8,229 research outputs found
London SynEx Demonstrator Site: Impact Assessment Report
The key ingredients of the SynEx-UCL software components are:
1. A comprehensive and federated electronic healthcare record that can be used to
reference or to store all of the necessary healthcare information acquired from a
diverse range of clinical databases and patient-held devices.
2. A directory service component to provide a core persons demographic database to
search for and authenticate staff users of the system and to anchor patient
identification and connection to their federated healthcare record.
3. A clinical record schema management tool (Object Dictionary Client) that enables
clinicians or engineers to define and export the data sets mapping to individual
feeder systems.
4. An expansible set of clinical management algorithms that provide prompts to the
patient or clinician to assist in the management of patient care.
CHIME has built up over a decade of experience within Europe on the requirements
and information models that are needed to underpin comprehensive multiprofessional
electronic healthcare records. The resulting architecture models have
influenced new European standards in this area, and CHIME has designed and built
prototype EHCR components based on these models. The demonstrator systems
described here utilise a directory service and object-oriented engineering approach,
and support the secure, mobile and distributed access to federated healthcare
records via web-based services.
The design and implementation of these software components has been founded on
a thorough analysis of the clinical, technical and ethico-legal requirements for
comprehensive EHCR systems, published through previous project deliverables and
in future planned papers.
The clinical demonstrator site described in this report has provided the solid basis
from which to establish "proof of concept" verification of the design approach, and a
valuable opportunity to install, test and evaluate the results of the component
engineering undertaken during the EC funded project. Inevitably, a number of
practical implementation and deployment obstacles have been overcome through
this journey, each of those having contributed to the time taken to deliver the
components but also to the richness of the end products.
UCL is fortunate that the Whittington Hospital, and the department of cardiovascular
medicine in particular, is committed to a long-term vision built around this work. That
vision, outlined within this report, is shared by the Camden and Islington Health
Authority and by many other purchaser and provider organisations in the area, and
by a number of industrial parties. They are collectively determined to support the
Demonstrator Site as an ongoing project well beyond the life of the EC SynEx
Project.
This report, although a final report as far as the EC project is concerned, is really a
description of the first phase in establishing a centre of healthcare excellence. New
EC Fifth Framework project funding has already been approved to enable new and
innovative technology solutions to be added to the work already established in north
London
Lifetime Measurement of the 8s Level in Francium
We measure the lifetime of the 8s level on a magneto-optically trapped sample
of ^{210}Fr atoms with time-correlated single-photon counting. The 7P_{1/2}
state serves as the resonant intermediate level for two-photon excitation of
the 8s level completed with a 1300 nm laser. Analysis of the fluorescence decay
through the the 7P_{3/2} level gives 53.30 +- 0.44 ns for the 8s level
lifetime.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Lifetime Measurement of the 6s Level of Rubidium
We present a lifetime measurements of the 6s level of rubidium. We use a
time-correlated single-photon counting technique on two different samples of
rubidium atoms. A vapor cell with variable rubidium density and a sample of
atoms confined and cooled in a magneto-optical trap. The 5P_{1/2} level serves
as the resonant intermediate step for the two step excitation to the 6s level.
We detect the decay of the 6s level through the cascade fluorescence of the
5P_{3/2} level at 780 nm. The two samples have different systematic effects,
but we obtain consistent results that averaged give a lifetime of 45.57 +- 0.17
ns.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
European Metrology Network (EMN) for Advanced Manufacturing
The European Metrology Network (EMN) for Advanced Manufacturing has been established in June 2021. Currently 11 EMNs focussing on different important topics of strategic importance for Europe exist and form an integral part of EURAMET, the European Association of National Metrology Institutes (NMI). EMNs are tasked to
- develop a high-level coordination of the metrology community in Europe in a close dialogue with the respective stakeholders (SH)
- develop a Strategic Research Agenda (SRA) within their thematic areas
- provide contributions to the European Partnership on Metrology research programme
Based on the analysis of existing metrology infrastructures and capabilities of NMIs, the metrology research needs for advanced manufacturing are identified in close cooperation with academic, governmental and industrial stakeholders. Here, we report on advanced materials metrology needs addressed in the EMNs preliminary SRA
The Random Walk in Generalized Quantum Theory
One can view quantum mechanics as a generalization of classical probability
theory that provides for pairwise interference among alternatives. Adopting
this perspective, we ``quantize'' the classical random walk by finding, subject
to a certain condition of ``strong positivity'', the most general Markovian,
translationally invariant ``decoherence functional'' with nearest neighbor
transitions.Comment: 25 pages, no figure
A review of solar driven absorption cooling with photovoltaic thermal systems
The aim of this investigation is to evaluate the recent advances in the field of solar absorption cooling systems from the viewpoint of solar collector types. A review in the area of photovoltaic thermal (PVT) absorption cooling systems is conducted. This review includes experimental and computational work focusing on collector types and their efficiencies and performance indicators. Compared to vapour compression air conditioning systems, 50% of primary energy was saved by using solar absorption cooling systems and 10–35% maximum electrical efficiency of PVT was achieved.
This review shows that Coefficient of Performance (COP) for solar cooling systems is in the range of 0.1–0.91 while the thermal collector efficiencies are in the range of 0.06–0.64. The average area to produce cooling for single effect absorption chillers for experimental and computational projects is 4.95 m2/kWc and 5.61 m2/kWc respectively. The specific area for flat plat collector (FPC) is in the range of 2.18–9.4 m2/kWc, while for evacuated tube collector (ETC) is in the range of 1.27–12.5 m2/kWc. For concentrated photovoltaic thermal collector (CPVT) and PVT, the average area to produce cooling for solar absorption chillers are 2.72 m2/kWc and 3.1 m2/kWc respectively
The Role of Collective Neutrino Flavor Oscillations in Core-Collapse Supernova Shock Revival
We explore the effects of collective neutrino flavor oscillations due to
neutrino-neutrino interactions on the neutrino heating behind a stalled
core-collapse supernova shock. We carry out axisymmetric (2D)
radiation-hydrodynamic core-collapse supernova simulations, tracking the first
400 ms of the post-core-bounce evolution in 11.2 solar mass and 15 solar mass
progenitor stars. Using inputs from these 2D simulations, we perform neutrino
flavor oscillation calculations in multi-energy single-angle and multi-angle
single-energy approximations. Our results show that flavor conversions do not
set in until close to or outside the stalled shock, enhancing heating by not
more than a few percent in the most optimistic case. Consequently, we conclude
that the postbounce pre-explosion dynamics of standard core-collapse supernovae
remains unaffected by neutrino oscillations. Multi-angle effects in regions of
high electron density can further inhibit collective oscillations,
strengthening our conclusion.Comment: v2: Added multi-angle calculations. Conclusions unchanged. 16 pages,
7 figures. Accepted to Phys. Rev. D after revisions: 15 Sept 2011 (major), 24
Jan 2012 (minor
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