1,197 research outputs found
Imperfect Construction of Microclusters
Microclusters are the basic building blocks used to construct cluster states
capable of supporting fault-tolerant quantum computation. In this paper, we
explore the consequences of errors on microcluster construction using two error
models. To quantify the effect of the errors we calculate the fidelity of the
constructed microclusters and the fidelity with which two such microclusters
can be fused together. Such simulations are vital for gauging the capability of
an experimental system to achieve fault tolerance.Comment: 5 pages 2 figure
The UCSC Archaeal Genome Browser
As more archaeal genomes are sequenced, effective research and analysis tools are needed to integrate the diverse information available for any given locus. The feature-rich UCSC Genome Browser, created originally to annotate the human genome, can be applied to any sequenced organism. We have created a UCSC Archaeal Genome Browser, available at , currently with 26 archaeal genomes. It displays G/C content, gene and operon annotation from multiple sources, sequence motifs (promoters and Shine-Dalgarno), microarray data, multi-genome alignments and protein conservation across phylogenetic and habitat categories. We encourage submission of new experimental and bioinformatic analysis from contributors. The purpose of this tool is to aid biological discovery and facilitate greater collaboration within the archaeal research community
The MUSCLES Treasury Survey. V. FUV Flares on Active and Inactive M Dwarfs
M dwarf stars are known for their vigorous flaring. This flaring could impact
the climate of orbiting planets, making it important to characterize M dwarf
flares at the short wavelengths that drive atmospheric chemistry and escape. We
conducted a far-ultraviolet flare survey of 6 M dwarfs from the recent MUSCLES
(Measurements of the Ultraviolet Spectral Characteristics of Low-mass
Exoplanetary Systems) observations, as well as 4 highly-active M dwarfs with
archival data. When comparing absolute flare energies, we found the
active-M-star flares to be about 10 more energetic than inactive-M-star
flares. However, when flare energies were normalized by the star's quiescent
flux, the active and inactive samples exhibited identical flare distributions,
with a power-law index of - (cumulative distribution). The
rate and distribution of flares are such that they could dominate the FUV
energy budget of M dwarfs, assuming the same distribution holds to flares as
energetic as those cataloged by Kepler and ground-based surveys. We used the
observed events to create an idealized model flare with realistic spectral and
temporal energy budgets to be used in photochemical simulations of exoplanet
atmospheres. Applied to our own simulation of direct photolysis by photons
alone (no particles), we find the most energetic observed flares have little
effect on an Earth-like atmosphere, photolyzing 0.01% of the total O
column. The observations were too limited temporally (73 h cumulative exposure)
to catch rare, highly energetic flares. Those that the power-law fit predicts
occur monthly would photolyze 1% of the O column and those it
predicts occur yearly would photolyze the full O column. Whether such
energetic flares occur at the rate predicted is an open question.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. v2 fixed some transposed errors, added PDF To
Selectively oxidised vertical cavity surface emitting lasers with 50% power conversion efficiency
Includes bibliographical references (page 209).Index-guided vertical cavity top-surface emitting laser diodes have been fabricated from an all epitaxial structure with conducting mirrors by selective lateral oxidation of AlGaAs. Low voltage, a 78% slope efficiency, and a 350μA threshold current in a single device combine to yield a maximum power conversion efficiency of 50% at less than a 2mA drive current. The device operates in a single mode up to 1.5mW
Connecting massive galaxies to dark matter halos in BOSS - I. Is galaxy color a stochastic process in high-mass halos?
We use subhalo abundance matching (SHAM) to model the stellar mass function
(SMF) and clustering of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS)
"CMASS" sample at . We introduce a novel method which accounts for
the stellar mass incompleteness of CMASS as a function of redshift, and produce
CMASS mock catalogs which include selection effects, reproduce the overall SMF,
the projected two-point correlation function , the CMASS ,
and are made publicly available. We study the effects of assembly bias above
collapse mass in the context of "age matching" and show that these effects are
markedly different compared to the ones explored by Hearin et al. (2013) at
lower stellar masses. We construct two models, one in which galaxy color is
stochastic ("AbM" model) as well as a model which contains assembly bias
effects ("AgM" model). By confronting the redshift dependent clustering of
CMASS with the predictions from our model, we argue that that galaxy colors are
not a stochastic process in high-mass halos. Our results suggest that the
colors of galaxies in high-mass halos are determined by other halo properties
besides halo peak velocity and that assembly bias effects play an important
role in determining the clustering properties of this sample.Comment: 22 pages. Appendix. B added. Matches the version accepted by MNRAS.
