383 research outputs found

    Mega: A Search for the Decay μ → e γ

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    This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478

    The Oedipal Paradigm in Group Development

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/68383/2/10.1177_104649647300400302.pd

    A Measurement of Stimulated Emission From 83m-Kr(m)

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    This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478

    A Measurement of Parity-Violating Neutron Transmission in Xenon

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    This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478

    A Study of Single-Particle Parity-Nonconserving Nuclear Matrix Elements

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    This research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation Grant NSF PHY-931478

    Multibarrier tunneling

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    We study the tunneling through an arbitrary number of finite rectangular opaque barriers and generalize earlier results by showing that the total tunneling phase time depends neither on the barrier thickness nor on the inter-barrier separation. We also predict two novel peculiar features of the system considered, namely the independence of the transit time (for non resonant tunneling) and the resonant frequency on the number of barriers crossed, which can be directly tested in photonic experiments. A thorough analysis of the role played by inter-barrier multiple reflections and a physical interpretation of the results obtained is reported, showing that multibarrier tunneling is a highly non-local phenomenon.Comment: RevTex, 7 pages, 1 eps figur

    Physiology and coronary artery disease: emerging insights from computed tomography imaging based computational modeling

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    Improvements in spatial and temporal resolution now permit robust high quality characterization of presence, morphology and composition of coronary atherosclerosis in computed tomography (CT). These characteristics include high risk features such as large plaque volume, low CT attenuation, napkin-ring sign, spotty calcification and positive remodeling. Because of the high image quality, principles of patient-specific computational fluid dynamics modeling of blood flow through the coronary arteries can now be applied to CT and allow the calculation of local lesion-specific hemodynamics such as endothelial shear stress, fractional flow reserve and axial plaque stress. This review examines recent advances in coronary CT image-based computational modeling and discusses the opportunity to identify lesions at risk for rupture much earlier than today through the combination of anatomic and hemodynamic information

    AUTOMATED QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF CORONARY CALCIFICATION USING INTRAVASCULAR ULTRASOUND

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    Coronary calcification represents a challenge in the treatment of coronary artery disease by stent placement. It negatively affects stent expansion and has been related to future adverse cardiac events. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) is known for its high sensitivity in detecting coronary calcification. At present, automated quantification of calcium as detected by IVUS is not available. For this reason, we developed and validated an optimized framework for accurate automated detection and quantification of calcified plaque in coronary atherosclerosis as seen by IVUS. Calcified lesions were detected by training a supported vector classifier per IVUS A-line on manually annotated IVUS images, followed by post-processing using regional information. We applied our framework to 35 IVUS pullbacks from each of the three commonly used IVUS systems. Cross-validation accuracy for each system was >0.9, and the testing accuracy was 0.87, 0.89 and 0.89 for the three systems. Using the detection result, we propose an IVUS calcium score, based on the fraction of calcium-positive A-lines in a pullback segment, to quantify the extent of calcified plaque. The high accuracy of the proposed classifier suggests that it may provide a robust and accurate tool to assess the presence and amount of coronary calcification and, thus, may play a role in imageguided coronary interventions. (E-mail: [email protected]

    On a universal photonic tunnelling time

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    We consider photonic tunnelling through evanescent regions and obtain general analytic expressions for the transit (phase) time Ď„\tau (in the opaque barrier limit) in order to study the recently proposed ``universality'' property according to which Ď„\tau is given by the reciprocal of the photon frequency. We consider different physical phenomena (corresponding to performed experiments) and show that such a property is only an approximation. In particular we find that the ``correction'' factor is a constant term for total internal reflection and quarter-wave photonic bandgap, while it is frequency-dependent in the case of undersized waveguide and distributed Bragg reflector. The comparison of our predictions with the experimental results shows quite a good agreement with observations and reveals the range of applicability of the approximated ``universality'' property.Comment: RevTeX, 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; subsection added with a new experiment analyzed, some other minor change

    Potential Scattering in Dirac Field Theory

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    We develop the potential scattering of a spinor within the context of perturbation field theory. As an application, we reproduce, up to second order in the potential, the diffusion results for a potential barrier of quantum mechanics. An immediate consequence is a simple generalization to arbitrary potential forms, a feature not possible in quantum mechanics.Comment: 7 page
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