285 research outputs found
Strong-disorder renormalization for interacting non-Abelian anyon systems in two dimensions
We consider the effect of quenched spatial disorder on systems of
interacting, pinned non-Abelian anyons as might arise in disordered Hall
samples at filling fractions \nu=5/2 or \nu=12/5. In one spatial dimension,
such disordered anyon models have previously been shown to exhibit a hierarchy
of infinite randomness phases. Here, we address systems in two spatial
dimensions and report on the behavior of Ising and Fibonacci anyons under the
numerical strong-disorder renormalization group (SDRG). In order to manage the
topology-dependent interactions generated during the flow, we introduce a
planar approximation to the SDRG treatment. We characterize this planar
approximation by studying the flow of disordered hard-core bosons and the
transverse field Ising model, where it successfully reproduces the known
infinite randomness critical point with exponent \psi ~ 0.43. Our main
conclusion for disordered anyon models in two spatial dimensions is that
systems of Ising anyons as well as systems of Fibonacci anyons do not realize
infinite randomness phases, but flow back to weaker disorder under the
numerical SDRG treatment.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, 1 tabl
Effect of different warm-up strategies on simulated laparoscopy performance: a randomized controlled trial.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this trial was to assess which type of warm-up has the highest effect on virtual reality (VR) laparoscopy performance. The following warm-up strategies were applied: a hands-on exercise (group 1), a cognitive exercise (group 2), and no warm-up (control, group 3).
DESIGN: This is a 3-arm randomized controlled trial.
SETTING: The trial was conducted at the department of surgery of the University Hospital Basel in Switzerland.
PARTICIPANTS: A total of 94 participants, all laypersons without any surgical or VR experience, completed the study.
RESULTS: A total of 96 participants were randomized, 31 to group 1, 31 to group 2, and 32 to group 3. There were 2 postrandomization exclusions. In the multivariate analysis, we found no evidence that the intervention had an effect on VR performance as represented by 6 calculated subscores of accuracy, time, and path length for (1) camera manipulation and (2) hand-eye coordination combined with 2-handed maneuvers (p = 0.795). Neither the comparison of the average of the intervention groups (groups 1 and 2) vs control (group 3) nor the pairwise comparisons revealed any significant differences in VR performance, neither multivariate nor univariate. VR performance improved with increasing performance score in the cognitive exercise warm-up (iPad 3D puzzle) for accuracy, time, and path length in the camera navigation task.
CONCLUSIONS: We were unable to show an effect of the 2 tested warm-up strategies on VR performance in laypersons. We are currently designing a follow-up study including surgeons rather than laypersons with a longer warm-up exercise, which is more closely related to the final task
Radiation hardness of CMS pixel barrel modules
Pixel detectors are used in the innermost part of the multi purpose
experiments at LHC and are therefore exposed to the highest fluences of
ionising radiation, which in this part of the detectors consists mainly of
charged pions. The radiation hardness of all detector components has thoroughly
been tested up to the fluences expected at the LHC. In case of an LHC upgrade,
the fluence will be much higher and it is not yet clear how long the present
pixel modules will stay operative in such a harsh environment. The aim of this
study was to establish such a limit as a benchmark for other possible detector
concepts considered for the upgrade.
As the sensors and the readout chip are the parts most sensitive to radiation
damage, samples consisting of a small pixel sensor bump-bonded to a CMS-readout
chip (PSI46V2.1) have been irradiated with positive 200 MeV pions at PSI up to
6E14 Neq and with 21 GeV protons at CERN up to 5E15 Neq.
After irradiation the response of the system to beta particles from a Sr-90
source was measured to characterise the charge collection efficiency of the
sensor. Radiation induced changes in the readout chip were also measured. The
results show that the present pixel modules can be expected to be still
operational after a fluence of 2.8E15 Neq. Samples irradiated up to 5E15 Neq
still see the beta particles. However, further tests are needed to confirm
whether a stable operation with high particle detection efficiency is possible
after such a high fluence.Comment: Contribution to the 11th European Symposium on Semiconductor
Detectors June 7-11, 2009 Wildbad Kreuth, German
Description of the ERA-CLIM historical upper-air data
Historical, i.e. pre-1957, upper-air data are a valuable source of
information on the state of the atmosphere, in some parts of the world dating back
to the early 20th century. However, to date, reanalyses have only
partially made use of these data, and only of observations made after 1948.