Mock galaxy catalog and HOD table are available at
http://www.massivegalaxies.co
High-frequency modulation of oxide-confined vertical cavity surface emitting lasers
Includes bibliographical references (page 458).High-speed studies of packaged, submilliampere threshold, oxide-confined vertical cavity surface emitting lasers show modulation bandwidths > 16GHz. Very high modulation current efficiency factors occur at low bias but decrease as the modulation bandwidth and frequency of the relative intensity noise peak saturate at higher currents
Rising Annual Costs of Dizziness Presentations to U.S. Emergency Departments
Objectives Dizziness and vertigo account for roughly 4% of chief symptoms in the emergency department ( ED ). Little is known about the aggregate costs of ED evaluations for these patients. The authors sought to estimate the annual national costs associated with ED visits for dizziness. Methods This cost study of adult U.S. ED visits presenting with dizziness or vertigo combined public‐use ED visit data (1995 to 2009) from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey ( NHAMCS ) and cost data (2003 to 2008) from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey ( MEPS ). We calculated total visits, test utilization, and ED diagnoses from NHAMCS . Diagnosis groups were defined using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project's Clinical Classifications Software ( HCUP ‐ CCS ). Total visits and the proportion undergoing neuroimaging for future years were extrapolated using an autoregressive forecasting model. The average ED visit cost‐per‐diagnosis‐group from MEPS were calculated, adjusting to 2011 dollars using the Hospital Personal Health Care Expenditures price index. An overall weighted mean across the diagnostic groups was used to estimate total national costs. Year 2011 data are reported in 2011 dollars. Results The estimated number of 2011 US ED visits for dizziness or vertigo was 3.9 million (95% confidence interval [ CI ] = 3.6 to 4.2 million). The proportion undergoing diagnostic imaging by computed tomography ( CT ), magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI ), or both in 2011 was estimated to be 39.9% (39.4% CT , 2.3% MRI ). The mean per‐ ED ‐dizziness‐visit cost was 3.9 billion. HCUP ‐ CCS key diagnostic groups for those presenting with dizziness and vertigo included the following (fraction of dizziness visits, cost‐per‐ ED ‐visit, attributable annual national costs): otologic/vestibular (25.7%; 757 million), cardiovascular (16.5%, 941 million), and cerebrovascular (3.1%; 127 million). Neuroimaging was estimated to account for about 12% of the total costs for dizziness visits in 2011 ( CT scans 110 million). Conclusions Total U.S. national costs for patients presenting with dizziness to the ED are substantial and are estimated to now exceed $4 billion per year (about 4% of total ED costs). Rising costs over time appear to reflect the rising prevalence of ED visits for dizziness and increased rates of imaging use. Future economic studies should focus on the specific breakdown of total costs, emphasizing areas of high cost and use that might be safely reduced. Resumen Incremento Anual de los Costes de las Atenciones por Mareo en los Servicios de Urgencias de Estados Unidos Objectivos El mareo y el vértigo suman aproximadamente el 4% de los motivos de consulta en el servicio de urgencias ( SU ). Se conoce poco sobre los costes globales de las evaluaciones del SU en estos pacientes. Se buscó estimar los costes anuales nacionales asociados con las visitas al SU por mareo. Metodología Este estudio de costes de visitas al SU de adultos norteamericanos que acudieron con mareo o vértigo combinó los datos públicos de las visitas a los SU (1995 a 2009) recogidos por el National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey ( NHAMCS ) y los costes (2003 a 2008) recogidos por el Medical Expenditure Panel Survey ( MEPS ). Se calcularon el total de visitas, el uso de pruebas diagnósticas y los diagnósticos del SU del NHAMCS . Los grupos diagnósticos se definieron según el Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project's Clinical Classifications Software ( HCUP ‐ CCS ). Los datos del año 2011 se documentaron en dólares de 2011. El total de visitas y la proporción de neuroimagen llevada a cabo en los futuros años se extrapoló usando un modelo predictivo autorregresivo. La media del coste por visita al SU por grupo diagnóstico del MEPS se calculó, ajustándose a dólares de 2011, mediante el índice de precios de los Hospital Personal Health Care Expenditures. Se utilizó una media ponderada global entre los grupos diagnósticos para estimar los costes totales nacionales. Resultados El número de visitas al SU en Estados Unidos en 2011 por mareo o vértigo fue de 3,9 millones ( IC 95% = 3,6 a 4,2 millones). El porcentaje de pruebas diagnósticas de imagen llevadas a cabo por tomografía computarizada ( TC ), resonancia magnética ( RM ) o ambas en 2011 se estimó