648 research outputs found
Normative Data and Minimally Detectable Change for Inner Retinal Layer Thicknesses Using a Semi-automated OCT Image Segmentation Pipeline
Neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory diseases regularly cause optic nerve and
retinal damage. Evaluating retinal changes using optical coherence tomography (OCT)
in diseases like multiple sclerosis has thus become increasingly relevant. However,
intraretinal segmentation, a necessary step for interpreting retinal changes in the context
of these diseases, is not standardized and often requires manual correction. Here
we present a semi-automatic intraretinal layer segmentation pipeline and establish
normative values for retinal layer thicknesses at the macula, including dependencies on
age, sex, and refractive error. Spectral domain OCT macular 3D volume scans were
obtained from healthy participants using a Heidelberg Engineering Spectralis OCT. A
semi-automated segmentation tool (SAMIRIX) based on an interchangeable third-party
segmentation algorithm was developed and employed for segmentation, correction, and
thickness computation of intraretinal layers. Normative data is reported froma 6mmEarly
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) circle around the fovea. An interactive
toolbox for the normative database allows surveying for additional normative data. We
cross-sectionally evaluated data from218 healthy volunteers (144 females/74males, age
36.5 ± 12.3 years, range 18–69 years). Average macular thickness (MT) was 313.70 ±
12.02 μm, macular retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (mRNFL) 39.53 ± 3.57 μm, ganglion
cell and inner plexiform layer thickness (GCIPL) 70.81 ± 4.87 μm, and inner nuclear layer
thickness (INL) 35.93 ± 2.34 μm. All retinal layer thicknesses decreased with age. MT
and GCIPL were associated with sex, with males showing higher thicknesses. Layer
thicknesses were also positively associated with each other. Repeated-measurement
reliability for the manual correction of automatic intraretinal segmentation results was excellent, with an intra-class correlation coefficient >0.99 for all layers. The SAMIRIX
toolbox can simplify intraretinal segmentation in research applications, and the normative
data application may serve as an expandable reference for studies, in which normative
data cannot be otherwise obtained
Certification of a Refillable PET Bottle Material with Respect to Chemical Inertness Behaviour According to a PR-CEN Standard Method, BCR-712.
Abstract not availableJRC.D-Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Geel
Certification of the Mass fractions of Crude Protein, Crude Oils and Fats, Crude Fibre, Crude Ash and Phosphorus (According to Methods Specifications Laid down in EU-Legislation) and of Copper, Calcium and Magnesium, BCR-708 (Synthetic Dairy Feed), ....
Abstract not availableJRC.D-Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Geel
Probe spectroscopy in an operating magneto-optical trap: the role of Raman transitions between discrete and continuum atomic states
We report on cw measurements of probe beam absorption and four-wave-mixing
spectra in a Rb magneto-optical trap taken while the trap is in
operation. The trapping beams are used as pump light. We concentrate on the
central feature of the spectra at small pump-probe detuning and attribute its
narrow resonant structures to the superposition of Raman transitions between
light-shifted sublevels of the ground atomic state and to atomic recoil
processes. These two contributions have different dependencies on trap
parameters and we show that the former is inhomogeneously broadened. The strong
dependence of the spectra on the probe-beam polarization indicates the
existence of large optical anisotropy of the cold-atom sample, which is
attributed to the recoil effects. We point out that the recoil-induced
resonances can be isolated from other contributions, making pump-probe
spectroscopy a highly sensitive diagnostic tool for atoms in a working MOT.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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Silicon Powder-Based Wafers for Low-Cost Photovoltaics: Laser Treatments and Nanowire Etching
In this study, laser-treated polycrystalline Si (pc-Si) wafers, fabricated by wire sawing of hot-pressed ingots sintered from Si powder, have been investigated. As-cut wafers and those with high-quality thin Si layers deposited on top of them by e-beam have been subjected to laser irradiation to clarify typical trends of structural modifications caused by laser treatments. Moreover, possibility to use laser-treated Si powder-based substrates for fabrication of advanced Si structures has been analysed. It is established that (i) Si powder-based wafers with thicknesses 180 μm can be fully (from the front to back side) or partly (subsurface region) remelted by a diode laser and grain sizes in laser-treated regions can be increased; (ii) a high-quality top layer can be fabricated by crystallization of an additional a-Si layer deposited by e-beam evaporation on top of the pc-Si; and (iii) silicon nanowires can be formed by metal-assisted wet chemical etching (MAWCE) of polished Si powder-based wafers and as-cut wafers irradiated with medium laser power, while a surface texturing on the as-cut pc-Si wafers occur, and no nanowires can form in the region subject to a liquid phase crystallization (LPC) caused by high-power laser treatments
Competitive stochastic noises in coherently driven two-level atoms and quantum interference
A system of coherently-driven two-level atoms is analyzed in presence of two
independent stochastic perturbations: one due to collisions and a second one
due to phase fluctuations of the driving field. The behaviour of the quantum
interference induced by the collisional noise is considered in detail. The
quantum-trajectory method is utilized to reveal the phase correlations between
the dressed states involved in the interfering transition channels. It is shown
that the quantum interference induced by the collisional noise is remarkably
robust against phase noise. This effect is due to the fact that the phase
noise, similarly to collisions, stabilizes the phase-difference between the
dressed states.Comment: accepted for publication in J. Opt.
