3,364 research outputs found
On localization and position operators in Moebius-covariant theories
Some years ago it was shown that, in some cases, a notion of locality can
arise from the group of symmetry enjoyed by the theory, thus in an intrinsic
way. In particular, when Moebius covariance is present, it is possible to
associate some particular transformations to the Tomita Takesaki modular
operator and conjugation of a specific interval of an abstract circle. In this
context we propose a way to define an operator representing the coordinate
conjugated with the modular transformations. Remarkably this coordinate turns
out to be compatible with the abstract notion of locality. Finally a concrete
example concerning a quantum particle on a line is also given.Comment: 19 pages, UTM 705, version to appear in RM
Dilated Cardiomyopathy With Mid-Range Ejection Fraction at Diagnosis: Characterization and Natural History
Background Limited data are available on mid-range ejection fraction (mrEF) patients with dilated cardiomyopathy. We sought to define the characteristics, evolution, and long-term prognosis of dilated cardiomyopathy patients with mrEF at diagnosis. Methods and Results We analyzed all dilated cardiomyopathy patients consecutively evaluated in the Trieste Heart Muscle Disease Registry from 1988 to 2013. mrEF and reduced ejection fraction (rEF) were defined as baseline left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction values between 40% and 49% and <40%, respectively. All-cause mortality or heart transplantation, sudden cardiac death, or major ventricular arrhythmias were considered as outcome measures. Worsening LV ejection fraction (reduction to <40%) during follow-up was also considered to identify possible predictors of adverse remodeling. Among 812 enrolled patients, 175 (22%) presented with mrEF at presentation. At baseline, as compared with the rEF group, mrEF patients had lower rates of moderate-severe mitral regurgitation and restrictive LV filling pattern. During a median follow-up period of 120 (60-204) months, the mrEF group presented a lower rate of death/heart transplantation (9% versus 36%, P<0.001) and sudden cardiac death or major ventricular arrhythmias (4.5% versus 15%, P<0.001) than rEF patients. Moreover, 29 out of 175 mrEF patients (17%) evolved to rEF. Restrictive LV filling pattern emerged as the strongest predictor of rEF development following multivariable analysis. Conclusions mrEF identified a consistent subgroup of dilated cardiomyopathy patients diagnosed in an earlier stage with subsequent apparent better long-term evolution. However, 17% of these patients evolved into rEF despite the use of medical therapy. A baseline restrictive LV filling pattern was independently associated with subsequent evolution to rEF
The HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG XI. GJ 685 b: a warm super-Earth around an active M dwarf
Small rocky planets seem to be very abundant around low-mass M-type stars.
Their actual planetary population is however not yet precisely understood.
Currently several surveys aim to expand the statistics with intensive detection
campaigns, both photometric and spectroscopic. We analyse 106 spectroscopic
HARPS-N observations of the active M0-type star GJ 685 taken over the past five
years. We combine these data with photometric measurements from different
observatories to accurately model the stellar rotation and disentangle its
signals from genuine Doppler planetary signals in the RV data. We run an MCMC
analysis on the RV and activity indexes time series to model the planetary and
stellar signals present in the data, applying Gaussian Process regression
technique to deal with the stellar activity signals. We identify three periodic
signals in the RV time series, with periods of 9, 24, and 18 d. Combining the
analyses of the photometry of the star with the activity indexes derived from
the HARPS-N spectra, we identify the 18 d and 9 d signals as activity-related,
corresponding to the stellar rotation period and its first harmonic
respectively. The 24 d signals shows no relations with any activity proxy, so
we identify it as a genuine planetary signal. We find the best-fit model
describing the Doppler signal of the newly-found planet, GJ 685\,b,
corresponding to an orbital period d and a
minimum mass M. We also study a
sample of 70 RV-detected M-dwarf planets, and present new statistical evidence
of a difference in mass distribution between the populations of single- and
multi-planet systems, which can shed new light on the formation mechanisms of
low-mass planets around late-type stars.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Cosmological horizons and reconstruction of quantum field theories
As a starting point, we state some relevant geometrical properties enjoyed by
the cosmological horizon of a certain class of Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
backgrounds. Those properties are generalised to a larger class of expanding
spacetimes admitting a geodesically complete cosmological horizon \scrim
common to all co-moving observers. This structure is later exploited in order
to recast, in a cosmological background, some recent results for a linear
scalar quantum field theory in spacetimes asymptotically flat at null infinity.
