1,070 research outputs found
Influence of PWM on the proximity loss in permanent magnet brushless AC machines
The winding copper loss can be significantly increased due to skin and proximity eddy current effects. The skin and proximity losses due to fundamental frequency current has been investigated in literature, but the influence of PWM on the skin and proximity losses has not been reported. In this paper, 2-D finite element method is employed to analyze the skin and proximity losses in a permanent magnet brushless AC machine, in which significant proximity loss exists due to high frequency current ripples induced by the PWM, as confirmed by both theoretical calculation and experiment. The analyses should be generally applicable to other machines
A new method of measuring shoulder hand behind back movement: Reliability, values in symptomatic and asymptomatic people, effect of hand dominance, and side-to-side variability
Shoulder hand behind back (HBB) range of motion (ROM) is a useful measure of impairment and treatment outcome. The purpose of this repeated measures study was to identify inter- and intra-rater reliability, of a new simplified method of measuring HBB ROM. Two experienced raters measured HBB ROM with a bubble inclinometer on 25 people (aged 42–75 years, 14 female) with unilateral shoulder dysfunction and 25 age- and gender-matched asymptomatic subjects on two different occasions. Statistical analysis included calculation of intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs), minimal detectable change (MDC), standard error of measurement (SEM), Pearson correlation coefficient (r), coefficient of determination (R2), and the lower bound score. Mean HBB ROM was 108.6° (SD = 16.3) and 23.9° (SD = 10.5) on the pain-free and symptomatic side, respectively. Both intra-rater and inter-rater reliability were high (ICC > 0.80). For asymptomatic people the SEM was at most 3° and MDC was 8° with a strong correlation between the dominant and nondominant sides (r > 0.72). The mean absolute values and lower bound scores were at most 10.2° and 26.0°, respectively. These results indicate that this new and novel method of measuring HBB ROM is accurate, has good inter- and intra-rater reliability, and provides normal values for between-limb ROM variability
Development of dual energy X-ray absorptiometry to measure hand bone mineral content for the assessment of rheumatoid arthritis
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN013212 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
The nil Hecke ring and singularity of Schubert varieties
We give a criterion for smoothness of a point in any Schubert variety in any
G/B in terms of the nil Hecke ring.Comment: AMSTE
GALEX J201337.6+092801: The lowest gravity subdwarf B pulsator
We present the recent discovery of a new subdwarf B variable (sdBV), with an
exceptionally low surface gravity. Our spectroscopy of J20136+0928 places it at
Teff = 32100 +/- 500, log(g) = 5.15 +/- 0.10, and log(He/H) = -2.8 +/- 0.1.
With a magnitude of B = 12.0, it is the second brightest V361 Hya star ever
found. Photometry from three different observatories reveals a temporal
spectrum with eleven clearly detected periods in the range 376 to 566 s, and at
least five more close to our detection limit. These periods are unusually long
for the V361 Hya class of short-period sdBV pulsators, but not unreasonable for
p- and g-modes close to the radial fundamental, given its low surface gravity.
Of the ~50 short period sdB pulsators known to date, only a single one has been
found to have comparable spectroscopic parameters to J20136+0928. This is the
enigmatic high-amplitude pulsator V338 Ser, and we conclude that J20136+0928 is
the second example of this rare subclass of sdB pulsators located well above
the canonical extreme horizontal branch in the HR diagram.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Quantum Pieri rules for isotropic Grassmannians
We study the three point genus zero Gromov-Witten invariants on the
Grassmannians which parametrize non-maximal isotropic subspaces in a vector
space equipped with a nondegenerate symmetric or skew-symmetric form. We
establish Pieri rules for the classical cohomology and the small quantum
cohomology ring of these varieties, which give a combinatorial formula for the
product of any Schubert class with certain special Schubert classes. We also
give presentations of these rings, with integer coefficients, in terms of
special Schubert class generators and relations.Comment: 59 pages, LaTeX, 6 figure
Mask formulas for cograssmannian Kazhdan-Lusztig polynomials
We give two contructions of sets of masks on cograssmannian permutations that
can be used in Deodhar's formula for Kazhdan-Lusztig basis elements of the
Iwahori-Hecke algebra. The constructions are respectively based on a formula of
Lascoux-Schutzenberger and its geometric interpretation by Zelevinsky. The
first construction relies on a basis of the Hecke algebra constructed from
principal lower order ideals in Bruhat order and a translation of this basis
into sets of masks. The second construction relies on an interpretation of
masks as cells of the Bott-Samelson resolution. These constructions give
distinct answers to a question of Deodhar.Comment: 43 page
Schubert calculus of Richardson varieties stable under spherical Levi subgroups
We observe that the expansion in the basis of Schubert cycles for
of the class of a Richardson variety stable under a spherical Levi subgroup is
described by a theorem of Brion. Using this observation, along with a
combinatorial model of the poset of certain symmetric subgroup orbit closures,
we give positive combinatorial descriptions of certain Schubert structure
constants on the full flag variety in type . Namely, we describe
when and are inverse to Grassmannian permutations with unique descents
at and , respectively. We offer some conjectures for similar rules in
types and , associated to Richardson varieties stable under spherical
Levi subgroups of SO(2n+1,\C) and SO(2n,\C), respectively.Comment: Section 4 significantly shortened, and other minor changes made as
suggested by referees. Final version, to appear in Journal of Algebraic
Combinatoric
Implementation and preliminary clinical outcomes of a pharmacist-managed venous thromboembolism clinic for patients treated with rivaroxaban post emergency department discharge
Objective
To describe the implementation, work flow, and differences in outcomes between a pharmacist-managed clinic for the outpatient treatment of venous thromboembolism (VTE) using rivaroxaban versus care by a primary care provider.
Interventions
Patients in the studied health system that are diagnosed with low-risk VTE in the emergency department are often discharged without hospital admission. These patients are treated with rivaroxban and follow up either in a pharmacist-managed VTE clinic or with their primary care provider. Pharmacists in the VTE clinic work independently under a collaborative practice agreement. An evaluation of thirty-four patients, seventeen in each treatment arm, was conducted to compare the differences in treatment-related outcomes of rivaroxaban when managed by a pharmacist versus a primary care provider.
Results
The primary endpoint was a six month composite of anticoagulation treatment-related complications that included a diagnosis of major bleeding, recurrent thromboembolism, or fatality due to either major bleeding or recurrent thromboembolism. Secondary endpoints included number of hospitalizations, adverse events, and medication adherence. There was no difference in the primary endpoint between groups with one occurrence of the composite endpoint in each treatment arm (p=1.000), both of which were recurrent thromboembolic events. Medication adherence assessment was formally performed in 8 patients in the pharmacist group versus 0 patients in the control group. No differences were seen amongst other secondary endpoints.
Conclusions
The pharmacist-managed clinic is a novel expansion of clinical pharmacy services that treats patients with low-risk VTEs with rivaroxaban in the outpatient setting. The evaluation of outcomes provides support that pharmacist-managed care utilizing standardized protocols under a collaborative practice agreement may be as safe as care by a primary care provider
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