381 research outputs found

    Tool support for security-oriented virtual research collaborations

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    Collaboration is at the heart of e-Science and e-Research more generally. Successful collaborations must address both the needs of the end user researchers and the providers that make resources available. Usability and security are two fundamental requirements that are demanded by many collaborations and both concerns must be considered from both the researcher and resource provider perspective. In this paper we outline tools and methods developed at the National e-Science Centre (NeSC) that provide users with seamless, secure access to distributed resources through security-oriented research environments, whilst also allowing resource providers to define and enforce their own local access and usage policies through intuitive user interfaces. We describe these tools and illustrate their application in the ESRC-funded Data Management through e-Social Science (DAMES) and the JISC-funded SeeGEO projects

    Supporting security-oriented, inter-disciplinary research: crossing the social, clinical and geospatial domains

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    How many people have had a chronic disease for longer than 5-years in Scotland? How has this impacted upon their choices of employment? Are there any geographical clusters in Scotland where a high-incidence of patients with such long-term illness can be found? How does the life expectancy of such individuals compare with the national averages? Such questions are important to understand the health of nations and the best ways in which health care should be delivered and measured for their impact and success. In tackling such research questions, e-Infrastructures need to provide tailored, secure access to an extensible range of distributed resources including primary and secondary e-Health clinical data; social science data, and geospatial data sets amongst numerous others. In this paper we describe the security models underlying these e-Infrastructures and demonstrate their implementation in supporting secure, federated access to a variety of distributed and heterogeneous data sets exploiting the results of a variety of projects at the National e-Science Centre (NeSC) at the University of Glasgow

    Coupled non-equilibrium growth equations: Self-consistent mode coupling using vertex renormalization

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    We find that studying the simplest of the coupled non-equilibrium growth equations of Barabasi by self-consistent mode coupling requires the use of dressed vertices. Using the vertex renormalization, we find a roughness exponent which already in the leading order is quite close to the numerical value.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Interface roughening with nonlinear surface tension

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    Using stability arguments, this Brief Report suggests that a term that enhances the surface tension in the presence of large height fluctuations should be included in the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation. A one-loop renormalization group analysis then shows for interface dimensions larger than 3.3\simeq 3.3 an unstable strong-coupling fixed point that enters the system from infinity. The relevance of these results to the roughening transition is discussed.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 1 figur

    Measurements of Distributed Strain During Impact Pile Driving

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    This paper reports the use of optical Fibre Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors to monitor the stress waves generated below ground during pile driving, combined with measurements using conventional pile driving analyzer (PDA) sensors mounted at the pile head. Fourteen tubular steel piles with a diameter of 508 mm and embedded length to diameter ratios of 6 to 20 were impact driven at an established chalk test site in Kent, UK. The pile shafts were instrumented with multiple FBG strain gauges and pile head PDA sensors, which monitored the piles’ responses under each hammer blow. A high frequency (5 kHz) fibre optic interrogator allowed a previously unseen resolution of the stress wave propagation along the pile. Estimates of the base soil resistances to driving and distributions of shaft shear resistances were found through signal matching that compared time series of pile head PDA measurements and FBG strains measured below ground surface. Numerical solutions of the one-dimensional wave equation were optimised by taking account of the data from multiple FBG gauges, leading to significant advantages that have potential for widespread application in cases where high resolution strain measurements are made

    Empirical Determination of Bang-Bang Operations

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    Strong and fast "bang-bang" (BB) pulses have been recently proposed as a means for reducing decoherence in a quantum system. So far theoretical analysis of the BB technique relied on model Hamiltonians. Here we introduce a method for empirically determining the set of required BB pulses, that relies on quantum process tomography. In this manner an experimenter may tailor his or her BB pulses to the quantum system at hand, without having to assume a model Hamiltonian.Comment: 14 pages, 2 eps figures, ReVTeX4 two-colum

    Level structure of 30S: Implications for the astrophysical 29P(p,γ)30S reaction rate in ONe novae and x-ray bursts

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    A γ-ray spectroscopy study of 30S is presented. Excitation energies have been determined with improved precision over previous studies and firm spin-parity assignments have been made for key 29P+p resonant states. An evaluation of the 29P(p,γ)30S reaction for T=0.08-2.5 GK shows that the 3+ and 2+ resonant states located at Er=289(3) and 410(3) keV, respectively, dominate the 29P(p,γ)30S reaction rate in ONe novae, while the 410-keV resonance is expected to govern the rate in x-ray burster environments. These new, precise resonance energy measurements and firm spin-parity assignments have significantly reduced uncertainties in the 29P(p,γ)30S reaction in ONe novae and x-ray bursts. In particular, the reaction rate is now specified precisely enough for calculations of isotopic abundances in ONe novae ejecta

    The health and educational costs of preterm birth to 18 years of age in Australia

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    Background: Preterm birth is the greatest cause of death up to five years of age and an im-portant contributor to lifelong disability. There is increasing evidence that a meaningful pro-portion of early births may be prevented, but widespread introduction of effective preventive strategies will require financial support.Aims: This study estimated the economic cost to the Australian government of preterm birth, up to 18 years of age.Materials and Methods: A decision-analytic model was developed to estimate the costs of preterm birth in Australia for a hypothetical cohort of 314 814 children, the number of live births in 2016. Costs to Australia’s eight jurisdictions included medical expenditures and ad-ditional costs to educational services.Results: The total cost of preterm birth to the Australian government associated with the an-nual cohort was estimated at $1.413 billion (95% CI 1047-1781). Two-thirds of the costs were borne by healthcare services during the newborn period and one-quarter of the costs by educational services providing special assistance. For each child, the costs were highest for those born at the earliest survivable gestational age, but the larger numbers of children born at later gestational ages contributed heavily to the overall economic burden.Conclusion: Preterm birth leaves many people with lifelong disabilities and generates a sig-nificant economic burden to society. The costs extend beyond those to the healthcare system and include additional educational needs. Assessments of economic costs should inform eco-nomic evaluations of interventions aimed at the prevention or treatment of preterm birth.John P. Newnham, Chris Schilling, Stavros Petrou, Jonathan M Morris, Euan M. Wallace, Kiarna Brown ... et al

    Many body physics from a quantum information perspective

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    The quantum information approach to many body physics has been very successful in giving new insight and novel numerical methods. In these lecture notes we take a vertical view of the subject, starting from general concepts and at each step delving into applications or consequences of a particular topic. We first review some general quantum information concepts like entanglement and entanglement measures, which leads us to entanglement area laws. We then continue with one of the most famous examples of area-law abiding states: matrix product states, and tensor product states in general. Of these, we choose one example (classical superposition states) to introduce recent developments on a novel quantum many body approach: quantum kinetic Ising models. We conclude with a brief outlook of the field.Comment: Lectures from the Les Houches School on "Modern theories of correlated electron systems". Improved version new references adde
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