Under suitable hypotheses on , encompassing both the cosmological de Sitter
background and a large class of other FRW spacetimes, the algebra of
observables for a Klein-Gordon field is mapped into a subalgebra of the algebra
of observables \cW(\scrim) constructed on the cosmological horizon. There is
exactly one pure quasifree state on \cW(\scrim) which fulfils a
suitable energy-positivity condition with respect to a generator related with
the cosmological time displacements. Furthermore induces a preferred
physically meaningful quantum state for the quantum theory in the
bulk. If admits a timelike Killing generator preserving \scrim, then the
associated self-adjoint generator in the GNS representation of has
positive spectrum (i.e. energy). Moreover turns out to be invariant
under every symmetry of the bulk metric which preserves the cosmological
horizon. In the case of an expanding de Sitter spacetime, coincides
with the Euclidean (Bunch-Davies) vacuum state, hence being Hadamard in this
case. Remarks on the validity of the Hadamard property for in more
general spacetimes are presented.Comment: 32 pages, 1 figure, to appear on Comm. Math. Phys., dedicated to
Professor Klaus Fredenhagen on the occasion of his 60th birthda
The extended algebra of observables for Dirac fields and the trace anomaly of their stress-energy tensor
We discuss from scratch the classical structure of Dirac spinors on an
arbitrary globally hyperbolic, Lorentzian spacetime, their formulation as a
locally covariant quantum field theory, and the associated notion of a Hadamard
state. Eventually, we develop the notion of Wick polynomials for spinor fields,
and we employ the latter to construct a covariantly conserved stress-energy
tensor suited for back-reaction computations. We shall explicitly calculate its
trace anomaly in particular.Comment: 65 page
HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG. VII. Rotation and activity of M-Dwarfs from time-series high-resolution spectroscopy of chromospheric indicators
We aim to investigate the presence of signatures of magnetic cycles and
rotation on a sample of 71 early M-dwarfs from the HADES RV programme using
high-resolution time-series spectroscopy of the Ca II H & K and Halpha
chromospheric activity indicators, the radial velocity series, the parameters
of the cross correlation function and the V-band photometry. We used mainly
HARPS-N spectra, acquired over four years, and add HARPS spectra from the
public ESO database and ASAS photometry light-curves as support data, extending
the baseline of the observations of some stars up to 12 years. We provide
log(R'hk) measurements for all the stars in the sample, cycle length
measurements for 13 stars, rotation periods for 33 stars and we are able to
measure the semi-amplitude of the radial velocity signal induced by rotation in
16 stars. We complement our work with previous results and confirm and refine
the previously reported relationships between the mean level of chromospheric
emission, measured by the log(R'hk), with the rotation period, and with the
measured semi-amplitude of the activity induced radial velocity signal for
early M-dwarfs. We searched for a possible relation between the measured
rotation periods and the lengths of the magnetic cycle, finding a weak
correlation between both quantities. Using previous v sin i measurements we
estimated the inclinations of the star's poles to the line of sight for all the
stars in the sample, and estimate the range of masses of the planets GJ 3998 b
and c (2.5 - 4.9 Mearth and 6.3 - 12.5 Mearth), GJ 625 b (2.82 Mearth), GJ 3942
b (7.1 - 10.0 Mearth) and GJ 15A b (3.1 - 3.3 Mearth), assuming their orbits
are coplanar with the stellar rotation.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, 10 table
Elevated levels of eEF1A2 protein expression in triple negative breast cancer relate with poor prognosis
Eukaryotic elongation factor 1 alpha 2 (eEF1A2) is a translation factor selectively expressed by heart, skeletal muscle, nervous system and some specialized cells. Its ectopic expression relates with tumorigenesis in several types of human cancer. No data are available about the role of eEF1A2 in Triple Negative Breast Cancers (TNBC). This study investigated the relation between eEF1A2 protein levels and the prognosis of TNBC. A total of 84 TNBC diagnosed in the period 2002-2011 were included in the study. eEF1A2 protein level was measured in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues by immunohistochemistry in a semi-quantitative manner (sum of the percentage of positive cells x staining intensity) on a scale from 0 to 300. Cox regression assessed the association between eEF1A2 levels and disease-free