523 research outputs found
Crossing Over from Attractive to Repulsive Interactions in a Tunneling Bosonic Josephson Junction
We explore the interplay between tunneling and interatomic interactions in
the dynamics of a bosonic Josephson junction. We tune the scattering length of
an atomic K Bose-Einstein condensate confined in a double-well trap to
investigate regimes inaccessible to other superconducting or superfluid
systems. In the limit of small-amplitude oscillations, we study the transition
from Rabi to plasma oscillations by crossing over from attractive to repulsive
interatomic interactions. We observe a critical slowing down in the oscillation
frequency by increasing the strength of an attractive interaction up to the
point of a quantum phase transition. With sufficiently large initial
oscillation amplitude and repulsive interactions the system enters the
macroscopic quantum self-trapping regime, where we observe coherent undamped
oscillations with a self-sustained average imbalance of the relative well
population. The exquisite agreement between theory and experiments enables the
observation of a broad range of many body coherent dynamical regimes driven by
tunable tunneling energy, interactions and external forces, with applications
spanning from atomtronics to quantum metrology.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, supplemental materials are include
Double-degenerate Fermi mixtures of Li and Cr atoms
We report on the realization of a novel degenerate mixture of ultracold
fermionic lithium and chromium atoms. Based on an all-optical approach, with an
overall duty-cycle of about 13 seconds, we produce large and degenerate samples
of more than 2 Li atoms and Cr atoms, with both
species exhibiting normalized temperatures of about =0.25.
Additionally, through the exploitation of a crossed bichromatic optical dipole
trap, we can controllably vary the density and degree of degeneracy of the two
components almost independently, and widely tune the lithium-to-chromium
density ratio. Our Li-Cr Fermi mixture opens the way to the
investigation of a variety of exotic few- and many-body regimes of quantum
matter, and it appears as an optimally-suited system to realize ultracold
paramagnetic polar molecules, characterized by both electric and magnetic
dipole moments. Ultimately, our strategy also provides an efficient pathway to
produce dipolar Fermi gases, or spin-mixtures, of ultracold Cr atoms.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Feshbach resonances in the 6Li-40K Fermi-Fermi mixture: Elastic versus inelastic interactions
We present a detailed theoretical and experimental study of Feshbach
resonances in the 6Li-40K mixture. Particular attention is given to the
inelastic scattering properties, which have not been considered before. As an
important example, we thoroughly investigate both elastic and inelastic
scattering properties of a resonance that occurs near 155 G. Our theoretical
predictions based on a coupled channels calculation are found in excellent
agreement with the experimental results. We also present theoretical results on
the molecular state that underlies the 155G resonance, in particular concerning
its lifetime against spontaneous dissociation. We then present a survey of
resonances in the system, fully characterizing the corresponding elastic and
inelastic scattering properties. This provides the essential information to
identify optimum resonances for applications relying on interaction control in
this Fermi-Fermi mixture.Comment: Submitted to EPJD, EuroQUAM special issues "Cold Quantum Matter -
Achievements and Prospects", v2 with updated calibration of magnetic field
(+4mG correction) and updated figures 4 and
OpenSwarm: an event-driven embedded operating system for miniature robots
This paper presents OpenSwarm, a lightweight easy-to-use open-source operating system. To our knowledge, it is the first operating system designed for and deployed on miniature robots. OpenSwarm operates directly on a robot’s microcontroller. It has a memory footprint of 1 kB RAM and 12 kB ROM. OpenSwarm enables a robot to execute multiple processes simultaneously. It provides a hybrid kernel that natively supports preemptive and cooperative scheduling, making it suitable for both computationally intensive and swiftly responsive robotics tasks. OpenSwarm provides hardware abstractions to rapidly develop and test platformindependent code. We show how OpenSwarm can be used to solve a canonical problem in swarm robotics—clustering a collection of dispersed objects. We report experiments, conducted with five e-puck mobile robots, that show that an OpenSwarm implementation performs as good as a hardware-near implementation. The primary goal of OpenSwarm is to make robots with severely constrained hardware more accessible, which may help such systems to be deployed in real-world applications
Progressive development of augmentation during long-term treatment with levodopa in restless legs syndrome: results of a prospective multi-center study
