretical models for the bouncing, which at
present find close agreement with the condensate's evolution. Very strong
focusing has been inferred and the observation of atomic matter-wave
diffraction should be possible. Prospects look bright for applications in
matter-wave atom-optics, due to the very smooth nature of the mirror
BulB - visualizing bulletin board activity
Visualisation is well known as an effective means of enriching user interaction with complex systems. Recent research with online communities has considered the application of visualisation tool support, with the intention of further improving communication between community members. This paper reviews existing work in this area with specific reference to the application of visualisation to improve user interaction within online forums such as bulletin boards. The paper then outlines work undertaken by the authors to develop a second-generation visualisation tool - 'BulB'
The impact of myosteatosis on outcomes following surgery for gastrointestinal malignancy: a meta-analysis.
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this review was to evaluate the impact of preoperative myosteatosis on long-term outcomes following surgery for gastrointestinal malignancy. METHODS: We conducted a systematic search of the electronic information sources, including PubMed MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), CINAHL and AMED. Studies were included if they reported the impact of preoperatively defined myosteatosis, or a similar term, on long-term survival outcomes following surgery for gastrointestinal malignancy. A subgroup analysis was performed for those studies reporting outcomes for colorectal cancer patients only. FINDINGS: Thirty-nine full-text articles were reviewed for inclusion, with 19 being retained after the inclusion criteria were applied. The total number of included patients across all studies was 14,481. Patients with myosteatosis had significantly poorer overall survival, according to univariate (hazard ratio (HR) 1.82, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.67-1.99) and multivariable (HR 1.66, 95% CI 1.49-1.86) analysis. This was also demonstrated for cancer-specific survival (univariate HR 1.62, 95% CI 1.18-2.22; multivariable HR 1.73, 95% CI 1.48-2.03) and recurrence-free survival (univariate HR 1.28, 95% CI 1.10-1.48; multivariable HR 1.38, 95% CI 1.07-1.77). CONCLUSIONS: This meta-analysis demonstrates that patients with preoperative myosteatosis have poorer long-term survival outcomes following surgery for gastrointestinal malignancy. Therefore, myosteatosis should be used for preoperative optimisation and as a prognostic tool before surgery. More standardised definitions of myosteatosis and further cohort studies of patients with non-colorectal malignancies are required
Deterministic single-atom excitation via adiabatic passage and Rydberg blockade
We propose to use adiabatic rapid passage with a chirped laser pulse in the
strong dipole blockade regime to deterministically excite only one Rydberg atom
from randomly loaded optical dipole traps or optical lattices. The chirped
laser excitation is shown to be insensitive to the random number \textit{N} of
the atoms in the traps. Our method overcomes the problem of the
dependence of the collective Rabi frequency, which was the main obstacle for
deterministic single-atom excitation in the ensembles with unknown \textit{N},
and can be applied for single-atom loading of dipole traps and optical
lattices.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Version 5 is expanded and submitted to PRA. Typo
in Fig.4 corrected in Version 2. Version 3 and 4 are duplicates of V
c ○ 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Manufactured in The Netherlands. Bayesian Object Localisation in Images
Abstract. A Bayesian approach to intensity-based object localisation is presented that employs a learned probabilistic model of image filter-bank output, applied via Monte Carlo methods, to escape the inefficiency of exhaustive search. An adequate probabilistic account of image data requires intensities both in the foreground (i.e. over the object), and in the background, to be modelled. Some previous approaches to object localisation by Monte Carlo methods have used models which, we claim, do not fully address the issue of the statistical independence of image intensities. It is addressed here by applying to each image a bank of filters whose outputs are approximately statistically independent. Distributions of the responses of individual filters, over foreground and background, are learned from training data. These distributions are then used to define a joint distribution for the output of the filter bank, conditioned on object configuration, and this serves as an observation likelihood for use in probabilistic inference about localisation. The effectiveness of probabilistic object localisation in image clutter, using Bayesian Localisation, is illustrated. Because it is a Monte Carlo method, it produces not simply a single estimate of object configuration, but an entire sample from the posterior distribution for the configuration. This makes sequential inference of configuration possible. Two examples are illustrated here: coarse to fine scale inference, and propagation of configuration estimates over time, in image sequences. Keywords: vision, object location, Monte Carlo, filter-bank, statistical independenc
Scotland, Catalonia and the “right” to self-determination: a comment suggested by Kathryn Crameri’s “Do Catalans Have the Right to Decide?
No abstract available
Responsivity mapping techniques for the non-positional CCD: the swept charge device CCD236
The e2v CCD236 is a swept charge device (SCD) designed as a soft X-ray detector for spectroscopy in the range 0.8 keV to 10 keV [1]. It benefits from improvements in design over the previous generation of SCD (the e2v CCD54) [2] to allow for increased detector area, a reduction in split X-ray events and improvements to radiation hardness [3]. To enable the suppression of surface dark current the device is clocked continuously, therefore there is no positional information making responsivity variations difficult to measure. This paper describes investigated techniques to achieve a responsivity map across the device using masking and XRF, and spot illumination from an organic light-emitting diode (OLED). The results of this technique should allow a deeper understanding of the device sensitivity and allow better data interpretation in SCD applications
Photoabsorption on nuclei
We calculate the total photoabsorption cross section on nuclei in the energy
range from 300 MeV to 1 GeV within the framework of a semi-classical phase
space model. Besides medium modifications like Fermi motion and Pauli blocking
we focus on the collision broadening of the involved resonances. The resonance
contributions to the elementary cross section are fixed by fits to partial wave
amplitudes of pion photoproduction. The cross sections for ,
needed for the calculation of collision broadening, are obtained by detailed
balance from a fit to cross sections. We show that a
reasonable collision broadening is not able to explain the experimentally
observed disappearance of the -resonance in the photoabsorption
cross section on nuclei.Comment: 26 pages Latex including 9 postscript figure
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