268 research outputs found
Female Faith Leaders in Collaboration: Rabbis, Nuns, and Ministers for (Nearly) 50 Years
13th Annual Lecture in Jewish and Christian Engagement… Rabbi Carole B. Balin, PhD, Auburn Seminary, Professor Emerita of History HUC-JIR. Response by Elena Procario-Foley, PhD, Iona College.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/bennettcenter-posters/1355/thumbnail.jp
Assessment of the impact of race and proxies of socioeconomic status on the prevalence and health outcome of peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) using the “All of Us” Databank
Background: Peripartum Cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a form of cardiomyopathy occurring during the last month of pregnancy or within months after giving birth in women with previously normal hearts. PPCM is an idiopathic systolic dysfunction that causes a reduced left ventricle ejection fraction. The estimated incidence of PPCM worldwide is 1 diagnosis out of 2,000 live births, and the causes of PPCM remain unknown. A retrospective cohort study conducted at the University of Pennsylvania Health System by Getz et al. showed that black race and socioeconomic proxies (like neighborhood disadvantage index (NDI)) were independently associated with sustained cardiac dysfunction (Getz et al., Am Heart J 2021). This study also showed that from all the components of NDI (education, high rental occupied housing, annual income below poverty line, female headed household, adults unemployed, adults on public assistance), low education and high rental occupied housing were significantly associated with sustained cardiac dysfunction. The central aim of the present project is to assess the effect of socioeconomic proxies (including NDI, lack of access to health care and food insecurity) on the prevalence of sustained cardiac dysfunction from PPCM across the US using the “All of Us” databank. A secondary aim is to test the compliance of the All of Us database capacity to interrogate this potential association. Lastly, we aim to compare the results obtained from the All of Us database with the UK Biobank.
Methods: The All of Us databank (Ramirez et al., Patterns 2022; The All of US Research Program, NEJM 2019) will be used to conduct a retrospective cohort study to assess how proxies of socioeconomic status may affect the incidence and prevalence of sustained cardiac dysfunction from PPCM across different ethnicities in the US. The All of Us database focuses on enrolling people in the US from diverse groups that have historically been underrepresented in medical research. Therefore, it includes a more diverse population than the population targeted in the retrospective study conducted at the University of Pennsylvania in which only black women from Philadelphia, PA, were included. To further interrogate the impact that geographic location and population ethnicity may have on the prevalence of sustained cardiac dysfunction from PPCM, the results obtained from the “All of Us” database will be compared against data obtained from the UK Biobank.
Expected Results: We expect that the socioeconomic proxies interrogated in this study will have a significant impact on the prevalence of sustained cardiac dysfunction from PPCM. Current knowledge is limited on how socioeconomic status affects sustained cardiac dysfunction resulting from PPCM. Previous studies have been done on populations restricted to small geographic areas and did not analyze factors such as food security, access to care, or disability status. Understanding how these factors affect the incidence and prevalence of sustained cardiac dysfunction from PPCM may be used to improve prevention, early diagnosis, and management of PPCM
Quantum size effect on charges and phonons ultrafast dynamics in atomically controlled nanolayers of topological insulators Bi2Te3
This work was supported by the French Ministry of Education and Research, the CNRS, Region Pays de la Loire (CPER Femtosecond Spectroscopy equipment program) and the LIA-CNRS (Laboratoire International Associé) IM-LED. The partial financial support from National Science Center under project 2016/21/B/ST5/02531 is acknowledged. R. Rapacz was supported by FORSZT PhD fellowship.Heralded as one of the key elements for next generation spintronics devices, topological insulators (TIs) are now step by step envisioned as nanodevices like charge-to-spin current conversion or as Dirac fermions based nanometer Schottky diode for example. However, reduced to few nanometers, TIs layers exhibit a profound modification of the electronic structure and the consequence of this quantum size effect on the fundamental carriers and phonons ultrafast dynamics has been poorly investigated so far. Here, thanks to a complete study of a set of high quality molecular beam epitaxy grown nanolayers, we report the existence of a critical thickness of around ~6 nm, below which a spectacular reduction of the carrier relaxation time by a factor of ten is found in comparison to bulk Bi2 Te3 In addition, we also evidence an A1g optical phonon mode softening together with the appearance of a thickness dependence of the photoinduced coherent acoustic phonons signals. This drastic evolution of the carriers and phonons dynamics might be due an important electron-phonon coupling evolution due to the quantum confinement. These properties have to be taken into account for future TIs-based spintronic devices.Centre National de la Recherche Scientifiqu
