3,915 research outputs found
Supersymmetric Canonical Commutation Relations
We present unitarily represented supersymmetric canonical commutation
relations which are subsequently used to canonically quantize massive and
massless chiral,antichiral and vector fields. The massless fields, especially
the vector one, show new facets which do not appear in the non superymmetric
case. Our tool is the supersymmetric positivity induced by the Hilbert-Krein
structure of the superspace.Comment: 14 page
Supersymmetric Distributions, Hilbert Spaces of Supersymmetric Functions and Quantum Fields
The recently investigated Hilbert-Krein and other positivity structures of
the superspace are considered in the framework of superdistributions. These
tools are applied to problems raised by the rigorous supersymmetric quantum
field theory.Comment: 24 page
The wave surveyor technique for fast plasma wave detection in multi-spacecraft data
Multi-satellite missions like Cluster allow to study the full spatio-temporal variability of plasma processes in near-Earth space, and both the frequency and the wave vector dependence of dispersion relations can be reconstructed. Existing wave analysis methods include high-resolution beamformers like the wave telescope or <I><B>k</B></I>-filtering technique, and the phase differencing approach that combines the correlations measured at pairs of sensors of the spacecraft array. In this paper, we make use of the eigendecomposition of the cross spectral density matrix to construct a direct wave identification method that we choose to call the wave surveyor technique. The analysis scheme extracts only the dominant wave mode but is much faster to apply than existing techniques, hence it is expected to ease survey-type detection of waves in large data sets. The wave surveyor technique is demonstrated by means of synthetic data, and is also applied to Cluster magnetometer measurements
Linear and nonlinear parameters of heart rate variability in ischemic stroke patients
Introduction
Cardiovascular system presents cortical modulation. Post-stroke outcome can be highly influenced by autonomic nervous system disruption. Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis is a simple non-invasive method to assess sympatho-vagal balance.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to investigate cardiac autonomic activity in ischemic stroke patients and to asses HRV nonlinear parameters beside linear ones.
Methods
We analyzed HRV parameters in 15 right and 15 left middle cerebral artery ischemic stroke patients, in rest condition and during challenge (standing and deep breathing). Data were compared with 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls.
Results
There was an asymmetric response after autonomic stimulation tests depending on the cortical lateralization in ischemic stroke patients. In resting state, left hemisphere stroke patients presented enhanced parasympathetic control of the heart rate (higher values for RMSSD, pNN50 and HF in normalized units). Right hemisphere ischemic stroke patients displayed a reduced cardiac parasympathetic modulation during deep breathing test. Beside time and frequency domain, using short-term ECG monitoring, cardiac parasympathetic modulation can also be assessed by nonlinear parameter SD1, that presented strong positive correlation with time and frequency domain parameters RMSSD, pNN50, HFnu, while DFA α1 index presented negative correlation with the same indices and positive correlation with the LFnu and LF/HF ratio, indicating a positive association with the sympatho-vagal balance.
Conclusions
Cardiac monitoring in clinical routine using HRV analysis in order to identify autonomic imbalance may highlight cardiac dysfunctions, thus helping preventing potential cardiovascular complications, especially in right hemisphere ischemic stroke patients with sympathetic hyperactivation
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