386 research outputs found
Focusing and Compression of Ultrashort Pulses through Scattering Media
Light scattering in inhomogeneous media induces wavefront distortions which
pose an inherent limitation in many optical applications. Examples range from
microscopy and nanosurgery to astronomy. In recent years, ongoing efforts have
made the correction of spatial distortions possible by wavefront shaping
techniques. However, when ultrashort pulses are employed scattering induces
temporal distortions which hinder their use in nonlinear processes such as in
multiphoton microscopy and quantum control experiments. Here we show that
correction of both spatial and temporal distortions can be attained by
manipulating only the spatial degrees of freedom of the incident wavefront.
Moreover, by optimizing a nonlinear signal the refocused pulse can be shorter
than the input pulse. We demonstrate focusing of 100fs pulses through a 1mm
thick brain tissue, and 1000-fold enhancement of a localized two-photon
fluorescence signal. Our results open up new possibilities for optical
manipulation and nonlinear imaging in scattering media
Supermassive Black Hole Mass Functions at Intermediate Redshifts from Spheroid and AGN Luminosity Functions
Redshift evolution of supermassive black hole mass functions (BHMFs) is
investigated up to z ~ 1. BHMFs at intermediate redshifts are calculated in two
ways. One way is from early-type galaxy luminosity functions (LFs); we assume
an M_BH - L_sph correlation at a redshift by considering a passive evolution of
L_sph in the local relationship. The resultant BHMFs (spheroid-BHMFs) from LFs
of red sequence galaxies indicates a slight decrease of number density with
increasing redshift at M_BH > 10^{7.5-8} M_solar. Since a redshift evolution in
slope and zeropoint of the M_BH - L_sph relation is unlikely to be capable of
making such an evolution in BHMF, the evolution of the spheroid-BHMFs is
perhaps due mainly to the decreasing normalization in the galaxy LFs. We also
investigate how spheroid-BHMFs are affected by uncertainties existing in the
derivation in detail. The other way of deriving a BHMF is based on the
continuity equation for number density of SMBHs and LFs of active galactic
nucleus (AGN). The resultant BHMFs (AGN-BHMFs) show no clear evolution out to z
= 1 at M_BH > 10^8 M_solar, but exhibit a significant decrease with redshift in
the lower mass range. Comparison of the spheroid-BHMFs with the AGN-BHMFs
suggests that at M_BH > 10^{8} M_solar, the spheroid-BHMFs are broadly
consistent with the AGN-BHMFs out to z ~ 1. The agreement between the
spheroid-BHMFs and the AGN-BHMFs appears to support that most of the SMBHs are
already hosted by massive spheroids at z ~ 1 and they evolve without
significant mass growth since then.Comment: 13 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
Mass-dependent evolution of the relation between supermassive black hole mass and host spheroid mass since z ~ 1
We investigate the evolution of supermassive black hole mass (M_BH) and the
host spheroid mass (M_sph) in order to track the history of the M_BH-M_sph
relationship. The typical mass increase of M_BH is calculated by a continuity
equation and accretion history, which is estimated from the active galactic
nucleus (AGN) luminosity function. The increase in M_sph is also calculated by
using a continuity equation and a star formation model, which uses
observational data for the formation rate and stellar mass function. We find
that the black hole to spheroid mass ratio is expected to be substantially
unchanged since z~1.2 for high mass objects (M_BH>10^8.5M_SUN and
M_sph>10^11.3M_SUN). In the same redshift range, the spheroid mass is found to
increase more rapidly than the black hole mass if M_sph>10^11M_SUN. The
proposed mass-dependent model is consistent with the current available
observational data in the M_BH-M_sph diagram.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted to MNRA
Bariatric surgery provision in response to the COVID-19 pandemic: retrospective cohort study of a national registry
Background When surgery resumed following outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, guidelines recommended the prioritization of patients with greater obesity-related comorbidity and/or higher Body Mass Index (BMI). Objectives The aim of this study was to record the effect of the pandemic on total number, patient demographic and peri-operative outcomes of elective bariatric surgery in the United Kingdom. Setting and Method The United Kingdom National Bariatric Surgical Registry was used to identify patients that underwent elective bariatric surgery during the pandemic (one year from 1st April 2020). Characteristics of this group were compared with a pre-pandemic cohort. Primary outcomes were case volume, case-mix and provider. National Health Service (NHS) cases were analyzed for baseline health status and peri-operative outcomes. Chi-square, Fisherâs exact or Studentâs t-test were used as appropriate. Results Total number of cases reduced to one third of pre-pandemic volume (8615 to 2930). Operating volume reduction varied, with thirty-six (45%) hospitals experiencing a 75-100% reduction. Cases performed in the NHS fell from 74% to 53% (p<0.0001). There was no change in baseline BMI (45.2 kg/m2 ± 8.3 from 45.5 kg/m2 ± 8.3; p=0.228) or prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (26% from 26%; p=0.999. Length of stay (median 2 days) and surgical complication rate (1.4% from 2.0%; RR 0.71 (95% CI 0.45 â 1.12); p=0.133) were unchanged. Conclusions In the context of a dramatic reduction in elective bariatric surgery due to the COVID-19 pandemic, patients with more severe comorbidity were not prioritized for surgery. These findings should inform preparation for future crises
