846 research outputs found
Computation of molecular HartreeâFock Wigner intracules
The computation of molecular Wigner intracules from HartreeâFock wave functions using Gaussian basis functions is described. The Wigner intracule is a new type of intracule that contains information about both the relative position and momentum of the electrons. Two methods for evaluating the required integrals are presented. The first approach uses quadrature while the second requires summation of an infinite series.This research was partly supported by the Engineering
and Physical Sciences Research Council through a project
studentship (GR/R81121) to D.P.O. and an Advanced Research
Fellowship (GR/R77636) to N.A.B
Optical Designs for a Multi-Beam 340 and 625/640 GHz Spaceborne Climate Research Instrument
We report on an ongoing study where different optical
configurations for a multi-beam limb-viewing (four to eight
receiver channels at 340 and two channels at 625 GHz) spaceborne
instrument for climate research are presented and
compared. The optical configurations are analyzed in terms of
optical performance (gain, side lobe levels, beam efficiency etc.),
weight and size of the overall instrument envelope. Using ideal
fundamental Gaussian beam modes and numerical tools relying
on ray-tracing and physical optics methods, the different
configurations are designed and evaluated. Preliminary results
indicate that a 1.3 m x 0.65 m primary reflector can be used in a
configuration that includes a relay optics system having two to
four elements. In addition to the limb-viewing instrument, there
will be an additional instrument operating at 640 GHz for
observing clouds in nadir mode
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Reporting and Assessing the Quality of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies for Cervical Cancer Screening and Management.
ObjectiveWe adapted the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 (QUADAS-2) tool for studies of cervical cancer screening and management and used the adapted tool to evaluate the quality of studies included in a systematic review supporting the 2019 Risk-Based Management Consensus Guidelines.MethodsWe evaluated the quality of all studies included in our systematic review for postcolposcopy (n = 5) and posttreatment (n = 23) surveillance using QUADAS-2 criteria. Subsequently, we adapted signaling questions to indications of cervical cancer screening and management. An iterative process was carried out to evaluate interrater agreement between 2 study authors (M.A.C. and N.W.). Discrepant ratings were discussed, and criteria were adapted accordingly. We also evaluated the influence of study quality on risk estimates and between study variation using stratified subgroup meta-analyses.ResultsTwelve signaling questions for bias assessment that were adapted to or newly developed for cervical cancer screening and management are described here. Interrater agreement on bias assessment increased from 70% to 83% during the adaptation process. Detailed assessment of bias and applicability showed that all studies on postcolposcopy management and 90% of studies on posttreatment management had high risk of bias in at least 1 domain. Most commonly, high risk of bias was observed for the patient selection domain, indicating the heterogeneity of study designs and clinical practice in reported studies.ConclusionsThe adapted QUADAS-2 will have broad application for researchers, evidence evaluators, and journals who are interested in designing, conducting, evaluating, and publishing studies for cervical cancer screening and management
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A methodology for the estimation of kappa (Îș) for large datasets. Example application to rock sites in the NGA-East database
This report reviews four of the main approaches (two band-limited and two broadband) currently used for estimating the site Îș0: the acceleration slope (AS) above the corner frequency, the displacement slope (DS) below the corner frequency, the broadband (BB) fit of the spectrum, and the response spectral shape (RESP) template. Using these four methods, estimates of Îș0 for rock sites in Central Eastern North America (CENA) in the shallow crustal dataset from NGAEast are computed for distances less than 100 km.
Using all of the data within 100 km, the mean Îș0 values are 8 msec for the AS approach and 27 msec for the DS approach. These mean values include negative Îș estimates for some sites. If the negative Îș values are removed, then the mean values are 25 msec and 42 msec, respectively. Stacking all spectra together led to mean Îș0 values of 7 and 29 msec, respectively. Overall, the DS approach yields 2â3 times higher values than the AS, which agrees with previous observations, but the uncertainty of the estimates in each case is large. The AS approach seems consistent for magnitudes down to M3 but not below.
There is large within-station variability of Îș that may be related to differences in distance, Q, complexity along the path, or particular source characteristics, such as higher or lower stress drop. The station-to-station differences may be due to site-related factors. Because most sites have been assigned Vs30 = 2000 m/sec, it is not possible to correlate variations in Îș0 with rock stiffness.
