74 research outputs found
Combinatorial Hopf algebras in quantum field theory I
This manuscript stands at the interface between combinatorial Hopf algebra
theory and renormalization theory. Its plan is as follows: Section 1 is the
introduction, and contains as well an elementary invitation to the subject. The
rest of part I, comprising Sections 2-6, is devoted to the basics of Hopf
algebra theory and examples, in ascending level of complexity. Part II turns
around the all-important Faa di Bruno Hopf algebra. Section 7 contains a first,
direct approach to it. Section 8 gives applications of the Faa di Bruno algebra
to quantum field theory and Lagrange reversion. Section 9 rederives the related
Connes-Moscovici algebras. In Part III we turn to the Connes-Kreimer Hopf
algebras of Feynman graphs and, more generally, to incidence bialgebras. In
Section10 we describe the first. Then in Section11 we give a simple derivation
of (the properly combinatorial part of) Zimmermann's cancellation-free method,
in its original diagrammatic form. In Section 12 general incidence algebras are
introduced, and the Faa di Bruno bialgebras are described as incidence
bialgebras. In Section 13, deeper lore on Rota's incidence algebras allows us
to reinterpret Connes-Kreimer algebras in terms of distributive lattices. Next,
the general algebraic-combinatorial proof of the cancellation-free formula for
antipodes is ascertained; this is the heart of the paper. The structure results
for commutative Hopf algebras are found in Sections 14 and 15. An outlook
section very briefly reviews the coalgebraic aspects of quantization and the
Rota-Baxter map in renormalization.Comment: 94 pages, LaTeX figures, precisions made, typos corrected, more
references adde
Comparison of dynamical decoupling protocols for a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond
We perform a detailed theoretical-experimental study of the dynamical
decoupling (DD) of the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond. We investigate
the DD sequences applied to suppress the dephasing of the electron spin of the
NV center induced by the coupling to a spin bath composed of the substitutional
nitrogen atoms. The decoupling efficiency of various DD schemes is studied,
including both periodic and periodic pulse sequences. For ideal control pulses,
we find that the DD protocols with the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) timing
of the pulses provides best performance. We show that, as the number of control
pulses increases, the decoupling fidelity scaling differs qualitatively from
the predictions of the Magnus expansion, and explain the origin of this
difference. In particular, more advanced symmetrized or concatenated protocols
do not improve the DD performance. Next, we investigate the impact of the
systematic instrumental pulse errors in different periodic and aperiodic pulse
sequences. The DD protocols with the single-axis control do not preserve all
spin components in the presence of the pulse errors, and the two-axis control
is needed. We demonstrate that the two-axis control sequence with the CPMG
timing is very robust with respect to the pulse errors. The impact of the pulse
errors can be diminished further by symmetrizing this protocol. For all
protocols studied here, we present a detailed account of the pulse error
parameters which make strongest impact on the DD performance. In conclusion, we
give specific recommendations about choosing the decoupling protocol for the
system under investigation.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
BubR1 as a prognostic marker for recurrence-free survival rates in epithelial ovarian cancers
BACKGROUND: Epithelial ovarian cancer is one of the most lethal malignancies, and has a high recurrence rate. Thus, prognostic markers
for recurrence are crucial for the care of ovarian cancer. As ovarian cancers frequently exhibit chromosome instability, we aimed at
assessing the prognostic significance of two key mitotic kinases, BubR1 and Aurora A.
METHODS: We analysed paraffin-embedded tissue sections from 160 ovarian cancer patients whose clinical outcomes had been
tracked after first-line treatment.
RESULTS: The median recurrence-free survival in patients with a positive and negative expression of BubR1 was 27 and 83 months,
respectively (Po0.001). A positive BubR1 expression was also associated with advanced stage, serous histology and high grade.
In contrast, Aurora A immunostaining did not correlate with any of the clinical parameters analysed.
CONCLUSION: BubR1, but not Aurora A, is a prognostic marker for recurrence-free survival rates in epithelial ovarian cancers.Research in the H Lee laboratory is funded by the National
Research Laboratory Program from the Korean ministry of
Education and Science (ROA-2008-000-20023-0). This work was
also supported by the Seoul National University Hospital Grant
(0420080450), the 21C Frontier Functional Genome Project (FG06-
2-14) of the Korean ministry of Education and Science, Korea
Research Foundation (KRF-2005-C00097), and the National R&D
Program for Cancer Control (0620070) from the Korean ministry
of Health welfare and Family Affairs. Imaging facilities in the H Lee
laboratory are funded by RCFC (R11-2005-009-04003-0) of the SRC
program from KOSEF
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