The evolution of the luminosity functions in the FORS Deep Field from low to high redshift: I. The blue bands
We use the very deep and homogeneous I-band selected dataset of the FORS Deep
Field (FDF) to trace the evolution of the luminosity function over the redshift
range 0.5 < z < 5.0. We show that the FDF I-band selection down to I(AB)=26.8
misses of the order of 10 % of the galaxies that would be detected in a K-band
selected survey with magnitude limit K(AB)=26.3 (like FIRES). Photometric
redshifts for 5558 galaxies are estimated based on the photometry in 9 filters
(U, B, Gunn g, R, I, SDSS z, J, K and a special filter centered at 834 nm). A
comparison with 362 spectroscopic redshifts shows that the achieved accuracy of
the photometric redshifts is (Delta z / (z_spec+1)) < 0.03 with only ~ 1 %
outliers. This allows us to derive luminosity functions with a reliability
similar to spectroscopic surveys. In addition, the luminosity functions can be
traced to objects of lower luminosity which generally are not accessible to
spectroscopy. We investigate the evolution of the luminosity functions
evaluated in the restframe UV (1500 Angstroem and 2800 Angstroem), u', B, and
g' bands. Comparison with results from the literature shows the reliability of
the derived luminosity functions. Out to redshifts of z ~ 2.5 the data are
consistent with a slope of the luminosity function approximately constant with
redshift, at a value of -1.07 +- 0.04 in the UV (1500 Angstroem, 2800
Angstroem) as well as u', and -1.25 +- 0.03 in the blue (g', B). We do not see
evidence for a very steep slope (alpha < -1.6) in the UV at z ~ 3.0 and z ~ 4.0
favoured by other authors. There may be a tendency for the faint-end slope to
become shallower with increasing redshift but the effect is marginal. We find a
brightening of M_star and a decrease of Phi_star with redshift for all analyzed
wavelengths. [abridged]Comment: 30 pages, re-submitted to A&A after referee comments have been taken
into account, full-resolution version available at
http://www.usm.uni-muenchen.de/people/gabasch/publications/gabasch_lfblue.p
Shaping speckles: spatio-temporal focussing of an ultrafast pulse through a multiply scattering medium
The multiple scattering of coherent light is a problem of both fundamental
and applied importance. In optics, phase conjugation allows spatial focussing
and imaging through a multiply scattering medium; however, temporal control is
nonetheless elusive, and multiple scattering remains a challenge for
femtosecond science. Here, we report on the spatially and temporally resolved
measurement of a speckle field produced by the propagation of an ultrafast
optical pulse through a thick strongly scattering medium. Using spectral pulse
shaping, we demonstrate the spatially localized temporal recompression of the
output speckle to the Fourier-limit duration, offering an optical analogue to
time-reversal experiments in the acoustic regime. This approach shows that a
multiply scattering medium can be put to profit for light manipulation at the
femtosecond scale, and has a diverse range of potential applications that
includes quantum control, biological imaging and photonics.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, published in Nature Communication
Causes of death and demographic characteristics of victims of meteorological disasters in Korea from 1990 to 2008
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Meteorological disasters are an important component when considering climate change issues that impact morbidity and mortality rates. However, there are few epidemiological studies assessing the causes and characteristics of deaths from meteorological disasters. The present study aimed to analyze the causes of death associated with meteorological disasters in Korea, as well as demographic and geographic vulnerabilities and their changing trends, to establish effective measures for the adaptation to meteorological disasters.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Deaths associated with meteorological disasters were examined from 2,045 cases in Victim Survey Reports prepared by 16 local governments from 1990 to 2008. Specific causes of death were categorized as drowning, structural collapse, electrocution, lightning, fall, collision, landslide, avalanche, deterioration of disease by disaster, and others. Death rates were analyzed according to the meteorological type, specific causes of death, and demographic and geographic characteristics.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Drowning (60.3%) caused the greatest number of deaths in total, followed by landslide (19.7%) and structural collapse (10.1%). However, the causes of deaths differed between disaster types. The meteorological disaster associated with the greatest number of deaths has changed from flood to typhoon. Factors that raised vulnerability included living in coastal provinces (11.3 times higher than inland metropolitan), male gender (1.9 times higher than female), and older age.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Epidemiological analyses of the causes of death and vulnerability associated with meteorological disasters can provide the necessary information for establishing future adaptation measures against climate change. A more comprehensive system for assessing disaster epidemiology needs to be established.</p
Discussing life expectancy with surgical patients: Do patients want to know and how should this information be delivered?
