12,025 research outputs found
Development, construction and testing of an ultrahigh vacuum dc sputtering system Final report
Design and performance of ultrahigh vacuum system for direct current sputtering electrode
A class of quadratic deformations of Lie superalgebras
We study certain Z_2-graded, finite-dimensional polynomial algebras of degree
2 which are a special class of deformations of Lie superalgebras, which we call
quadratic Lie superalgebras. Starting from the formal definition, we discuss
the generalised Jacobi relations in the context of the Koszul property, and
give a proof of the PBW basis theorem. We give several concrete examples of
quadratic Lie superalgebras for low dimensional cases, and discuss aspects of
their structure constants for the `type I' class. We derive the equivalent of
the Kac module construction for typical and atypical modules, and a related
direct construction of irreducible modules due to Gould. We investigate in
detail one specific case, the quadratic generalisation gl_2(n/1) of the Lie
superalgebra sl(n/1). We formulate the general atypicality conditions at level
1, and present an analysis of zero-and one-step atypical modules for a certain
family of Kac modules.Comment: 26pp, LaTeX. Original title: "Finite dimensional quadratic Lie
superalgebras"; abstract re-worded; text clarified; 3 references added;
rearrangement of minor appendices into text; new subsection 4.
Estimating the Value of Discounted Rental Accommodation for London’s ‘Squeezed’ Key Workers
This new research shows:
1 The economic value of providing discounted rental housing to key workers is, on average, £27,000 per household. From this we have deducted the cost of providing it of c.£14,000. The net benefit to London’s economy per household is at least £12,500 per annum.
2 Although it is marginally cheaper to provide key worker housing in outer boroughs, there are significant costs to be offset – transport, time, etc, and these almost negate the benefits of doing so. And because costs of housing in outer boroughs are rising so quickly, the differential is disappearing. Wherever we look across London there is a problem of ‘affordable’ living. If we wish to avoid the ‘doughnut’ effect – evident in Paris – where the workforce is ‘ghettoised’ in an outer suburban ring, we need to make provision for key workers across London. Failure to do this will have serious implications for the London economy.
3 The approach to fixing rents in S106 agreements typically over-subsidises a percentage of tenants who could afford to pay more. A personalised rent model, which we have applied at the New Era Estate would be more cost effective and allow more key worker housing to be created
Large magnetoresistance effect due to spin-injection into a non-magnetic semiconductor
A novel magnetoresistance effect, due to the injection of a spin-polarized
electron current from a dilute magnetic into a non-magnetic semiconductor, is
presented. The effect results from the suppression of a spin channel in the
non-magnetic semiconductor and can theoretically yield a positive
magnetoresistance of 100%, when the spin flip length in the non-magnetic
semiconductor is sufficiently large. Experimentally, our devices exhibit up to
25% magnetoresistance.Comment: 3 figures, submitted for publicatio
Self Assembled II-VI Magnetic Quantum Dot as a Voltage-Controlled Spin-Filter
A key element in the emergence of a full spintronics technology is the
development of voltage controlled spin filters to selectively inject carriers
of desired spin into semiconductors. We previously demonstrated a prototype of
such a device using a II-VI dilute-magnetic semiconductor quantum well which,
however, still required an external magnetic field to generate the level
splitting. Recent theory suggests that spin selection may be achievable in
II-VI paramagnetic semiconductors without external magnetic field through local
carrier mediated ferromagnetic interactions. We present the first experimental
observation of such an effect using non-magnetic CdSe self-assembled quantum
dots in a paramagnetic (Zn,Be,Mn)Se barrier.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Tunneling magnetoresistance in devices based on epitaxial NiMnSb with uniaxial anisotropy
We demonstrate tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) junctions based on a tri layer
system consisting of an epitaxial NiMnSb, aluminum oxide and CoFe tri layer.
The junctions show a tunnelling magnetoresistance of Delta R/R of 8.7% at room
temperature which increases to 14.7% at 4.2K. The layers show clear separate
switching and a small ferromagnetic coupling. A uniaxial in plane anisotropy in
the NiMnSb layer leads to different switching characteristics depending on the
direction in which the magnetic field is applied, an effect which can be used
for sensor applications.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Appl. Phys. Let
Testing T Invariance in the Interaction of Slow Neutrons with Aligned Nuclei
The study of five-fold (P even, T odd) correlation in the interaction of slow
polarized neutrons with aligned nuclei is a possible way of testing the time
reversal invariance due to the expected enhancement of T violating effects in
compound resonances. Possible nuclear targets are discussed which can be
aligned both dynamically as well as by the "brute force" method at low
temperature. A statistical estimation is performed of the five-fold correlation
for low lying p wave compound resonances of the Sb, Sb and
I nuclei. It is shown that a significant improvement can be achieved
for the bound on the intensity of the fundamental parity conserving time
violating (PCTV) interaction.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, published versio
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Increasing compliance with low tidal volume ventilation in the ICU with two nudge-based interventions: evaluation through intervention time-series analyses
Objectives: Low tidal volume (TVe) ventilation improves outcomes for ventilated patients, and the majority of clinicians state they implement it. Unfortunately, most patients never receive low TVes. ‘Nudges’ influence decision-making with subtle cognitive mechanisms and are effective in many contexts. There have been few studies examining their impact on clinical decision-making. We investigated the impact of 2 interventions designed using principles from behavioural science on the deployment of low TVe ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU).
Setting: University Hospitals Bristol, a tertiary, mixed medical and surgical ICU with 20 beds, admitting over 1300 patients per year.
Participants: Data were collected from 2144 consecutive patients receiving controlled mechanical ventilation for more than 1 hour between October 2010 and September 2014. Patients on controlled mechanical ventilation for more than 20 hours were included in the final analysis.
Interventions: (1) Default ventilator settings were adjusted to comply with low TVe targets from the initiation of ventilation unless actively changed by a clinician. (2) A large dashboard was deployed displaying TVes in the format mL/kg ideal body weight (IBW) with alerts when TVes were excessive.
Primary outcome measure: TVe in mL/kg IBW.
Findings: TVe was significantly lower in the defaults group. In the dashboard intervention, TVe fell more quickly and by a greater amount after a TVe of 8 mL/kg IBW was breached when compared with controls. This effect improved in each subsequent year for 3 years.
Conclusions: This study has demonstrated that adjustment of default ventilator settings and a dashboard with alerts for excessive TVe can significantly influence clinical decision-making. This offers a promising strategy to improve compliance with low TVe ventilation, and suggests that using insights from behavioural science has potential to improve the translation of evidence into practice
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