The European Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) Study Group performed the first multi-center, long-term study systematically evaluating RLS augmentation under levodopa treatment. This prospective, open-label 6-month study was conducted in six European countries and included 65 patients (85% treatment naive) with idiopathic RLS. Levodopa was flexibly up-titrated to a maximum dose of 600 mg/day. Presence of augmentation was diagnosed independently by two international experts using established criteria. In addition to the augmentation severity rating scale (ASRS), changes in RLS severity (International RLS severity rating scale (IRLS), clinical global impression (CGI)) were analyzed. Sixty patients provided evaluable data, 35 completed the trial and 25 dropped out. Augmentation occurred in 60% (36/60) of patients, causing 11.7% (7/60) to drop out. Median time to occurrence of augmentation was 71 days. The mean maximum dose of levodopa was 311 mg/day (SD: 105). Patients with augmentation compared to those without were significantly more likely to be on higher doses of levodopa (≥300 mg, 83 vs. 54%, P = 0.03) and to show less improvement of symptom severity (IRLS, P = 0.039). Augmentation was common with levodopa, but could be tolerated by most patients during this 6-month trial. Patients should be followed over longer periods to determine if dropout rates increase with time
SwarmCom : an infra-red-based mobile ad-hoc network for severely constrained robots
Swarm robotics investigates groups of relatively simple robots that use decentralized control to achieve a common goal. While the robots of many swarm systems communicate via optical links, the underlying channels and their impact on swarm performance are poorly understood. This paper models the optical channel of a widely used robotic platform, the e-puck. It proposes SwarmCom, a mobile ad-hoc network for mobile robots. SwarmCom has a detector that, with the help of the channel model, was designed to adapt to the environment and nearby robots. Experiments with groups of up to 30 physical e-pucks show that (i) SwarmCom outperforms the state-of-the-art infra-red communication software—libIrcom—in range (up to 3 times further), bit error rate (between 50 and 63% lower), or throughput (up to 8 times higher) and that (ii) the maximum number of communication channels per robot is relatively low, which limits the load per robot even for high-density swarms. Using channel coding, the bit error rate can be further reduced at the expense of throughput. SwarmCom could have profound implications for swarm robotics, contributing to system understanding and reproducibility, while paving the way for novel applications
PO104 placebo and nocebo responses in RLS : a meta-analysis
Objective: Our goals were to estimate the placebo and nocebo responses in restless legs syndrome (RLS).
Methods: Databases were searched up to October 2015. Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials of RLS patient were included. ‘Placebo response’ was defined as the within-group change from baseline, using any scale measuring RLS severity or disability. ‘Nocebo response’ was defined as the proportion of patients experiencing adverse events in the placebo arm. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to pool data.
Results: We included 5046 participants. Pooled placebo response effect size was −1.41 (95%CI:−1.56-−1.25), corresponding to −6.58 points in the International RLS Study Group Scale (IRLS). Pooled nocebo response was 45.36% (95%CI:40.47%–50.29%). The placebo and nocebo responses were greater in trials with longer duration, evaluating pharmacological interventions and idiopathic RLS, and in industry funded and unpublished studies. The placebo response was considerable smaller in objective as compared to subjective outcomes. In addition, the nocebo response increases proportionally with the placebo response, and has the same predictors.
Conclusions: The magnitude of the placebo response in RLS is above the threshold of minimal clinical important difference, and the frequency of adverse events is also considerable. These results are relevant to inform the design and interpretation of future clinical trials.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Ultra-cold Polarized Fermi Gases
Recent experiments with ultra-cold atoms have demonstrated the possibility of
realizing experimentally fermionic superfluids with imbalanced spin
populations. We discuss how these developments have shed a new light on a half-
century old open problem in condensed matter physics, and raised new
interrogations of their own.Comment: 27 pages; 8 figures; Published in Report in Rep. Prog. Phys. 73
112401 (2010
Tau protein, A beta 42 and S-100B protein in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with dementia with Lewy bodies
The intra vitam diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is still based on clinical grounds. So far no technical investigations have been available to support this diagnosis. As for tau protein and beta-amyloid((1-42)) (Abeta42), promising results for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease ( AD) have been reported; we evaluated these markers and S-100B protein in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), using a set of commercially available assays, of 71 patients with DLB, 67 patients with AD and 41 nondemented controls (NDC) for their differential diagnostic relevance. Patients with DLB showed significantly lower tau protein values compared to AD but with a high overlap of values. More prominent differences were observed in the comparison of DLB patients with all three clinical core features and AD patients. Abeta42 levels were decreased in the DLB and AD groups versus NDC, without significant subgroup differences. S-100B levels were not significantly different between the groups. Tau protein levels in CSF may contribute to the clinical distinction between DLB and AD, but the value of the markers is still limited especially due to mixed pathology. We conclude that more specific markers have to be established for the differentiation of these diseases. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
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