488 research outputs found
Scalable Circuits for Preparing Ground States on Digital Quantum Computers: The Schwinger Model Vacuum on 100 Qubits
The vacuum of the lattice Schwinger model is prepared on up to 100 qubits of
IBM's Eagle-processor quantum computers. A new algorithm to prepare the ground
state of a gapped translationally-invariant system on a quantum computer is
presented, which we call Scalable Circuits ADAPT-VQE (SC-ADAPT-VQE). This
algorithm uses the exponential decay of correlations between distant regions of
the ground state, together with ADAPT-VQE, to construct quantum circuits for
state preparation that can be scaled to arbitrarily large systems. SC-ADAPT-VQE
is applied to the Schwinger model, and shown to be systematically improvable,
with an accuracy that converges exponentially with circuit depth. Both the
structure of the circuits and the deviations of prepared wavefunctions are
found to become independent of the number of spatial sites, . This allows
for a controlled extrapolation of the circuits, determined using small or
modest-sized systems, to arbitrarily large . The circuits for the Schwinger
model are determined on lattices up to (28 qubits) with the qiskit
classical simulator, and subsequently scaled up to prepare the (100
qubits) vacuum on IBM's 127 superconducting-qubit quantum computers
ibm_brisbane and ibm_cusco. After applying an improved error-mitigation
technique, which we call Operator Decoherence Renormalization, the chiral
condensate and charge-charge correlators obtained from the quantum computers
are found to be in good agreement with classical Matrix Product State
simulations.Comment: 14 pages + appendices. 16 figures, 12 table
DIC analysis of mechanical response of tooth aligners under simulated swallowing acts
In this work, the mechanical and deformation behavior of clear Polyethylene Terephthalate-glycol (PET-g) aligners, under cyclic loading was investigated using a full-field optical technique: the Digital Image Correlation. In particular, the PET-g aligners thermoformed from 0.88 mm thick discs, were subjected to cyclic compression tests for 13000 load cycles from 0 to 50 N in the atmospheric environment (~25°C). This number of cycles was chosen because it simulates, on average, the intraoral load associated with the swallowing acts that an aligner is subjected to during the time of use of 1 week. At the same time, the results from the analysis of hysteresis loops obtained by the DIC technique were compared with those obtained by the testing machine. The mechanical response of clear aligners was evaluated in terms of maximum displacement, energy loss and relative stiffness along the load direction to seven different stages
of the 13000 load cycles. A comparable trend was found between the measurements obtained by Digital Image Correlation analysis and the analysis of the hysteresis loops obtained from the cyclic compression tests. Furthermore, the morphological features of the PET-g aligner at the end of the tests were analyzed by optical microscopy (OM). The OM analyses showed that thesurface of PET-g aligner was affected by morphological variations such as high depressions and cracks
Hodgkin lymphoma: A special microenvironment
Classical Hodgknâs lymphoma (cHL) is one of the most particular lymphomas for the few tumor cells surrounded by an inflammatory microenvironment. Reed-Sternberg (RS) and Hodgkin (H) cells reprogram and evade antitumor mechanisms of the normal cells present in the microenvi-ronment. The cells of microenvironment are essential for growth and survival of the RS/H cells and are recruited through the effect of cytokines/chemokines. We summarize recent advances in gene expression profiling (GEP) analysis applied to study microenvironment component in cHL. We also describe the main therapies that target not only the neoplastic cells but also the cellular components of the background
Longitudinal tear protein changes correlate with ocular chronic gvhd development in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant patients
Ocular graft-versus-host disease (oGVHD) is a manifestation of chronic GVHD, frequently occurring in patients after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT). We analyzed tear protein changes before and after allogeneic HSCT, and correlated their levels with the oGVHD development. This retrospective study included 102 patients, and data were recorded before the conditioning treatment, and after 3 to 6 months postoperatively. Tear protein analysis was performed with the Agilent-2100 Bioanalyzer on individual tears sampled by aspiration. Total protein (TP), Lysozyme-C (LYS-C), Lactoferrin (LACTO), Lipocalin-1 (LIPOC-1), Transferrin (TRANSF), Albumin (ALB), and Zinc-alpha-2-glycoprotein (ZAG-2) levels were retrieved and statistically analyzed. Following HSCT forty-three patients developed oGVHD. TP, LACTO, LYS-C, and ZAG-2 levels significantly decreased post-HSCT as compared to pre HSCT levels. In univariate analysis, TP, LACTO, and ZAG-2 decrease was associated with an increased development of oGVHD (OR = 4.49; 95% CI, 1.9 to 10.5; p < 0.001; OR = 3.08; 95% CI 1.3 to 7.6; p = 0.01; OR = 11.1; 95% CI 2.7 to 46.6; p < 0.001, respectively). TRANSF post-HSCT levels significantly increased (OR 15.7; 95% CI, 4.1 to 52.2; p = 0.0001). No pre-post-HSCT changes were shown in ALB and LIPOC-1 levels. Data suggest that TP content, LACTO, TRANSF, and ZAG-2 pre-post changes might be significant predictors of oGVHD development
Phenotypic, morphological, and metabolic characterization of vascular-spheres from human vascular mesenchymal stem cells
The ability to form spheroids under non-adherent conditions is a well-known property of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs), in addition to stemness and multilineage differentiation features. In the present study, we tested the ability of hMSCs isolated from the vascular wall (hVW-MSCs) to grow as spheres, and provide a characterization of this 3D model. hVW-MSCs were isolated from femoral arteries through enzymatic digestion. Spheres were obtained using ultra-low attachment and hanging drop methods. Immunophenotype and pluripotent genes (SOX-2, OCT-4, NANOG) were analyzed by immunocytochemistry and real-time PCR, respectively. Spheres histological and ultrastructural architecture were examined. Cell viability and proliferative capacity were measured using LIVE/DEATH assay and ki-67 proliferation marker. Metabolomic profile was obtained with liquid chromatographyâmass spectrometry. In 2D, hVW-MSCs were spindle-shaped, expressed mesenchymal antigens, and displayed mesengenic potential. 3D cultures of hVW-MSCs were CD44+, CD105low, CD90low, exhibited a low propensity to enter the cell cycle as indicated by low percentage of ki-67 expression and accumulated intermediate metabolites pointing to slowed metabolism. The 3D model of hVW-MSCs exhibits stemness, dormancy and slow metabolism, typically observed in stem cell niches. This culture strategy can represent an accurate model to investigate hMSCs features for future clinical applications in the vascular field
Human influence on the record-breaking cold event in January of 2016 in Eastern China
Anthropogenic influences are estimated to have reduced the likelihood of an extreme cold event in midwinter with the intensity equal to or stronger than the record of 2016 in eastern China by about twoâthirds
Sella turcica and craniofacial morphology in patients with palatally displaced canines: a retrospective study
Background: The aim of the study was to evaluate the sella and craniofacial morphological features in growing patients with palatally displaced canines compared to controls.
