4,377 research outputs found
What was a mortarium used for? Organic residues and cultural change in Iron Age and Roman Britain.
The Romans brought the mortarium to Britain in the first century AD, and there has long been speculation on its actual purpose. Using analysis of the residues trapped in the walls of these âkitchen blendersâ and comparing them with Iron Age and Roman cooking pots, the authors show that it wasn't the diet that changed â just the method of preparing certain products: plants were being ground in the mortarium as well as cooked in the pot. As well as plants, the mortars contained animal fats, including dairy products. The question that remains, however, is why these natural products were being mixed together in mortaria. Were they for food, pharmaceuticals or face creams?</jats:p
Effects of patient motion on absolute quantification of glucose metabolism in cardiac positron emission tomography (PET)
Die Positronen-Emissions-Tomographie (PET) stellt eine der leistungsfĂ€higsten Methoden zur Bestimmung myokardialer VitalitĂ€t dar, deren Bestimmung fĂŒr die Prognose und Therapie von Patienten mit koronarer Herzerkrankung elementar ist.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, das Auftreten und die EinflĂŒsse von Patientenbewegung anhand von klinischen und simulierten Daten zu untersuchen. Ein numerisches Herzmodell wurde neu entwickelt, die EinflĂŒsse von kĂŒnstlichen Bewegungen auf das Modell und klinische Daten untersucht und diese Ergebnisse mit bewegungskontaminierten klinischen Daten verglichen.
Es wurde festgestellt, dass Patientenbewegung in mehr als einem Drittel der PET-Untersuchungen auftritt. Die simulierten Bewegungsartefakte zeigten gleiche Ergebnisse fĂŒr das Modell und die klinischen Daten. Der Vergleich mit klinischen Bewegungsartefakten bestĂ€tigt diese Ergebnisse. Positron-Emission-Tomography (PET) is one of the most efficient methods
for the assessment of myocardial vitality, the assessment of which is
fundamental for prognosis and therapy of coronary artery disease.
Aim of this work was to determine the occurence and influence of patient
motion by means of clinical and simulated data. A numerical model of
the heart was newly developed. The influences of artificial motion on
the model and clinical data was investigated and compared with clinical
data.
It was shown that patient motion occurs in more than a third of the
PET-investigations. Simulated effects of motion were similar in the
model and the clinical data. These results are comparable to those of
clinical motion-biased data
Quantum simulation of frustrated magnetism in triangular optical lattices
Magnetism plays a key role in modern technology as essential building block
of many devices used in daily life. Rich future prospects connected to
spintronics, next generation storage devices or superconductivity make it a
highly dynamical field of research. Despite those ongoing efforts, the
many-body dynamics of complex magnetism is far from being well understood on a
fundamental level. Especially the study of geometrically frustrated
configurations is challenging both theoretically and experimentally. Here we
present the first realization of a large scale quantum simulator for magnetism
including frustration. We use the motional degrees of freedom of atoms to
comprehensively simulate a magnetic system in a triangular lattice. Via a
specific modulation of the optical lattice, we can tune the couplings in
different directions independently, even from ferromagnetic to
antiferromagnetic. A major advantage of our approach is that standard
Bose-Einstein-condensate temperatures are sufficient to observe magnetic
phenomena like N\'eel order and spin frustration. We are able to study a very
rich phase diagram and even to observe spontaneous symmetry breaking caused by
frustration. In addition, the quantum states realized in our spin simulator are
yet unobserved superfluid phases with non-trivial long-range order and
staggered circulating plaquette currents, which break time reversal symmetry.
These findings open the route towards highly debated phases like spin-liquids
and the study of the dynamics of quantum phase transitions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A sub-basin scale dust plume source frequency inventory for southern Africa, 2005-2008
We present a dust plume source inventory for southern Africa. In order to locate and track the local, short-lived plume events, source and frequency data have been derived from Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) thermal infrared composite data (4âkm data using 8.7, 10.8, and 12.0â”m) and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) visible composite data (0.25âkm data utilizing 0.620 â 0.670â”m, 0.545 â 0.565â”m, and 0.459 â 0.479â”m). Between January 2005 and December 2008, a total of 328 distinct daytime dust plumes more than 10âkm in length were detected. These plumes were attributed to 101 distinct point sources, consisting largely of ephemeral inland lakes, coastal pans as well as dry river valleys in Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa. These data also provided sub-basin scale source observations for large basins such as Etosha and Makgadikgadi Pans
Epitaxial growth of deposited amorphous layer by laser annealing
We demonstrate that a single short pulse of laser irradiation of appropriate energy is capable of recrystallizing in open air an amorphous Si layer deposited on a (100) single-crystal substrate into an epitaxial layer. The laser pulse annealing technique is shown to overcome the interfacial oxide obstacle which usually leads to polycrystalline formation in normal thermal annealing
Analog of photon-assisted tunneling in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We study many-body tunneling of a small Bose-Einstein condensate in a
periodically modulated, tilted double-well potential. Periodic modulation of
the trapping potential leads to an analog of photon-assisted tunneling, with
distinct signatures of the interparticle interaction visible in the amount of
particles transferred from one well to the other. In particular, under
experimentally accessible conditions there exist well-developed half-integer
Shapiro-like resonances.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Bose-Hubbard model on two-dimensional line graphs
We construct a basis for the many-particle ground states of the positive
hopping Bose-Hubbard model on line graphs of finite 2-connected planar
bipartite graphs at sufficiently low filling factors. The particles in these
states are localized on non-intersecting vertex-disjoint cycles of the line
graph which correspond to non-intersecting edge-disjoint cycles of the original
graph. The construction works up to a critical filling factor at which the
cycles are close-packed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, figures and conclusions update
Superfluid-insulator transition in a periodically driven optical lattice
We demonstrate that the transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator in
the Bose-Hubbard model can be induced by an oscillating force through an
effective renormalization of the tunneling matrix element. The mechanism
involves adiabatic following of Floquet states, and can be tested
experimentally with Bose-Einstein condensates in periodically driven optical
lattices. Its extension from small to very large systems yields nontrivial
information on the condensate dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, RevTe
Tunable gauge potential for neutral and spinless particles in driven lattices
We present a universal method to create a tunable, artificial vector gauge
potential for neutral particles trapped in an optical lattice. The necessary
Peierls phase of the hopping parameters between neighboring lattice sites is
generated by applying a suitable periodic inertial force such that the method
does not rely on any internal structure of the particles. We experimentally
demonstrate the realization of such artificial potentials, which generate
ground state superfluids at arbitrary non-zero quasi-momentum. We furthermore
investigate possible implementations of this scheme to create tuneable magnetic
fluxes, going towards model systems for strong-field physics
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