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Predicted patient life expectancy (LE) and survival probability (SP), based on a patient's medical history, are important components of surgical decision-making and informed consent. The objective of this study was to assess patients' interpretation of and desire to know information relating to LE, in addition to establishing the most effective format for discussion.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A cross sectional survey of 120 patients (mean age = 68.7 years, range 50â90 years), recruited from general urological and surgical outpatient clinics in one District General and one Teaching hospital in Southwest England (UK) was conducted. Patients were included irrespective of their current diagnosis or associated comorbidity. Hypothetical patient case scenarios were used to assess patients' desire to know LE and SP, in addition to their preferred presentation format.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>58% of patients expressed a desire to know their LE and SP, if it were possible to calculate, with 36% not wishing to know either. Patients preferred a combination of numerical and pictorial formats in discussing LE and SP, with numerical, verbal and pictorial formats alone least preferred. 71% patients ranked the survival curve as either their first or second most preferred graph, with 76% rating facial figures their least preferred. No statistically significant difference was noted between sexes or educational backgrounds.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>A proportion of patients seem unwilling to discuss their LE and SP. This may relate to their current diagnosis, level of associated comorbidity or degree of understanding. However it is feasible that by providing this information in a range of presentation formats, greater engagement in the shared decision-making process can be encouraged.</p
The ESO-Sculptor Survey: Evolution of late-type galaxies at redshifts 0.1-0.5
[ABRIDGED] Using the Gaussian+Schechter composite luminosity functions
measured from the ESO-Sculptor Survey (de Lapparent et al. 2003), we obtain
evidence for evolution in the late spectral class containing late-type Spiral
(Sc+Sd) and dwarf Irregular (dI) galaxies. This evolution is detected as an
increase of the Sc+Sd+dI galaxy density which can be modeled as either
n(z)~1+3(z-0.15) or n(z) ~ (1+z)^2 using the currently favored cosmological
parameters Omega_m=0.3 and Omega_Lambda=0.7, with an uncertainty in both
evolution rates of order of unity. For Omega_m=1.0 and Omega_Lambda=0.0, the
linear and power-law evolution rates are 4 and 2.5 resp. Both models yield a
good match to the ESS BVRc redshift distributions to 21-22 mag and to the
number-counts to 23-23.5 mag, which probe the galaxy distribution to redshifts
z~0.5 and z~1.0 resp. This analysis illustrates how Gaussian+Schechter
composite luminosity functions provide more robust constraints on the evolution
rate than pure Schechter functions. The detected density evolution indicates
that mergers could play a significant role in the evolution of late-type Spiral
and dwarf Irregular galaxies. However, the ESO-Sculptor density increase with
redshift could also be caused by a ~1 mag brightening of the Sc+Sd+dI galaxies
at z~0.5 and a ~1.5-2.0 mag brightening at z~1, which is compatible with the
expected passive brightening of Sc galaxies at these redshifts. Distinguishing
between luminosity and density evolution is a major difficulty as these produce
the same effect on the redshift and magnitude distributions. The detected
evolution rate of the ESO-Sculptor Sc+Sd+dI galaxies is nevertheless among the
range of measured values from the other existing analyses, whether they provide
evidence for density or luminosity evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A - 25 Pages, 16 color figures, A&A
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