Even for the period between 1948 (the starting year of the NCEP/NCAR (National Centers for Environmental
Prediction/National Center for Atmospheric Research) reanalysis) and the International Geophysical Year in 1957 (the starting
year of the ERA-40 reanalysis), when the global upper-air coverage reached
more or less its current status, many observations have not yet been digitised. The Comprehensive Historical Upper-Air Network (CHUAN) already
compiled a large collection of pre-1957 upper-air data. In the framework of
the European project ERA-CLIM (European Reanalysis of Global Climate Observations), significant amounts of additional upper-air
data have been catalogued (> 1.3 million station days), imaged
(> 200 000 images) and digitised (> 700 000 station
days) in order to prepare a new input data set for upcoming reanalyses. The
records cover large parts of the globe, focussing on, so far, less well
covered regions such as the tropics, the polar regions and the oceans, and
on very early upper-air data from Europe and the US. The total number of
digitised/inventoried records is 61/101 for moving upper-air data, i.e. data
from ships, etc., and 735/1783 for fixed upper-air stations. Here, we give a
detailed description of the resulting data set including the metadata and the
quality checking procedures applied. The data will be included in the next
version of CHUAN. The data are available at <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.821222"target="_blank">doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.821222</a>
2D Detectors for Particle Physics and for Imaging Applications
The demands on detectors for particle detection as well as for medical and
astronomical X-ray imaging are continuously pushing the development of novel
pixel detectors. The state of the art in pixel detector technology to date are
hybrid pixel detectors in which sensor and read-out integrated circuits are
processed on different substrates and connected via high density interconnect
structures. While these detectors are technologically mastered such that large
scale particle detectors can be and are being built, the demands for improved
performance for the next generation particle detectors ask for the development
of monolithic or semi-monolithic approaches. Given the fact that the demands
for medical imaging are different in some key aspects, developments for these
applications, which started as particle physics spin-off, are becomming rather
independent. New approaches are leading to novel signal processing concepts and
interconnect technologies to satisfy the need for very high dynamic range and
large area detectors. The present state in hybrid and (semi-)monolithic pixel
detector development and their different approaches for particle physics and
imaging application is reviewed
European climate response to tropical volcanic eruptions over the last half millennium
We analyse the winter and summer climatic signal following 15 major tropical volcanic eruptions over the last half millennium based on multi-proxy reconstructions for Europe. During the first and second post-eruption years we find significant continental scale summer cooling and somewhat drier conditions over Central Europe. In the Northern Hemispheric winter the volcanic forcing induces an atmospheric circulation response that significantly follows a positive NAO state connected with a significant overall warm anomaly and wetter conditions over Northern Europe. Our findings compare well with GCM studies as well as observational studies, which mainly cover the substantially shorter instrumental period and thus include a limited set of major eruptions
Pennsylvanian-Early Triassic stratigraphy in the Alborz Mountains (Iran)
New fieldwork was carried out in the central and eastern Alborz, addressing the sedimentary succession from the Pennsylvanian to the Early Triassic. A regional synthesis is proposed, based on sedimentary analysis and a wide collection of new palaeontological data. The Moscovian Qezelqaleh Formation, deposited in a mixed coastal marine and alluvial setting, is present in a restricted area of the eastern Alborz, transgressing on the Lower Carboniferous Mobarak and Dozdehband formations. The late Gzhelianâearly Sakmarian Dorud Group is instead distributed over most of the studied area, being absent only in a narrow belt to the SE. The Dorud Group is typically tripartite, with a terrigenous unit in the lower part (Toyeh Formation), a carbonate intermediate part (Emarat and Ghosnavi formations, the former particularly rich in fusulinids), and a terrigenous upper unit (Shah Zeid Formation), which however seems to be confined to the central Alborz. A major gap in sedimentation occurred before the deposition of the overlying Ruteh Limestone, a thick package of packstoneâwackestone interpreted as a carbonate ramp of Middle Permian age (WordianâCapitanian). The Ruteh Limestone is absent in the eastern part of the range, and everywhere ends with an emersion surface, that may be karstified or covered by a lateritic soil.
The Late Permian transgression was directed southwards in the central Alborz, where marine facies (Nesen Formation) are more common. Time-equivalent alluvial fans with marsh intercalations and lateritic soils (Qeshlaq Formation) are present in the east. Towards the end of the Permian most of the Alborz emerged, the marine facies being restricted to a small area on the Caspian side of the central Alborz. There, the Permo-Triassic boundary interval is somewhat similar to the AbadehâShahreza belt in central Iran, and contains oolites, flat microbialites and domal stromatolites, forming the base of the Elikah Formation. The PâT boundary is established on the basis of conodonts, small foraminifera and stable isotope data. The development of the lower and middle part of the Elikah Formation, still Early Triassic in age, contains vermicular bioturbated mudstone/wackestone, and anachronostic-facies-like gastropod oolites and flat pebble conglomerates.
Three major factors control the sedimentary evolution. The succession is in phase with global sea-level curve in the Moscovian and from the Middle Permian upwards. It is out of phase around the CarboniferousâPermian boundary, when the Dorud Group was deposited during a global lowstand of sealevel. When the global deglaciation started in the Sakmarian, sedimentation stopped in the Alborz and the area emerged. Therefore, there is a consistent geodynamic control. From the Middle Permian upwards, passive margin conditions control the sedimentary evolution of the basin, which had its depocentre(s) to the north. Climate also had a significant role, as the Alborz drifted quickly northwards with other central Iran blocks towards the Turan active margin. It passed from a southern latitude through the aridity belt in the Middle Permian, across the equatorial humid belt in the Late Permian and reached the northern arid tropical belt in the Triassic
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