Based on the available profile, the individual spectra are corrected for crustal amplification and only affect results below 15 Hz. Since the AS and DS approaches are applied over different frequency ranges, we find that only the DS results are sensitive to the amplification correction. More detailed knowledge of individual near-surface profiles may have effects on AS results, too. Although Îș is considered to be caused solely by damping in the shallow crust, measurement techniques often cannot separate the effects of damping and amplification, and yield the net effect of both phenomena.
The two broadband approaches, BB and RESP, yield similar results. The mean Îș0_BB is 5±0.5 msec across all NEHRP class A sites. The Îș0_RESP for the two events examined is 5 and 6 msec. From literature, the average value of Îș0 in CENA is 6 ± 2 msec. This typical value is similar to the broadband estimates of this study and to the mean ÎșAS when all available recordings are used along with all flags. When only recordings with down-going FAS slope are selected from the dataset, the mean value of ÎșAS increases by a factor of 2â3.
To evaluate the scaling of high-frequency ground motion with Îș, we analyze residuals from ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs) versus Îș estimates. Using the Îș values from the AS approach, the average trend of the ln(PSA) residuals for hard-rock data do not show the expected strong dependence on Îș, but when using Îș values from the DS approach, there is a stronger correlation of the residuals, i.e., a Îș that is more consistent with the commonly used analytically based scaling. The ÎșDS estimates may better reflect the damping in the shallow crust, while the ÎșAS estimates may reflect a net effect of damping and amplification that has not been decoupled. The ÎșDS estimates are higher than the ÎșAS estimates, so the expected effect on the high-frequency ground motion is smaller than that expected for the ÎșAS estimates.
An empirical hard-rock site factor model is developed that represents the combined Vs-Îș0 site factor relative to a 760 m/sec reference-site condition. At low frequencies ( 10 Hz), the residuals do not show the strong increase in the site factors as seen in the analytical model results. A second hard-rock dataset from British Columbia, Canada, is also used. This BC hard-rock residuals show an increase in the 15â50 Hz range that is consistent with the analytical Îș0 scaling for a hard-rock Îș0 of about 0.015 sec.
The variability of the PSA residuals is also used to evaluate the Îș0 scaling for hard-rock sites from analytical modeling. The scatter in existing Îș0 values found in literature is disproportionately large compared to the observed variability in high-frequency ground motions. We compared the predicted ground-motion variability based on analytical modeling to the observed variability in our residuals. While the hard-rock sites are more variable at high frequencies due to the additional Îș0 variability, this additional variability is much less than the variability predicted by the analytical modeling using the variability from Îș0-Vs30 correlations. This is consistent with weaker Îș0 scaling compared to that predicted by the analytical modelling seen in the mean residuals
StimuliâResponsive Polymers for Engineered Emulsions
© 2024 The Authors. Macromolecular Rapid Communications published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY), https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Emulsions are complex. Dispersing two immiscible phases, thus expanding an interface, requires effort to achieve and the resultant dispersion is thermodynamically unstable, driving the system toward coalescence. Furthermore, physical instabilities, including creaming, arise due to presence of dispersed droplets of different densities to a continuous phase. Emulsions allow the formulation of oils, can act as vehicles to solubilize both hydrophilic and lipophilic molecules, and can be tailored to desirable rheological profiles, including âgelâlikeâ behavior and shear thinning. The usefulness of emulsions can be further expanded by imparting stimuliâresponsive or âsmartâ behaviors by inclusion of a stimuliâresponsive emulsifier, polymer or surfactant. This enables manipulation like gelation, breaking, or aggregation, by external triggers such as pH, temperature, or salt concentration changes. This platform generates functional materials for pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, oil recovery, and colloid engineering, combining both smart behaviors and intrinsic benefit of emulsions. However, with increased functionality comes greater complexity. This review focuses on the use of stimuliâresponsive polymers for the generation of smart emulsions, motivated by the great adaptability of polymers for this application and their efficacy as steric stabilizers. Stimuliâresponsive emulsions are described according to the trigger used to provide the reader with an overview of progress in this field.Peer reviewe
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