5,425 research outputs found
Self-Similar Random Processes and Infinite-Dimensional Configuration Spaces
We discuss various infinite-dimensional configuration spaces that carry
measures quasiinvariant under compactly-supported diffeomorphisms of a manifold
M corresponding to a physical space. Such measures allow the construction of
unitary representations of the diffeomorphism group, which are important to
nonrelativistic quantum statistical physics and to the quantum theory of
extended objects in d-dimensional Euclidean space. Special attention is given
to measurable structure and topology underlying measures on generalized
configuration spaces obtained from self-similar random processes (both for d =
1 and d > 1), which describe infinite point configurations having accumulation
points
Unconstrained Astrometric Orbits for Hipparcos Stars with Stochastic Solutions
A considerable number of astrometric binaries whose positions on the sky do
not obey the standard model of mean position, parallax and linear proper
motion, were observed by the Hipparcos satellite. Some of them remain
non-discovered, and their observational data have not been properly processed
with the more adequate astrometric model that includes nonlinear orbital
motion. We develop an automated algorithm based on "genetic optimization", to
solve the orbital fitting problem with no prior information about the orbital
elements is available (from, e.g., spectroscopic data or radial velocity
monitoring). We test this method on Hipparcos stars with known orbital
solutions in the catalog, and further apply it to stars with stochastic
solutions, which may be unresolved binaries. At a confidence level of 99%,
orbital fits are obtained for 65 stars, most of which have not been known as
binary. A few of the new probable binaries with A-type primaries with periods
444-2015 d are chemically peculiar stars, including Ap and \lambda Boo type.
The anomalous spectra of these stars are explained as admixture of the light
from the unresolved, sufficiently bright and massive companions. We estimate
the apparent orbits of four stars which have been identified as members of the
300 Myr-old UMa kinematic group. Another four new nearby binaries may include
low-mass M-type or brown dwarf companions. Similar astrometric models and
algorithms can be used for binary stars and planet hosts observed by SIM
PlanetQuest and Gaia
Development of a multikilowatt ion thruster power processor
A feasibility study was made of the application of silicon-controlled, rectifier series, resonant inverter, power conditioning technology to electric propulsion power processing operating from a 200 to 400 Vdc solar array bus. A power system block diagram was generated to meet the electrical requirements of a 20 CM hollow cathode, mercury bombardment, ion engine. The SCR series resonant inverter was developed as a primary means of power switching and conversion, and the analog signal-to-discrete-time-interval converter control system was applied to achieve good regulation. A complete breadboard was designed, fabricated, and tested with a resistive load bank, and critical power processor areas relating to efficiency, weight, and part count were identified
The For-Profit Postsecondary School Sector: Nimble Critters or Agile Predators?
Private for-profit institutions have been the fastest growing part of the U.S. higher education sector. For-profit enrollment increased from 0.2 percent to 9.1 percent of total enrollment in degree-granting schools from 1970 to 2009, and for-profit institutions account for the majority of enrollments in non-degree granting postsecondary schools. We describe the schools, students, and programs in the for-profit higher education sector, its phenomenal recent growth, and its relationship to the federal and state governments. Using the 2004 to 2009 Beginning Postsecondary Students (BPS) longitudinal survey we assess outcomes of a recent cohort of first-time undergraduates who attended for-profits relative to comparable students who attended community colleges or other public or private non-profit institutions. We find that relative to these other institutions, for-profits educate a larger fraction of minority, disadvantaged, and older students, and they have greater success at retaining students in their first year and getting them to complete short programs at the certificate and associate degree levels. But we also find that for-profit students end up with higher unemployment and “idleness” rates and lower earnings six years after entering programs than do comparable students from other schools, and that they have far greater student debt burdens and default rates on their student loans.
Wrongly “Identified”: Why an Actual Knowledge Standard Should Govern Health Care Providers’ False Claims Act Obligations to Report and Return Medicare and Medicaid Overpayments
In 2015, Medicare spent 554 billion to provide health care to America’s needy. The government estimates that improper payments account for as much as 10% of Medicare and Medicaid spending. Given the vast amount of money at stake, and the fact that there is bipartisan support for recovering taxpayer dollars, it is no surprise the federal government has made it a priority to recoup the money lost to health care fraud each year. The results are noticeable: annual recoveries for health care fraud through the federal government’s most powerful anti-fraud weapon, the False Claims Act (FCA or “the Act”), have increased from 3 billion in 2012. Health care providers now pay millions of dollars to settle allegations that they have committed health care fraud in violation of the FCA. . .
This Note argues for the third approach, namely that overpaid Medicare and Medicaid claims should not be deemed “identified” until a health care provider has actual knowledge of their existence and amount. The Note is organized as follows: Part I introduces the relevant sources of law, including the FCA, the Sixty-Day Rule, and CMS’s regulations implementing the Sixty-Day Rule for Medicare. Part II describes a recent district court decision grappling with the proper interpretation of “identified” in the context of Medicaid overpayments, a situation in which none of CMS’s rules apply. Part III.A discusses how that case might be resolved if it dealt instead with claims under Medicare Part A or B, and thus were subject to CMS’s most recent regulation defining “identified.” Part III.B explains the problems with the existing regulatory scheme established by the FCA and current administrative interpretations of the Sixty-Day Rule. Part IV argues that providers should be required to have actual knowledge of overpayments for overpayments to be “identified.