en un 39,9% (39,4% TC , 2,3% RM ). La media de coste por visita al SU por mareo fue de 1.004 dólares de 2011. Los costes totales, extrapolados para todo el país, fueron de 3.900 millones de dólares. Los grupos diagnósticos HCUP ‐ CCS para aquéllos que presentaron mareo o vértigo incluyeron los siguientes (proporción de visitas por mareo; coste por visita al SU ; costes anuales nacionales atribuibles): otológico/vestibular (25,7%; 768 dólares; 757 millones de dólares), cardiovascular (16,5%, 1.489 dólares; 941 millones de dólares) y cerebrovascular (3,1%; 1.059 dólares; 127 millones de dólares). Se estimó una suma en la neuroimagen del 12% del total de costes para las visitas por mareo en 2011 (360 millones de dólares para la TC y 110 millones de dólares para la RM ). Conclusiones Los costes totales en Estados Unidos para los pacientes que acuden por mareo al SU son sustanciales, y se estima que sobrepasan en estos momentos los 4.000 millones de dólares por año (aproximadamente un 4% de los costes totales del SU ). El incremento de los costes con el paso del tiempo parece reflejar el crecimiento de la prevalencia de las visitas al SU por mareo y el aumento de porcentajes de utilización de la neuroimagen. Futuros estudios económicos deberían centrarse en el desglose de los costes totales, y hacer énfasis en las áreas de alto uso y coste que pueden ser reducidas sin riesgo.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99059/1/acem12168.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99059/2/acem12168-sup-0001-DataSupplementS1.pd
Alpha-synuclein ferrireductase activity is detectible in vivo, is altered in Parkinson's disease and increases the neurotoxicity of DOPAL
© 2017 Elsevier Inc. The normal cellular role of α-synuclein is of potential importance in understanding diseases in which an aggregated form of the protein has been implicated. A potential loss or change in the normal function of α-synuclein could play a role in the aetiology of diseases such as Parkinson's disease. Recently, it has been suggested that α-synuclein could cause the enzymatic reduction of iron and a cellular increase in Fe(II) levels. Experiments were carried out to determine if such activity could be measured in vivo. Experiments with rats overexpressing human α-synuclein in nigral dopaminergic neurons demonstrated a correlation between α-synuclein expression and ferrireductase activity. Furthermore, studies on tissue from Parkinson's disease patient brains showed a significant decrease in ferrireductase activity, possibly due to deposition of large amounts of inactive protein. Cellular studies suggest that increase ferrireductase activity results in increased levels of dopamine metabolites and increased sensitivity to the toxicity of DOPAL. These findings demonstrate that α-synuclein ferrireductase activity is present in vivo and its alteration may play a role in neuron loss in disease
Nonlocalized modulation of periodic reaction diffusion waves: The Whitham equation
In a companion paper, we established nonlinear stability with detailed
diffusive rates of decay of spectrally stable periodic traveling-wave solutions
of reaction diffusion systems under small perturbations consisting of a
nonlocalized modulation plus a localized perturbation. Here, we determine
time-asymptotic behavior under such perturbations, showing that solutions
consist to leading order of a modulation whose parameter evolution is governed
by an associated Whitham averaged equation
The impact of the Art Therapy Large Group, an educational tool in the training of art therapists, on post-qualification professional practice
This article reports the findings of a Likert scale survey that was sent to past graduates of the MA Art Psychotherapy, Goldsmiths, University of London asking them about the relevance of their experience in the Art Therapy Large Group (ATLG) to their subsequent employment as art therapists or work in another capacity. The ATLG comprises all the students and staff in a psychodynamically based experiential group that meets six times during the year. Survey questions were drawn from previously devised theory and related to learning relevant to the workplace and the development of professional identity. Though there was a low response rate (20%), there were some significant findings, namely that graduates found the ATLG to be helpful in their work, whether this was art therapy or non-art therapy work, and that those who had studied part-time were much more positive about the applicability of their learning in the group to their work than those who had studied full-time. The findings suggest that the ATLG has a particular role in meeting key performance indicators in professional regulation and teaching and in quality assurance and employability policies in higher education. Finally, the potential for the use of the ATLG beyond the university in the public, private and voluntary sectors is suggested
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