Ground-based water vapour soundings by microwave radiometry and Raman lidar on Jungfraujoch (Swiss Alps)
International audienceWater vapour has been measured from the International Scientific Station Jungfraujoch (ISSJ, 47° N, 7° E, 3580m above sea level) during the winters of 1999/2000 and 2000/2001 by microwave radiometry and Raman lidar. The abundance of atmospheric water vapour between the planetary boundary layer and the upper stratosphere varies over more than three orders of magnitude. The currently used measurement techniques are only suited to determine the abundance of water vapour in different atmospheric regimes. None can resolve the vertical distribution profile from ground level to the top of the stratosphere by itself. We present such a water vapour profile where simultaneous measurements from a Raman lidar and a microwave radiometer were combined to cover both the troposphere and the stratosphere, respectively. We also present a study of the stratospheric and tropospheric water vapour variability for the two consecutive winters
Simultaneous measurement of atmospheric temperature, humidity, and aerosol extinction and backscatter coefficients by a combined vibrational-pure-rotational Raman lidar
Implementation of the pure-rotational Raman (PRR) lidar method for simultaneous measurement of atmospheric temperature, humidity, and aerosol extinction and backscatter coefficients is reported. The isolation of two wavelength domains of the PRR spectrum and the suppression of the elastically scattered light is carried out by a double-grating polychromator. Experiments involving elastic backscatter from dense clouds and a solid target confirm the high level of suppression of the elastic light in the corresponding acquisition channels of the two selected PRR domains. Calibration of the temperature channel was done both by comparison with an experimentally verified atmospheric temperature model profile and by inter-comparison with radiosondes. Night-time temperature profiles with high vertical resolution were obtained up to the lower stratosphere. The PRR temperature profile combined with the water vapor mixing ratio obtained from the ro-vibrational Raman channel is used to estimate the relative humidit
Reduction of Non-CO2 Gas Emissions Through The In Situ Bioconversion of Methane
The primary objectives of this research were to seek previously unidentified anaerobic methanotrophs and other microorganisms to be collected from methane seeps associated with coal outcrops. Subsurface application of these microbes into anaerobic environments has the potential to reduce methane seepage along coal outcrop belts and in coal mines, thereby preventing hazardous explosions. Depending upon the types and characteristics of the methanotrophs identified, it may be possible to apply the microbes to other sources of methane emissions, which include landfills, rice cultivation, and industrial sources where methane can accumulate under buildings. Finally, the microbes collected and identified during this research also had the potential for useful applications in the chemical industry, as well as in a variety of microbial processes. Sample collection focused on the South Fork of Texas Creek located approximately 15 miles east of Durango, Colorado. The creek is located near the subsurface contact between the coal-bearing Fruitland Formation and the underlying Pictured Cliffs Sandstone. The methane seeps occur within the creek and in areas adjacent to the creek where faulting may allow fluids and gases to migrate to the surface. These seeps appear to have been there prior to coalbed methane development as extensive microbial soils have developed. Our investigations screened more than 500 enrichments but were unable to convince us that anaerobic methane oxidation (AMO) was occurring and that anaerobic methanotrophs may not have been present in the samples collected. In all cases, visual and microscopic observations noted that the early stage enrichments contained viable microbial cells. However, as the levels of the readily substrates that were present in the environmental samples were progressively lowered through serial transfers, the numbers of cells in the enrichments sharply dropped and were eliminated. While the results were disappointing we acknowledge that anaerobic methane oxidizing (AOM) microorganisms are predominantly found in marine habitats and grow poorly under most laboratory conditions. One path for future research would be to use a small rotary rig to collect samples from deeper soil horizons, possibly adjacent to the coal-bearing horizons that may be more anaerobic
