474 research outputs found
Quantum random walks with decoherent coins
The quantum random walk has been much studied recently, largely due to its
highly nonclassical behavior. In this paper, we study one possible route to
classical behavior for the discrete quantum walk on the line: the presence of
decoherence in the quantum ``coin'' which drives the walk. We find exact
analytical expressions for the time dependence of the first two moments of
position, and show that in the long-time limit the variance grows linearly with
time, unlike the unitary walk. We compare this to the results of direct
numerical simulation, and see how the form of the position distribution changes
from the unitary to the usual classical result as we increase the strength of
the decoherence.Comment: Minor revisions, especially in introduction. Published versio
Impact of the Anesthesiologist and Surgeon on Cardiac Surgical Outcomes
ObjectiveTo determine the impact of anesthesiologists, surgeons, and their monthly caseload volume on mortality after cardiac surgery.DesignTen-year audit of prospectively collected cardiac surgical data.SettingLarge adult cardiothoracic hospital.ParticipantsA total of 18,569 cardiac surgical patients in the decade from April 2002 through March 2012, plus 21 consultant surgeons and 29 consultant anesthesiologists.InterventionsMajor risk-stratified cardiac surgical operations.MethodsThe primary outcome was in-hospital death. Random intercept models for the surgeon and anesthesiologist cluster, respectively, were fitted, achieving risk-adjustment through the logistic EuroSCORE. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) subsequently was used to measure the amount of outcome variation due to clustering.Measurements and Main ResultsAfter exclusions (duplicates, very-short-term appointments, and cases performed by more than one consultant), there were 18,426 patients with 581 (3.15%) in-hospital deaths. The overwhelming factor associated with outcome variation was the patient risk profile, accounting for 97.14% of the variation. The impact of the surgeon was small (ICC = 2.78%), and the impact of the anesthesiologist was negligible (ICC = 0.08%). Low monthly surgeon volume of surgery, adjusted for average case mix, was associated with higher risk-adjusted mortality (odds ratio = 0.93, 95% CI 0.87-0.98).ConclusionsOutcome was determined primarily by the patient. There were small but significant differences in outcome between surgeons. The attending anesthesiologist did not affect patient outcome in this institution. Low average monthly surgeon volume was a significant risk factor. In contrast, low average monthly anesthesiologist volume had no effect
Quantum Walks driven by many coins
Quantum random walks have been much studied recently, largely due to their
highly nonclassical behavior. In this paper, we study one possible route to
classical behavior for the discrete quantum random walk on the line: the use of
multiple quantum ``coins'' in order to diminish the effects of interference
between paths. We find solutions to this system in terms of the single coin
random walk, and compare the asymptotic limit of these solutions to numerical
simulations. We find exact analytical expressions for the time-dependence of
the first two moments, and show that in the long time limit the ``quantum
mechanical'' behavior of the one-coin walk persists. We further show that this
is generic for a very broad class of possible walks, and that this behavior
disappears only in the limit of a new coin for every step of the walk.Comment: 36 pages RevTeX 4.0 + 5 figures (encapsulated Postscript). Submitted
to Physical Review
Effect of preoperative oral antibiotics in combination with mechanical bowel preparation on inflammatory response and shortâterm outcomes following leftâsided colonic and rectal resections
Background:
Preoperative oral antibiotics in addition to intravenous antibiotics and mechanical bowel preparation (MBP) may influence the gut microbiome and reduce both the postoperative systemic inflammatory response to surgery and postoperative infective complications following colorectal resection. This propensity scoreâmatched study compared outcomes of patients undergoing leftâsided colonic or rectal resection with or without a combination of oral antibiotics and MBP.
Methods:
The addition of oral antibiotics and MBP to prophylactic intravenous antibiotics in leftâsided colonic and rectal resections was introduced in 2015â2016 at a single institution. Propensity score matching was undertaken to compare the effects of oral antibiotics plus MBP versus neither oral antibiotics nor MBP on the postoperative systemic inflammatory response and shortâterm outcomes in patients undergoing leftâsided colonic or rectal resection between 2013 and 2018.
Results:
Of 396 patients who had propensity score matching for host, anaesthetic and operative factors, 204 matched patients were identified. The addition of oral antibiotics and MBP was associated with a significantly reduced postoperative inflammatory response (reduced postoperative Glasgow Prognostic Score) on dayâ3 (odds ratio (OR) 0·66, 95 per cent c.i. 0·44 to 0·99; P â=â0·013) and dayâ4 (OR 0·46, 0·30 to 0·71; P â=â0·001). Significantly reduced overall complications (OR 0·31, 0·17 to 0·56; P â<â0·001), infective complications (OR 0·41, 0·22 to 0·77; P â=â0·011), surgicalâsite infection (OR 0·37, 0·17 to 0·83; P â=â0·024) and postoperative length of hospital stay (median 7âdays versus 8âdays in patients who had intravenous antibiotics alone; P â=â0·050) were also observed.
