4,294 research outputs found
Biomechanical analysis and modeling of different vertebral growth patterns in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis and healthy subjects
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The etiology of AIS remains unclear, thus various hypotheses concerning its pathomechanism have been proposed. To date, biomechanical modeling has not been used to thoroughly study the influence of the abnormal growth profile (i.e., the growth rate of the vertebral body during the growth period) on the pathomechanism of curve progression in AIS. This study investigated the hypothesis that AIS progression is associated with the abnormal growth profiles of the anterior column of the spine.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A finite element model of the spinal column including growth dynamics was utilized. The initial geometric models were constructed from the bi-planar radiographs of a normal subject. Based on this model, five other geometric models were generated to emulate different coronal and sagittal curves. The detailed modeling integrated vertebral body growth plates and growth modulation spinal biomechanics. Ten years of spinal growth was simulated using AIS and normal growth profiles. Sequential measures of spinal alignments were compared.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>(1) Given the initial lateral deformity, the AIS growth profile induced a significant Cobb angle increase, which was roughly between three to five times larger compared to measures utilizing a normal growth profile. (2) Lateral deformities were absent in the models containing no initial coronal curvature. (3) The presence of a smaller kyphosis did not produce an increase lateral deformity on its own. (4) Significant reduction of the kyphosis was found in simulation results of AIS but not when using the growth profile of normal subjects.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Results from this analysis suggest that accelerated growth profiles may encourage supplementary scoliotic progression and, thus, may pose as a progressive risk factor.</p
Excess mortality for care home residents during the first 23 weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic in England: a national cohort study
Background: To estimate excess mortality for care home residents during the COVID-19 pandemic in England, exploring associations with care home characteristics. Methods: Daily number of deaths in all residential and nursing homes in England notified to the Care Quality Commission (CQC) from 1 January 2017 to 7 August 2020. Care home-level data linked with CQC care home register to identify home characteristics: client type (over 65s/children and adults), ownership status (for-profit/not-for-profit; branded/independent) and size (small/medium/large). Excess deaths computed as the difference between observed and predicted deaths using local authority fixed-effect Poisson regressions on pre-pandemic data. Fixed-effect logistic regressions were used to model odds of experiencing COVID-19 suspected/confirmed deaths. Results: Up to 7 August 2020, there were 29,542 (95% CI 25,176 to 33,908) excess deaths in all care homes. Excess deaths represented 6.5% (95% CI 5.5 to 7.4%) of all care home beds, higher in nursing (8.4%) than residential (4.6%) homes. 64.7% (95% CI 56.4 to 76.0%) of the excess deaths were confirmed/suspected COVID-19. Almost all excess deaths were recorded in the quarter (27.4%) of homes with any COVID-19 fatalities. The odds of experiencing COVID-19 attributable deaths were higher in homes providing nursing services (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.6 to 2.0), to older people and/or with dementia (OR 5.5, 95% CI 4.4 to 6.8), amongst larger (vs. small) homes (OR 13.3, 95% CI 11.5 to 15.4) and belonging to a large provider/brand (OR 1.2, 95% CI 1.1 to 1.3). There was no significant association with for-profit status of providers. Conclusions: To limit excess mortality, policy should be targeted at care homes to minimise the risk of ingress of disease and limit subsequent transmission. Our findings provide specific characteristic targets for further research on mechanisms and policy priority
Self Interacting Dark Matter in the Solar System
Weakly coupled, almost massless, spin 0 particles have been predicted by many
extensions of the standard model of particle physics. Recently, the PVLAS group
observed a rotation of polarization of electromagnetic waves in vacuum in the
presence of transverse magnetic field. This phenomenon is best explained by the
existence of a weakly coupled light pseudoscalar particle. However, the
coupling required by this experiment is much larger than the conventional
astrophysical limits. Here we consider a hypothetical self-interacting
pseudoscalar particle which couples weakly with visible matter.
