10,699 research outputs found
Angular dependence of domain wall resistivity in SrRuO films
is a 4d itinerant ferromagnet (T 150 K) with
stripe domain structure. Using high-quality thin films of SrRuO we study
the resistivity induced by its very narrow ( nm) Bloch domain walls,
(DWR), at temperatures between 2 K and T as a function of the
angle, , between the electric current and the ferromagnetic domains
walls. We find that which provides the first experimental
indication that the angular dependence of spin accumulation contribution to DWR
is . We expect magnetic multilayers to exhibit a similar
behavior.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Phases and relativity in atomic gravimetry
The phase observable measured by an atomic gravimeter built up on stimulated
Raman transitions is discussed in a fully relativistic context. It is written
in terms of laser phases which are invariant under relativistic gauge
transformations. The dephasing is the sum of light and atomic contributions
which are connected to one another through their interplay with conservation
laws at the interaction vertices. In the case of a closed geometry, a compact
form of the dephasing is written in terms of a Legendre transform of the laser
phases. These general expressions are illustrated by discussing two techniques
used for compensating the Doppler shift, one corresponding to chirped
frequencies and the other one to ramped variations.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
The double torus as a 2D cosmos: groups, geometry and closed geodesics
The double torus provides a relativistic model for a closed 2D cosmos with
topology of genus 2 and constant negative curvature. Its unfolding into an
octagon extends to an octagonal tessellation of its universal covering, the
hyperbolic space H^2. The tessellation is analysed with tools from hyperbolic
crystallography. Actions on H^2 of groups/subgroups are identified for SU(1,
1), for a hyperbolic Coxeter group acting also on SU(1, 1), and for the
homotopy group \Phi_2 whose extension is normal in the Coxeter group. Closed
geodesics arise from links on H^2 between octagon centres. The direction and
length of the shortest closed geodesics is computed.Comment: Latex, 27 pages, 5 figures (late submission to arxiv.org
Metformin and Myocardial Injury in Patients With Diabetes and ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction: A Propensity Score Matched Analysis
BACKGROUND: Although animal studies have documented metformin's cardioprotective effects, the impact in humans remains elusive. The study objective was to explore the association between metformin and myocardial infarct size in patients with diabetes presenting with STâsegment elevation myocardial infarction. METHODS AND RESULTS: Data extraction used the National Cardiovascular Data CathPCI Registry in all patients with diabetes aged >18 years presenting with STâsegment elevation myocardial infarction at 2 academic medical centers from January 2010 to December 2013. The exposure of interest was ongoing metformin use before the event. Propensity score matching was used for the metformin and nonmetformin groups on key prognostic variables. All matched pairs had acceptable D scores of <10%, confirming an efficient matching procedure. The primary outcome was myocardial infarct size, reflected by peak serum creatine kinaseâmyocardial band, troponin T, and hospital discharge left ventricular ejection fraction. Of all 1726 STâsegment elevation myocardial infarction cases reviewed, 493 patients had diabetes (28.5%), with 208 metformin users (42.1%) and 285 nonusers. Matched pairs analysis yielded 137 cases per group. The difference between metformin and nonmetformin groups was â18.1Â ng/mL (95% CI â55.0 to 18.8; P=0.56) for total peak serum creatine kinaseâmyocardial band and â1.1Â ng/mL (95% CI â2.8 to 0.5; P=0.41) for troponin T. Median discharge left ventricular ejection fraction in both groups was 45, and the difference between metformin and nonmetformin users was 0.7% (95% CI â2.2 to 3.6; P=0.99). CONCLUSIONS: No statistically significant association of cardioprotection was found between metformin and myocardial infarct size in patients with diabetes and acute STâsegment elevation myocardial infarction
A Telehealth-Delivered Pulmonary Rehabilitation Intervention in Underserved Hispanic and African American Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Community-Based Participatory Research Approach.