Conclusion:
Preoperative oral antibiotics and MBP in addition to prophylactic intravenous antibiotics were associated with a reduction in the postoperative systemic inflammatory response and postoperative complications in patients undergoing resectional leftâsided colonic or rectal surgery
Action-gradient-minimizing pseudo-orbits and almost-invariant tori
Transport in near-integrable, but partially chaotic,
degree-of-freedom Hamiltonian systems is blocked by invariant tori and is
reduced at \emph{almost}-invariant tori, both associated with the invariant
tori of a neighboring integrable system. "Almost invariant" tori with rational
rotation number can be defined using continuous families of periodic
\emph{pseudo-orbits} to foliate the surfaces, while irrational-rotation-number
tori can be defined by nesting with sequences of such rational tori. Three
definitions of "pseudo-orbit," \emph{action-gradient--minimizing} (AGMin),
\emph{quadratic-flux-minimizing} (QFMin) and \emph{ghost} orbits, based on
variants of Hamilton's Principle, use different strategies to extremize the
action as closely as possible. Equivalent Lagrangian (configuration-space
action) and Hamiltonian (phase-space action) formulations, and a new approach
to visualizing action-minimizing and minimax orbits based on AGMin
pseudo-orbits, are presented.Comment: Accepted for publication in a special issue of Communications in
Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation (CNSNS) entitled "The mathematical
structure of fluids and plasmas : a volume dedicated to the 60th birthday of
Phil Morrison
Disease-specific, neurosphere-derived cells as models for brain disorders
There is a pressing need for patient-derived cell models of brain diseases that are relevant and robust enough to produce the large quantities of cells required for molecular and functional analyses. We describe here a new cell model based on patient-derived cells from the human olfactory mucosa, the organ of smell, which regenerates throughout life from neural stem cells. Olfactory mucosa biopsies were obtained from healthy controls and patients with either schizophrenia, a neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorder, or Parkinson's disease, a neurodegenerative disease. Biopsies were dissociated and grown as neurospheres in defined medium. Neurosphere-derived cell lines were grown in serum-containing medium as adherent monolayers and stored frozen. By comparing 42 patient and control cell lines we demonstrated significant disease-specific alterations in gene expression, protein expression and cell function, including dysregulated neurodevelopmental pathways in schizophrenia and dysregulated mitochondrial function, oxidative stress and xenobiotic metabolism in Parkinson's disease. The study has identified new candidate genes and cell pathways for future investigation. Fibroblasts from schizophrenia patients did not show these differences. Olfactory neurosphere-derived cells have many advantages over embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells as models for brain diseases. They do not require genetic reprogramming and they can be obtained from adults with complex genetic diseases. They will be useful for understanding disease aetiology, for diagnostics and for drug discovery
A Relation Between Approaches to Integrability in Superconformal Yang-Mills Theory
We make contact between the infinite-dimensional non-local symmetry of the
typeIIB superstring on AdS5xS5 worldsheet theory and a non-abelian
infinite-dimensional symmetry algebra for the weakly coupled superconformal
gauge theory. We explain why the planar limit of the one-loop dilatation
operator is the Hamiltonian of a spin chain, and show that it commutes with the
g*2 N = 0 limit of the non-abelian charges.Comment: 19 pages, harvma
Solar Magnetic Carpet I: Simulation of Synthetic Magnetograms
This paper describes a new 2D model for the photospheric evolution of the
magnetic carpet. It is the first in a series of papers working towards
constructing a realistic 3D non-potential model for the interaction of
small-scale solar magnetic fields. In the model, the basic evolution of the
magnetic elements is governed by a supergranular flow profile. In addition,
magnetic elements may evolve through the processes of emergence, cancellation,
coalescence and fragmentation. Model parameters for the emergence of bipoles
are based upon the results of observational studies. Using this model, several
simulations are considered, where the range of flux with which bipoles may
emerge is varied. In all cases the model quickly reaches a steady state where
the rates of emergence and cancellation balance. Analysis of the resulting
magnetic field shows that we reproduce observed quantities such as the flux
distribution, mean field, cancellation rates, photospheric recycle time and a
magnetic network. As expected, the simulation matches observations more closely
when a larger, and consequently more realistic, range of emerging flux values
is allowed (4e16 - 1e19 Mx). The model best reproduces the current observed
properties of the magnetic carpet when we take the minimum absolute flux for
emerging bipoles to be 4e16 Mx. In future, this 2D model will be used as an
evolving photospheric boundary condition for 3D non-potential modeling.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures, 5 gif movies included: movies may be viewed at
http://www-solar.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~karen/movies_paper1
On the structure and evolution of a polar crown prominence/filament system
Polar crown prominences are made of chromospheric plasma partially circling
the Suns poles between 60 and 70 degree latitude. We aim to diagnose the 3D
dynamics of a polar crown prominence using high cadence EUV images from the
Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/AIA at 304 and 171A and the Ahead spacecraft
of the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO-A)/EUVI at 195A. Using
time series across specific structures we compare flows across the disk in 195A
with the prominence dynamics seen on the limb. The densest prominence material
forms vertical columns which are separated by many tens of Mm and connected by
dynamic bridges of plasma that are clearly visible in 304/171A two-color
images. We also observe intermittent but repetitious flows with velocity 15
km/s in the prominence that appear to be associated with EUV bright points on
the solar disk. The boundary between the prominence and the overlying cavity
appears as a sharp edge. We discuss the structure of the coronal cavity seen
both above and around the prominence. SDO/HMI and GONG magnetograms are used to
infer the underlying magnetic topology. The evolution and structure of the
prominence with respect to the magnetic field seems to agree with the filament
linkage model.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in Solar Physics
Journal, Movies can be found at http://www2.mps.mpg.de/data/outgoing/panesar
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