Materials and methods: Twenty-two subjects with palatally displaced canines were retrospectively selected and compared to 22 controls matched for age and gender. Lateral cephalograms were collected and sagittal and vertical cephalometric variables were measured, together with sella interclinoid distance, sella depth, and sella diameter. The independent samples T-test or Mann-Whitney U-test were used to compare all the variables between the two groups. A Pearson correlation was computed for the craniofacial and sella variables that differed significantly (p < 0.05) between the groups.
Results: Patients with palatally displaced canines showed a smaller interclinoid distance and a greater SNA angle than control subjects. The interclinoid distance and the SNA angle were negatively correlated (â0.52, p = 0.017) in the experimental group.
Conclusions: Growing patients with palatally displaced canines had smaller sella interclinoid distances and a greater SNA angle than control subjects
Upgrade of the HadGEM3-A based attribution system to high resolution and a new validation framework for probabilistic event attribution
We present a substantial upgrade of the Met Office system for the probabilistic attribution of extreme weather and climate events with higher horizontal and vertical resolution (60 km mid-latitudes and 85 vertical levels), the latest Hadley Centre atmospheric and land model (ENDGame dynamics with GA6.0 science and JULES at GL6.0) as well as an updated forcings set. A new set of experiments designed for the evaluation and implementation of an operational attribution service are described which consist of pairs of multi-decadal stochastic physics ensembles continued on a season by season basis by large ensembles that are able to sample extreme at- mospheric states possible in the recent past. Diagnostics from these experiments form the HadGEM3-A contribution to the international Climate of the 20th Century Plus (C20CĂŸ) project and were analysed under the European Climate and Weather Events: Interpretation and Attribution (EUCLEIA) event attribution project as well as contributing to the Climate Science for Service Partnership (CSSP)-China programme. After discussing the framing issues surrounding questions that can be asked with our system we construct a novel approach to the evaluation of atmosphere-only ensembles intended for event attribution, in the process highlighting and clarifying the distinction between hindcast skill and model performance. A framework based around assessing model representation of predictable components and ensuring exchangeability of model and real world statistics leads to a form of detection and attribution to boundary condition forcing as a means of quantifying one degree of freedom of potential model error and allowing for the bias correction of event probabilities and resulting probability ratios. This method is then applied systematically across the globe to assess contributions from anthropogenic influence and specific boundary conditions to the changing probability of observed and record seasonal mean temperatures of four recent 3-month seasons from March 2016âFebruary 2017
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Unusual past dry and wet rainy seasons over Southern Africa and South America from a climate perspective
Southern Africa and Southern South America have experienced recent extremes in dry and wet rainy seasons which have caused severe socio-economic damages. Selected past extreme events are here studied, to estimate how human activity has changed the risk of the occurrence of such events, by applying an event attribution approach (Stott et al., 2004)comprising global climate models of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 (CMIP5). Our assessment shows that models' representation of mean precipitation variability over Southern South America is not adequate to make a robust attribution statement about seasonal rainfall extremes in this region. Over Southern Africa, we show that unusually dry austral summers as occurred during 2002/2003 have become more likely, whereas unusually wet austral summers like that of 1999/2000 have become less likely due to anthropogenic climate change. There is some tentative evidence that the risk of extreme high 5-day precipitation totals (as observed in 1999/2000) have increased in the region. These results are consistent with CMIP5 models projecting a general drying trend over SAF during DecemberâJanuaryâFebruary (DJF) but also an increase in atmospheric moisture availability to feed heavy rainfall events when they do occur. Bootstrapping the confidence intervals of the fraction of attributable risk has demonstrated estimates of attributable risk are very uncertain, if the events are very rare. The study highlights some of the challenges in making an event attribution study for precipitation using seasonal precipitation and extreme 5-day precipitation totals and considering natural drivers such as ENSO in coupled oceanâatmosphere models
Attribution of Extreme Rainfall in Southeast China During May 2015
Anthropogenic climate change increased the probability that a short-duration,
intense rainfall event would occur in parts of southeast China. This type of
event occurred in May 2015, causing serious flooding.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Published in the Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society special report on extreme events of 201
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