BACKGROUND:Although home telemonitoring (TM) is a promising approach for patients managing their chronic disease, rehabilitation using home TM has not been tested for use with individuals living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) residing in underserved communities. OBJECTIVE:This study aimed to analyze qualitative data from focus groups with key stakeholders to ensure the acceptability and usability of the TM COPD intervention. METHODS:We utilized a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach to adapt a home TM COPD intervention to facilitate acceptability and feasibility in low-income African American and Hispanic patients. The study engaged community stakeholders in the process of modifying the intervention in the context of 2 community advisory board meetings. Discussions were audio recorded and professionally transcribed and lasted approximately 2 hours each. Structural coding was used to mark responses to topical questions in interview guides. RESULTS:We describe herein the formative process of a CBPR study aimed at optimizing telehealth utilization among African American and Latino patients with COPD from underserved communities. A total of 5 major themes emerged from qualitative analyses of community discussions: equipment changes, recruitment process, study logistics, self-efficacy, and access. The identification of themes was instrumental in understanding the concerns of patients and other stakeholders in adapting the pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) home intervention for acceptability for patients with COPD from underserved communities. CONCLUSIONS:These findings identify important adaptation recommendations from the stakeholder perspective that should be considered when implementing in-home PR via TM for underserved COPD patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03007485; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03007485
Progression and Forecast of a Curated Web-of-Trust: A Study on the Debian Project's Cryptographic Keyring
The Debian project is one of the largest free software undertakings worldwide. It is geographically distributed, and participation in the project is done on a voluntary basis, without a single formal employee or directly funded person. As we will explain, due to the nature of the project, its authentication needs are very strict â User/password schemes are way surpassed, and centralized trust management schemes such as PKI are not compatible with its distributed and flat organization; fully decentralized schemes such as the PGP Web of Trust are insuficient by themselves. The Debian project has solved this need by using what we termed a ``curated Web of Trust''.
We will explain some lessons learned from a massive key migration process that was triggered in 2014. We will present the social insight we have found from examining the relationships expressed as signatures in this curated Web of Trust, some recommendations on personal key-signing policies, and a statistical study and forecast on aging, refreshment and survival of project participants stemming from an analysis on their key-handling
Decision making and risk management in adventure sports coaching
Adventure sport coaches practice in environments that are dynamic and high in risk, both perceived and actual. The inherent risks associated with these activities, individualsâ responses and the optimal exploitation of both combine to make the processes of risk management more complex and hazardous than the traditional sports where risk management is focused almost exclusively on minimization. Pivotal to this process is the adventure sports coachesâ ability to make effective judgments regarding levels of risk, potential benefits and possible consequences. The exact nature of this decision making process should form the basis of coaching practice and coach education in this complex and dynamic field. This positional paper examines decision making by the adventure sports coach in these complex, challenging environments and seeks to stimulate debate whilst offering a basis for future research into this topic
Low-frequency noise and tunnelling magnetoresistance in Fe(110)/MgO(111)/Fe(110) epitaxial magnetic tunnel junctions
We report on tunnelling magnetoresistance (TMR), current-voltage (IV)
characteristics and low frequency noise in epitaxially grown
Fe(110)/MgO(111)/Fe(110) magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) with dimensions from
2x2 to 20x20 um2. The evaluated MgO energy barrier (0.50+/-0.08 eV), the
barrier width (13.1+/-0.5 angstrom) as well as the resistance times area
product (7+/-1 Mohmsum2) show relatively small variation, confirming a high
quality epitaxy and uniformity of all MTJs studied. The noise power, though
exhibiting large variation, was observed to be roughly anticorrelated with the
TMR. Surprisingly, for the largest junctions we observed a strong enhancement
of the normalized low-frequency noise in the antiparallel magnetic
configuration. This behaviour could be related to an interplay between the
magnetic state and the local barrier defects structure of the epitaxial MTJsComment: 9 pages and 3 figure
Resonant hyper-Raman scattering in spherical quantum dots
A theoretical model of resonant hyper-Raman scattering by an ensemble of
spherical semiconductor quantum dots has been developed. The electronic
intermediate states are described as Wannier-Mott excitons in the framework of
the envelope function approximation. The optical polar vibrational modes of the
nanocrystallites (vibrons) and their interaction with the electronic system are
analized with the help of a continuum model satisfying both the mechanical and
electrostatic matching conditions at the interface. An explicit expression for
the hyper-Raman scattering efficiency is derived, which is valid for incident
two-photon energy close to the exciton resonances. The dipole selection rules
for optical transitions and Fr\"ohlich-like exciton-lattice interaction are
derived: It is shown that only exciton states with total angular momentum
and vibrational modes with angular momentum contribute to the
hyper-Raman scattering process. The associated exciton energies, wavefunctions,
and vibron frequencies have been obtained for spherical CdSe zincblende-type
nanocrystals, and the corresponding hyper-Raman scattering spectrum and
resonance profile are calculated. Their dependence on the dot radius and the
influence of the size distribution on them are also discussed.Comment: 12 pages REVTeX (two columns), 2 tables, 8 figure
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