Coherent acoustic phonons generated by ultrashort terahertz pulses in nanofilms of metals and topological insulators
We report the generation of coherent acoustic phonons in materials with terahertz ultrashort pulses. This
is demonstrated in metals and topological insulators by exciting an acoustic eigenmode in nanometric-sized
thin films. The efficiency of the coupling is quadratic in the terahertz electric field strength within the range
of investigation. Owing to a quantitative comparison between terahertz and near-infrared ultrashort pulse
excitations, we show that the process of acoustic phonon generation by terahertz radiation is mainly driven
by thermoelastic stress. While for the near-infrared light excitation the lattice temperature increase comes
from a rapid energy transfer from the hot carriers to the phonon bath during carrier intraband relaxation, the
thermoelastic stress induced by the terahertz electric field is linked to the scattering of the accelerated electrons
leading to an ultrafast Joule effect
Search for the Radiative Capture d+d->^4He+\gamma Reaction from the dd\mu Muonic Molecule State
A search for the muon catalyzed fusion reaction dd --> ^4He +\gamma in the
dd\mu muonic molecule was performed using the experimental \mu CF installation
TRITON and NaI(Tl) detectors for \gamma-quanta. The high pressure target filled
with deuterium at temperatures from 85 K to 800 K was exposed to the negative
muon beam of the JINR phasotron to detect \gamma-quanta with energy 23.8 MeV.
The first experimental estimation for the yield of the radiative deuteron
capture from the dd\mu state J=1 was obtained at the level n_{\gamma}\leq
2\times 10^{-5} per one fusion.Comment: 9 pages, 3 Postscript figures, submitted to Phys. At. Nuc
An investigation of ozone and planetary boundary layer dynamics over the complex topography of Grenoble combining measurements and modeling
International audienceThis paper concerns an evaluation of ozone (O3) and planetary boundary layer (PBL) dynamics over the complex topography of the Grenoble region through a combination of measurements and mesoscale model (METPHOMOD) predictions for three days, during July 1999. The measurements of O3 and PBL structure were obtained with a Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL) system, situated 20 km south of Grenoble at Vif (310 m a.s.l.). The combined lidar observations and model calculations are in good agreement with atmospheric measurements obtained with an instrumented aircraft (METAIR). Ozone fluxes were calculated using lidar measurements of ozone vertical profiles concentrations and the horizontal wind speeds measured with a Radar Doppler wind profiler (DEGREANE). The ozone flux patterns indicate that the diurnal cycle of ozone production is controlled by local thermal winds. The convective PBL maximum height was some 2700 m above the land surface while the nighttime residual ozone layer was generally found between 1200 and 2200 m. Finally we evaluate the magnitude of the ozone processes at different altitudes in order to estimate the photochemical ozone production due to the primary pollutants emissions of Grenoble city and the regional network of automobile traffic
QCD-like Theories at Finite Baryon and Isospin Density
We use 2-color QCD as a model to study the effects of simultaneous presence
of chemical potentials for isospin charge, , and for baryon number,
. We determine the phase diagrams for 2 and 4 flavor theories using the
method of effective chiral Lagrangians at low densities and weak coupling
perturbation theory at high densities. We determine the values of various
condensates and densities as well as the spectrum of excitations as functions
of and . A similar analysis of QCD with quarks in the adjoint
representation is also presented. Our results can be of relevance for lattice
simulations of these theories. We predict a phase of inhomogeneous condensation
(Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov phase) in the 2 colour 2 flavor theory, while
we do not expect it the 4 flavor case or in other realizations of QCD with a
positive measure.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figure
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