Multiband theory of quantum-dot quantum wells: Dark excitons, bright excitons, and charge separation in heteronanostructures
Electron, hole, and exciton states of multishell CdS/HgS/CdS quantum-dot
quantum well nanocrystals are determined by use of a multiband theory that
includes valence-band mixing, modeled with a 6-band Luttinger-Kohn Hamiltonian,
and nonparabolicity of the conduction band. The multiband theory correctly
describes the recently observed dark-exciton ground state and the lowest,
optically active, bright-exciton states. Charge separation in pair states is
identified. Previous single-band theories could not describe these states or
account for charge separation.Comment: 10 pages of ReVTex, 6 ps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Bound and free atoms diagnosed by the recoil-induced resonances: 1D optical lattice in a working MOT
We report on studies of simultaneous trapping of Rb atoms in a
magneto-optical trap (MOT) and 1D optical lattice. Using Raman pump-probe
spectroscopy we observe the coexistence of two atomic fractions: the first,
which consists of free, unbound atoms trapped in a MOT and the second,
localized in the micropotentials of the optical lattice. We show that
recoil-induced resonances allow not only temperature determination of the
atomic cloud but, together with vibrational resonances, can also be used for
real-time, nondestructive studies of the lattice loading and of the dynamics of
systems comprising unbound and bound atomic fractions.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, submitted to PR
Comparative study of radiation-induced damage in magnesium aluminate spinel by means of IL, CL and RBS/C techniques
International audienceA comparative study of damage accumulation in magnesium aluminate spinel (MgAl2O4) has been conducted using ionoluminescence (IL), cathodoluminescence (CL) and Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry/channeling (RBS/C) techniques. MgAl2O4 single crystal and polycrystalline samples were irradiated with 320 keV Ar+ ions at fluencies ranging from 1 × 1012 to 2 × 1016 cm−2 in order to create various levels of radiation damage. RBS/C measurements provided quantitative data about damage concentration in the samples. These values were then compared to the luminescence measurements. The results obtained by IL and RBS/C methods demonstrate a two-step character of damage buildup process. The CL data analysis points to the three-step damage accumulation mechanism involving the first defect transformation at fluencies of about 1013 cm−2 and second at about 1015 cm−2. The rate of changes resulting from the formation of nonluminescent recombination centers is clearly nonlinear and cannot be described in terms of continuous accumulation of point defects. Both, IL and CL techniques, appear as new, complementary tools bringing new possibilities in the damage accumulation studies in single- and polycrystalline materials
Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation with frequency-modulated light in the geophysical field range
Recent work investigating resonant nonlinear magneto-optical rotation (NMOR)
related to long-lived (\tau\ts{rel} \sim 1 {\rm s}) ground-state atomic
coherences has demonstrated potential magnetometric sensitivities exceeding
for small () magnetic
fields. In the present work, NMOR using frequency-modulated light (FM NMOR) is
studied in the regime where the longitudinal magnetic field is in the
geophysical range (), of particular interest for many
applications. In this regime a splitting of the FM NMOR resonance due to the
nonlinear Zeeman effect is observed. At sufficiently high light intensities,
there is also a splitting of the FM NMOR resonances due to ac Stark shifts
induced by the optical field, as well as evidence of alignment-to-orientation
conversion type processes. The consequences of these effects for FM-NMOR-based
atomic magnetometry in the geophysical field range are considered.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
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