survival (DFS) and breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS). Elevated values of eEF1A2 were associated with older age at diagnosis (p = 0.003), and androgen receptors positivity (p = 0.002). At univariate Cox analysis, eEF1A2 levels were not significantly associated with DFS and BCSS (p = 0.11 and p = 0.08, respectively) whereas adjusting for stage of disease, elevated levels of eEF1A2 protein resulted associated with poor prognosis (HR = 1.05, 95% CI: 1.01-1.11, p = 0.04 and HR = 1.07, 95% CI: 1.01-1.14, p = 0.03 for DFS and BCSS, respectively). This trend was confirmed analyzing negative versus positive samples by using categorized scores. Our data showed a negative prognostic role of eEF1A2 protein in TNBC, sustaining further investigations to confirm this result by wider and independent cohorts of patients
Accuracy of right atrial pressure estimation using a multi-parameter approach derived from inferior vena cava semi-automated edge-tracking echocardiography: a pilot study in patients with cardiovascular disorders
The echocardiographic estimation of right atrial pressure (RAP) is based on the size and inspiratory collapse of the inferior vena cava (IVC). However, this method has proven to have limits of reliability. The aim of this study is to assess feasibility and accuracy of a new semi-automated approach to estimate RAP. Standard acquired echocardiographic images were processed with a semi-automated technique. Indexes related to the collapsibility of the vessel during inspiration (Caval Index, CI) and new indexes of pulsatility, obtained considering only the stimulation due to either respiration (Respiratory Caval Index, RCI) or heartbeats (Cardiac Caval Index, CCI) were derived. Binary Tree Models (BTM) were then developed to estimate either 3 or 5 RAP classes (BTM3 and BTM5) using indexes estimated by the semi-automated technique. These BTMs were compared with two standard estimation (SE) echocardiographic methods, indicated as A and B, distinguishing among 3 and 5 RAP classes, respectively. Direct RAP measurements obtained during a right heart catheterization (RHC) were used as reference. 62 consecutive \u2018all-comers\u2019 patients that had a RHC were enrolled; 13 patients were excluded for technical reasons. Therefore 49 patients were included in this study (mean age 62.2\ua0\ub1\ua015.2\ua0years, 75.5% pulmonary hypertension, 34.7% severe left ventricular dysfunction and 51% right ventricular dysfunction). The SE methods showed poor accuracy for RAP estimation (method A: misclassification error, ME\ua0=\ua051%, R2\ua0=\ua00.22; method B: ME\ua0=\ua069%, R2\ua0=\ua00.26). Instead, the new semi-automated methods BTM3 and BTM5 have higher accuracy (ME\ua0=\ua014%, R2\ua0=\ua00.47 and ME\ua0=\ua022%, R2\ua0=\ua00.61, respectively). In conclusion, a multi-parametric approach using IVC indexes extracted by the semi-automated approach is a promising tool for a more accurate estimation of RAP
Tunnelling Methods and Hawking's radiation: achievements and prospects
The aim of this work is to review the tunnelling method as an alternative
description of the quantum radiation from black holes and cosmological
horizons. The method is first formulated and discussed for the case of
stationary black holes, then a foundation is provided in terms of analytic
continuation throughout complex space-time. The two principal implementations
of the tunnelling approach, which are the null geodesic method and the
Hamilton-Jacobi method, are shown to be equivalent in the stationary case. The
Hamilton-Jacobi method is then extended to cover spherically symmetric
dynamical black holes, cosmological horizons and naked singularities. Prospects
and achievements are discussed in the conclusions.Comment: Topical Review commissioned and accepted for publication by
"Classical and Quantum Gravity". 101 pages; 6 figure
Central charges and boundary fields for two dimensional dilatonic black holes
In this paper we first show that within the Hamiltonian description of
general relativity, the central charge of a near horizon asymptotic symmetry
group is zero, and therefore that the entropy of the system cannot be estimated
using Cardy's formula. This is done by mapping a static black hole to a two
dimensional space. We explain how such a charge can only appear to a static
observer who chooses to stay permanently outside the black hole. Then an
alternative argument is given for the presence of a universal central charge.
Finally we suggest an effective quantum theory on the horizon that is
compatible with the thermodynamics behaviour of the black hole.Comment: 16 pages, no figures, LaTex 2e, references adde
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