1,938 research outputs found
Thermally stable low current consuming gallium and germanium chalcogenides for consumer and automotive memory applications
The phase change technology behind rewritable optical disks and the latest generation of electronic memories has provided clear commercial and technological advances for the field of data storage, by virtue of the many well known attributes, in particular scaling, cycling endurance and speed, that chalcogenide materials offer. While the switching power and current consumption of established germanium antimony telluride based memory cells are a major factor in chip design in real world applications, often the thermal stability of the device can be a major obstacle in the path to the full commercialisation. In this work we describe our research in material discovery and characterization for the purpose of identifying more thermally stable chalcogenides for applications in PCRAM
Recurrent episodes of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in systemic sclerosis
Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune disease characterized by fibrosis and small vessel vasculopathy, which affects various organ systems, such as the heart. Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is a transient cardiomyopathy in reaction to an emotional or physical trigger. There may be clinical and pathogenetic overlap between Takotsubo cardiomyopathy and primary systemic sclerosis heart disease, and some patients with systemic sclerosis have been diagnosed with recurrent Takotsubo cardiomyopathy. Our large systemic sclerosis clinical cohort was reviewed to identify cases diagnosed with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy. The clinical features, laboratory and imaging results were reviewed and evaluated to perform a comparison between cases. We identified five patients with systemic sclerosis, all female (age 68.6 ± 5.7 years), who were diagnosed with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy. Two of these patients had recurrent episodes: one case with a history of multiple episodes and the other with one recurrence. Typical features included repolarization abnormalities on the electrocardiogram and transient left ventricular dysfunction observed using echocardiography or cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. Our findings build upon previous reports and observations that systemic sclerosis may cause Takotsubo cardiomyopathy. To our knowledge, this is the largest case series of Takotsubo syndrome in patients with systemic sclerosis. This association may provide novel insights into the aetiopathogenesis of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy as part of primary systemic sclerosis heart involvement
Inverting Ray-Knight identity
We provide a short proof of the Ray-Knight second generalized Theorem, using
a martingale which can be seen (on the positive quadrant) as the Radon-Nikodym
derivative of the reversed vertex-reinforced jump process measure with respect
to the Markov jump process with the same conductances. Next we show that a
variant of this process provides an inversion of that Ray-Knight identity. We
give a similar result for the Ray-Knight first generalized Theorem.Comment: 18 page
Perspectives from those involved in healthy stadia
Healthy stadia is a growing agenda across industry and in turn academia. In this era of growth, much of the research literature is primarily sourced from academics with little contribution from applied and industry stakeholders. As such, the editors have sought to offer practitioners a platform to share novel projects, perspectives and preliminary intervention evaluation findings. This applied article intends to share evaluation and insight from applied practice, to encourage closer debate between the academic community and applied industry
Vortices in vibrated granular rods
We report the experimental observation of novel vortex patterns in vertically
vibrated granular rods. Above a critical packing fraction, moving ordered
domains of nearly vertical rods spontaneously form and coexist with horizontal
rods. The domains of vertical rods coarsen in time to form large vortices. We
investigate the conditions under which the vortices occur by varying the number
of rods, vibration amplitude and frequency. The size of the vortices increases
with the number of rods. We characterize the growth of the ordered domains by
measuring the area fraction of the ordered regions as a function of time. A
{\em void filling} model is presented to describe the nucleation and growth of
the vertical domains. We track the ends of the vertical rods and obtain the
velocity fields of the vortices. The rotation speed of the rods is observed to
depend on the vibration velocity of the container and on the packing. To
investigate the impact of the direction of driving on the observed phenomena,
we performed experiments with the container vibrated horizontally. Although
vertical domains form, vortices are not observed. We therefore argue that the
motion is generated due to the interaction of the inclination of the rods with
the bottom of a vertically vibrated container. We also perform simple
experiments with a single row of rods in an annulus. These experiments directly
demonstrate that the rod motion is generated when the rods are inclined from
the vertical, and is always in the direction of the inclination.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure, 2 movies at http://physics.clarku.edu/vortex uses
revtex
Memory Effects in Granular Material
We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of memory effects in
vibration-induced compaction of granular materials. In particular, the response
of the system to an abrupt change in shaking intensity is measured. At short
times after the perturbation a granular analog of aging in glasses is observed.
Using a simple two-state model, we are able to explain this short-time
response.
We also discuss the possibility for the system to obey an approximate
pseudo-fluctuation-dissipation theorem relationship and relate our work to
earlier experimental and theoretical studies of the problem.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, reference list change
Thermodynamic Theory of Weakly Excited Granular Materials
We present a thermodynamic theory of weakly excited two-dimensional granular
systems from the view point of elementary excitations of spinless Fermion
systems. We introduce a global temperature T that is associated with the
acceleration amplitude \Gamma in a vibrating bed. We show that the
configurational statistics of weakly excited granular materials in a vibrating
bed obey the Fermi statistics.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, To Appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. April, 199
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Relationships between Prediction Accuracy, Metacognitive Reflection, and Performance in Introductory Genetics Students
Cognitive scientists have previously shown that students’ perceptions of their learning and performance on assessments often do not match reality. This process of self-assessing performance is a component of metacognition, which also includes the practice of thinking about one’s knowledge and identifying and implementing strategies to improve understanding. We used a mixed-methods approach to investigate the relationship between students’ perceptions of their performance through grade predictions, their metacognitive reflections after receiving their grades, and their actual performance during a semester-long introductory genetics course. We found that, as a group, students do not display better predictive accuracy nor more metacognitive reflections over the semester. However, those who shift from overpredicting to matching or underpredicting also show improved performance. Higher performers are overall more likely to answer reflection questions than lower-performing peers. Although high-performing students are usually more metacognitive in their reflections, an increase in a student’s frequency of metacognitive responses over time does not necessarily predict a grade increase. We illustrate several example trends in student reflections and suggest possible next steps for helping students implement better metacognitive regulation.
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