Some Variations on Maxwell's Equations
In the first sections of this article, we discuss two variations on Maxwell's
equations that have been introduced in earlier work--a class of nonlinear
Maxwell theories with well-defined Galilean limits (and correspondingly
generalized Yang-Mills equations), and a linear modification motivated by the
coupling of the electromagnetic potential with a certain nonlinear Schroedinger
equation. In the final section, revisiting an old idea of Lorentz, we write
Maxwell's equations for a theory in which the electrostatic force of repulsion
between like charges differs fundamentally in magnitude from the electrostatic
force of attraction between unlike charges. We elaborate on Lorentz'
description by means of electric and magnetic field strengths, whose governing
equations separate into two fully relativistic Maxwell systems--one describing
ordinary electromagnetism, and the other describing a universally attractive or
repulsive long-range force. If such a force cannot be ruled out {\it a priori}
by known physical principles, its magnitude should be determined or bounded
experimentally. Were it to exist, interesting possibilities go beyond Lorentz'
early conjecture of a relation to (Newtonian) gravity.Comment: 26 pages, submitted to a volume in preparation to honor Gerard Emch
v. 2: discussion revised, factors of 4\pi corrected in some equation
Inactivation of cloned Na channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes
This study investigates the inactivation properties of Na channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes from two rat IIA Na channel cDNA clones differing by a single amino acid residue. Although the two cDNAs encode Na channels with substantially different activation properties (Auld, V. J., A. L. Goldin, D. S. Krafte, J. Marshall, J. M. Dunn, W. A. Catterall, H. A. Lester, N. Davidson, and R. J. Dunn. 1988. Neuron. 1:449-461), their inactivation properties resemble each other strongly but differ markedly from channels induced by poly(A+) rat brain RNA. Rat IIA currents inactivate more slowly, recover from inactivation more slowly, and display a steady-state voltage dependence that is shifted to more positive potentials. The macroscopic inactivation process for poly(A+) Na channels is defined by a single exponential time course; that for rat IIA channels displays two exponential components. At the single-channel level these differences in inactivation occur because rat IIA channels reopen several times during a depolarizing pulse; poly(A+) channels do not. Repetitive stimulation (greater than 1 Hz) produces a marked decrement in the rat IIA peak current and changes the waveform of the currents. When low molecular weight RNA is coinjected with rat IIA RNA, these inactivation properties are restored to those that characterize poly(A+) channels. Slow inactivation is similar for rat IIA and poly(A+) channels, however. The data suggest that activation and inactivation involve at least partially distinct regions of the channel protein
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Prediction of progression in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis using CT scans atbaseline: A quantum particle swarm optimization - Random forest approach
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a fatal lung disease characterized by an unpredictable progressive declinein lung function. Natural history of IPF is unknown and the prediction of disease progression at the time ofdiagnosis is notoriously difficult. High resolution computed tomography (HRCT) has been used for the diagnosisof IPF, but not generally for monitoring purpose. The objective of this work is to develop a novel predictivemodel for the radiological progression pattern at voxel-wise level using only baseline HRCT scans. Mainly, thereare two challenges: (a) obtaining a data set of features for region of interest (ROI) on baseline HRCT scans andtheir follow-up status; and (b) simultaneously selecting important features from high-dimensional space, andoptimizing the prediction performance. We resolved the first challenge by implementing a study design andhaving an expert radiologist contour ROIs at baseline scans, depending on its progression status in follow-upvisits. For the second challenge, we integrated the feature selection with prediction by developing an algorithmusing a wrapper method that combines quantum particle swarm optimization to select a small number of featureswith random forest to classify early patterns of progression. We applied our proposed algorithm to analyzeanonymized HRCT images from 50 IPF subjects from a multi-center clinical trial. We showed that it yields aparsimonious model with 81.8% sensitivity, 82.2% specificity and an overall accuracy rate of 82.1% at the ROIlevel. These results are superior to other popular feature selections and classification methods, in that ourmethod produces higher accuracy in prediction of progression and more balanced sensitivity and specificity witha smaller number of selected features. Our work is the first approach to show that it is possible to use onlybaseline HRCT scans to predict progressive ROIs at 6 months to 1year follow-ups using artificial intelligence
SAMBA: Superconducting antenna-coupled, multi-frequency, bolometric array
We present a design for a multipixel, multiband (100 GHz, 200 GHz and 400 GHz) submillimeter instrument: SAMBA (Superconducting Antenna-coupled, Multi-frequency, Bolometric Array). SAMBA uses slot antenna coupled bolometers and microstrip filters. The concept allows for a much more compact, multiband imager compared to a comparable feedhorn-coupled bolometric system. SAMBA incorporates an array of slot antennas, superconducting transmission lines, a wide band multiplexer and superconducting transition edge bolometers. The transition-edge film measures the millimeter-wave power deposited in the resistor that terminates the transmission line
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