40 research outputs found
Oscillations and waves in solar spicules
Since their discovery, spicules have attracted increased attention as energy/mass bridges between the dense and dynamic photosphere and the tenuous hot solar corona. Mechanical energy of photospheric random and coherent motions can be guided by magnetic field lines, spanning from the interior to the upper parts of the solar atmosphere, in the form of waves and oscillations. Since spicules are one of the most pronounced features of the chromosphere, the energy transport they participate in can be traced by the observations of their oscillatory motions. Oscillations in spicules have been observed for a long time. However the recent high-resolutions and high-cadence space and ground based facilities with superb spatial, temporal and spectral capacities brought new aspects in the research of spicule dynamics. Here we review the progress made in imaging and spectroscopic observations of waves and oscillations in spicules. The observations are accompanied by a discussion on theoretical modelling and interpretations of these oscillations. Finally, we embark on the recent developments made on the presence and role of Alfven and kink waves in spicules. We also address the extensive debate made on the Alfven versus kink waves in the context of the explanation of the observed transverse oscillations of spicule axes
Task-oriented evaluation of electronic medical records systems: development and validation of a questionnaire for physicians
BACKGROUND: Evaluation is a challenging but necessary part of the development cycle of clinical information systems like the electronic medical records (EMR) system. It is believed that such evaluations should include multiple perspectives, be comparative and employ both qualitative and quantitative methods. Self-administered questionnaires are frequently used as a quantitative evaluation method in medical informatics, but very few validated questionnaires address clinical use of EMR systems. METHODS: We have developed a task-oriented questionnaire for evaluating EMR systems from the clinician's perspective. The key feature of the questionnaire is a list of 24 general clinical tasks. It is applicable to physicians of most specialties and covers essential parts of their information-oriented work. The task list appears in two separate sections, about EMR use and task performance using the EMR, respectively. By combining these sections, the evaluator may estimate the potential impact of the EMR system on health care delivery. The results may also be compared across time, site or vendor. This paper describes the development, performance and validation of the questionnaire. Its performance is shown in two demonstration studies (n = 219 and 80). Its content is validated in an interview study (n = 10), and its reliability is investigated in a test-retest study (n = 37) and a scaling study (n = 31). RESULTS: In the interviews, the physicians found the general clinical tasks in the questionnaire relevant and comprehensible. The tasks were interpreted concordant to their definitions. However, the physicians found questions about tasks not explicitly or only partially supported by the EMR systems difficult to answer. The two demonstration studies provided unambiguous results and low percentages of missing responses. In addition, criterion validity was demonstrated for a majority of task-oriented questions. Their test-retest reliability was generally high, and the non-standard scale was found symmetric and ordinal. CONCLUSION: This questionnaire is relevant for clinical work and EMR systems, provides reliable and interpretable results, and may be used as part of any evaluation effort involving the clinician's perspective of an EMR system
Harmonising and linking biomedical and clinical data across disparate data archives to enable integrative cross-biobank research
A wealth of biospecimen samples are stored in modern globally distributed biobanks. Biomedical researchers worldwide need to be able to combine the available resources to improve the power of large-scale studies. A prerequisite for this effort is to be able to search and access phenotypic, clinical and other information about samples that are currently stored at biobanks in an integrated manner. However, privacy issues together with heterogeneous information systems and the lack of agreed-upon vocabularies have made specimen searching across multiple biobanks extremely challenging. We describe three case studies where we have linked samples and sample descriptions in order to facilitate global searching of available samples for research. The use cases include the ENGAGE (European Network for Genetic and Genomic Epidemiology) consortium comprising at least 39 cohorts, the SUMMIT (surrogate markers for micro- and macro-vascular hard endpoints for innovative diabetes tools) consortium and a pilot for data integration between a Swedish clinical health registry and a biobank. We used the Sample avAILability (SAIL) method for data linking: first, created harmonised variables and then annotated and made searchable information on the number of specimens available in individual biobanks for various phenotypic categories. By operating on this categorised availability data we sidestep many obstacles related to privacy that arise when handling real values and show that harmonised and annotated records about data availability across disparate biomedical archives provide a key methodological advance in pre-analysis exchange of information between biobanks, that is, during the project planning phase
Совершенствование технологий для осуществления рентабельного процесса добычи нефти на малодебитном фонде скважин
Материалы XII Междунар. науч. конф. студентов, магистрантов, аспирантов и молодых ученых, Гомель, 16–17 мая 2019 г
Plasma dynamics in solar macrospicules from high-cadence extreme-UV observations
Macrospicules are relatively large spicule-like formations found mainly over
the polar coronal holes when observing in the transition region spectral lines.
In this study, we took advantage of the two short series of observations in the
He II 304 \r{A} line obtained by the TESIS solar observatory with a cadence of
up to 3.5 s to study the dynamics of macrospicules in unprecedented detail. We
used a one-dimensional hydrodynamic method based on the assumption of their
axial symmetry and on a simple radiative transfer model to reconstruct the
evolution of the internal velocity field of 18 macrospicules from this dataset.
Besides the internal dynamics, we studied the motion of the apparent end points
of the same 18 macrospicules and found 15 of them to follow parabolic
trajectories with high precision which correspond closely to the obtained
velocity fields. We found that in a clear, unperturbed case these macrospicules
move with a constant deceleration inconsistent with a purely ballistic motion
and have roughly the same velocity along their entire axis, with the obtained
decelerations typically ranging from 160 to 230 m/s^2, and initial velocities
from 80 to 130 km/s. We also found a propagating acoustic wave for one of the
macrospicules and a clear linear correlation between the initial velocities of
the macrospicules and their decelerations, which indicates that they may be
driven by magneto-acoustic shocks. Finally, we inverted our previous method by
taking velocities from the parabolic fits to give rough estimates of the
percentage of mass lost by 12 of the macrospicules. We found that typically
from 10 to 30% of their observed mass fades out of the line (presumably being
heated to higher coronal temperatures) with three exceptions of 50% and one of
80%.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&