Assuming that these pseudoscalars pervade the galaxy, we show that the solar
limits on the pseudoscalar-photon coupling can be evaded.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
Superconductivity of metallic boron in MgB_2
Boron in MgB_2 forms layers of honeycomb lattices with magnesium as a space
filler. Band structure calculations indicate that Mg is substantially ionized,
and the bands at the Fermi level derive mainly from B orbitals. Strong bonding
with an ionic component and considerable metallic density of states yield a
sizeable electron-phonon coupling. Using the rigid atomic sphere approximation
and an analogy to Al, we estimate the coupling constant lambda to be of order
1. Together with high phonon frequencies, which we estimate via zone-center
frozen phonon calculations to be between 300 and 700 cm^-1, this produces a
high critical temperature, consistent with recent experiments reporting Tc=39 K
(J. Akimitsu et al., to be published). Thus MgB_2 can be viewed as an analog of
the long sought, but still hypothetical, superconducting metallic hydrogen.Comment: several typos corrected, most importantly, units in the tables fixed
and a missing zero in the expression for the resistivity restore
Distribution of velocities and acceleration for a particle in Brownian correlated disorder: inertial case
We study the motion of an elastic object driven in a disordered environment
in presence of both dissipation and inertia. We consider random forces with the
statistics of random walks and reduce the problem to a single degree of
freedom. It is the extension of the mean field ABBM model in presence of an
inertial mass m. While the ABBM model can be solved exactly, its extension to
inertia exhibits complicated history dependence due to oscillations and
backward motion. The characteristic scales for avalanche motion are studied
from numerics and qualitative arguments. To make analytical progress we
consider two variants which coincide with the original model whenever the
particle moves only forward. Using a combination of analytical and numerical
methods together with simulations, we characterize the distributions of
instantaneous acceleration and velocity, and compare them in these three
models. We show that for large driving velocity, all three models share the
same large-deviation function for positive velocities, which is obtained
analytically for small and large m, as well as for m =6/25. The effect of small
additional thermal and quantum fluctuations can be treated within an
approximate method.Comment: 42 page
High-pressure phase and transition phenomena in ammonia borane NH3BH3 from X-ray diffraction, Landau theory, and ab initio calculations
Structural evolution of a prospective hydrogen storage material, ammonia
borane NH3BH3, has been studied at high pressures up to 12 GPa and at low
temperatures by synchrotron powder diffraction. At 293 K and above 1.1 GPa a
disordered I4mm structure reversibly transforms into a new ordered phase. Its
Cmc21 structure was solved from the diffraction data, the positions of N and B
atoms and the orientation of NH3 and BH3 groups were finally assigned with the
help of density functional theory calculations. Group-theoretical analysis
identifies a single two-component order parameter, combining ordering and
atomic displacement mechanisms, which link an orientationally disordered parent
phase I4mm with ordered distorted Cmc21, Pmn21 and P21 structures. We propose a
generic phase diagram for NH3BH3, mapping three experimentally found and one
predicted (P21) phases as a function of temperature and pressure, along with
the evolution of the corresponding structural distortions. Ammonia borane
belongs to the class of improper ferroelastics and we show that both
temperature- and pressure-induced phase transitions can be driven to be of the
second order. The role of N-H...H-B dihydrogen bonds and other intermolecular
interactions in the stability of NH3BH3 polymorphs is examined.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figure
Numerical solution of the viscous flow past a cylinder with a non-global yet spectrally convergent meshless collocation method
Proceeding of: 11th International Conference on Spectral and High-Order Methods (ICOSAHOM'16), June 27-July 1, 2016, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.The flow of a viscous fluid past a cylinder is a classical problem in fluid-structure interaction and a benchmark for numerical methods in computational fluid dynamics. We solve it with the recently introduced radial basis function-based partition of unity method (RBF-PUM), which is a spectrally convergent collocation meshless scheme well suited to this kind of problem. The resulting discrete system of nonlinear equations is tackled with a trust-region algorithm, whose performance is much enhanced by the analytic Jacobian which is provided alongside. Preliminary results up to Re = 60 with just 1292 nodes are shown.F. Bernal acknowledges support from FCT grant SFRH/BPD/79986/2011 and INESC-ID. A. Heryudono is partially supported by NSF Grant DMS 1552238Publicad
Steep sharp-crested gravity waves on deep water
A new type of steady steep two-dimensional irrotational symmetric periodic
gravity waves on inviscid incompressible fluid of infinite depth is revealed.
We demonstrate that these waves have sharper crests in comparison with the
Stokes waves of the same wavelength and steepness. The speed of a fluid
particle at the crest of new waves is greater than their phase speed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
The effect of altering loading distance on skeleton start performance: Is higher pre-load velocity always beneficial?
Athletes initiating skeleton runs differ in the number of steps taken before loading the sled. We aimed to understand how experimentally modifying loading distance influenced sled velocity and overall start performance. Ten athletes (five elite, five talent; 67% of all national athletes) underwent two to four sessions, consisting of two dry-land push starts in each of three conditions (preferred, long and short loading distances). A magnet encoder on the sled wheel provided velocity profiles and the overall performance measure (sled acceleration index). Longer pre load distances (12% average increase from preferred to long distances) were related to higher pre-load velocity (r = 0.94), but lower load effectiveness (r = 0.75; average reduction 29%). Performance evaluations across conditions revealed that elite athletes’ preferred distance push starts were typically superior to the other conditions. Short loading distances were generally detrimental, whereas pushing the sled further improved some talent-squad athletes’ performance. Thus, an important trade-off between generating high pre load velocity and loading effectively was revealed, which coaches should consider when encouraging athletes to load later. This novel intervention study conducted within a real-world training setting has demonstrated the scope to enhance push-start performance by altering loading distance, particularly in developing athletes with less extensive training experience
Rotating light, OAM paradox and relativistic complex scalar field
Recent studies show that the angular momentum, both spin and orbital, of
rotating light beams possesses counter-intuitive characteristics. We present a
new approach to the question of orbital angular momentum of light based on the
complex massless scalar field representation of light. The covariant equation
for the scalar field is treated in rotating system using the general
relativistic framework. First we show the equivalence of the U(1) gauge current
for the scalar field with the Poynting vector continuity equation for paraxial
light, and then apply the formalism to the calculation of the orbital angular
momentum of rotating light beams. If the difference between the co-, contra-,
and physical quantities is properly accounted for there does not result any
paradox in the orbital angular momentum of rotating light. An artificial
analogue of the paradoxical situation could be constructed but it is wrong
within the present formalism. It is shown that the orbital angular momentum of
rotating beam comprising of modes with opposite azimuthal indices corresponds
to that of rigid rotation. A short review on the electromagnetism in
noninertial systems is presented to motivate a fully covariant Maxwell field
approach in rotating system to address the rotating light phenomenon.Comment: No figure
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