3,881 research outputs found

    Condensation of Hard Spheres Under Gravity

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    Starting from Enskog equation of hard spheres of mass m and diameter D under the gravity g, we first derive the exact equation of motion for the equilibrium density profile at a temperature T and examine its solutions via the gradient expansion. The solutions exist only when \beta\mu \le \mu_o \approx 21.756 in 2 dimensions and \mu_o\approx 15.299 in 3 dimensions, where \mu is the dimensionless initial layer thickness and \beta=mgD/T. When this inequality breaks down, a fraction of particles condense from the bottom up to the Fermi surface.Comment: 9 pages, one figur

    Supporting interoperability of genetic data with LOINC

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    Electronic reporting of genetic testing results is increasing, but they are often represented in diverse formats and naming conventions. Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC) is a vocabulary standard that provides universal identifiers for laboratory tests and clinical observations. In genetics, LOINC provides codes to improve interoperability in the midst of reporting style transition, including codes for cytogenetic or mutation analysis tests, specific chromosomal alteration or mutation testing, and fully structured discrete genetic test reporting. LOINC terms follow the recommendations and nomenclature of other standards such as the Human Genome Organization Gene Nomenclature Committee’s terminology for gene names. In addition to the narrative text they report now, we recommend that laboratories always report as discrete variables chromosome analysis results, genetic variation(s) found, and genetic variation(s) tested for. By adopting and implementing data standards like LOINC, information systems can help care providers and researchers unlock the potential of genetic information for delivering more personalized care

    Response to Unit conversions between LOINC codes

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    Estimating economic and social welfare impacts of pension reform

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    This paper examines the impact of two effects of the pension reform package that the UK Government put forward in the May White Paper Security in retirement: the likely increase in the number of older people working due to a higher State Pension age and the likely rise in saving due to more people putting away money for retirement. The overall effect of changes to State Pension age and the introduction of personal accounts on UK incomes is likely to be in the range of 0.9 – 3.1 per cent. Although these numbers are relatively small proportions of the total economy, they represent significant sums. In terms of today’s economy, they would be worth around £11 – 38 billion. This paper also applies an innovative economic analysis to examine the scale of the increase in people’s wellbeing as a result of improved consumption smoothing. It finds that if people save for retirement through personal accounts, then generally their wellbeing will be enhanced.pension reform; consumption smoothing; social welfare

    A Galvanic Coupling Method for Assessing Hydration Rates

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    Recent advances in biomedical sensors, data acquisition techniques, microelectronics and wireless communication systems opened up the use of wearable technology for ehealth monitoring. We introduce a galvanic coupled intrabody communication for monitoring human body hydration. Studies in hydration provide the information necessary for understanding the desired fluid levels for optimal performance of the body’s physiological and metabolic processes during exercise and activities of daily living. Current measurement techniques are mostly suitable for laboratory purposes due to their complexity and technical requirements. Less technical methods such as urine color observation and skin turgor testing are subjective and cannot be integrated into a wearable device. Bioelectrical impedance methods are popular but mostly used for estimating total body water with limited accuracy and sensitive to 800 mL–1000 mL change in body fluid levels. We introduce a non-intrusive and simple method of tracking hydration rates that can detect up to 1.30 dB reduction in attenuation when as little as 100 mL of water is consumed. Our results show that galvanic coupled intrabody signal propagation can provide qualitative hydration and dehydration rates in line with changes in an individual’s urine specific gravity and body mass. The real-time changes in galvanic coupled intrabody signal attenuation can be integrated into wearable electronic devices to evaluate body fluid levels on a particular area of interest and can aid diagnosis and treatment of fluid disorders such as lymphoedema

    A Circuit Model of Real Time Human Body Hydration

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    1014-92 Impaired Microcirculation in Chronic Heart Failure

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    The microcirculation plays a crucial role in the exchange of oxygen, energy rich substrates and metabolites. The effects on the microcirculation of impaired heart function and disturbed peripheral skin circulation in chronic heart failure (CHF) are unknown. Nailfold capillary morphology and dynamics in CHF were studied in relation to parameters of left ventricular (LV) structure and function. Twenty patients (13 male, 7 female, age 64±2 years) with CHF NYHA class II underwent a capillaroscopic examination at the finger nailfold using a computerised videophotometric system (Capiflow) at rest and after 1 min arterial occlusion. Patients were treated with diuretics, ACE inhibitors and digoxin and mean duration of symptoms was 65±9 months. Study parameters were number, length, and diameter of the capillaries as well as capillary blood velocity (CBV). Further experiments included echocardiography and determination of LV ejection fraction by Tc-scintigraphy. Nailfold capillaries in established CHF are enlarged (afferent diameter 6.6±0.4 μm, efferent diameter 8.2±0.4 μm, ref. resp. <6 and <8 μm) and CBV is dramatically decreased (351±64 μ/s, ref. >600 μm/s at 23°C). The reactive hyperemic response to one minute arterial occlusion is attenuated (peak CBV 879±158 μm/s, ref >2000 μm/s). CBV correlates positively with LV ejection fraction (r=0.61, p=001) and inversely with LV end-diastolic (r=-0.56, P=0.04) and end-systolic (r=-0.69, P=0.01) diameters. The time-to-peak flow (35±5 s, ref. 6–10 s) after one min arterial occlusion is positively related (r=0.68, P<0.05) to the duration of CHF. Our data indicate that microcirculation in chronic heart failure deteriorates in function of the severity and duration of heart failure
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