52 research outputs found
Regular-to-chaotic tunneling rates using a fictitious integrable system
We derive a formula predicting dynamical tunneling rates from regular states
to the chaotic sea in systems with a mixed phase space. Our approach is based
on the introduction of a fictitious integrable system that resembles the
regular dynamics within the island. For the standard map and other kicked
systems we find agreement with numerical results for all regular states in a
regime where resonance-assisted tunneling is not relevant.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Observing the emergence of chaos in a many-particle quantum system
Accessing the connection between classical chaos and quantum many-body
systems has been a long-standing experimental challenge. Here, we investigate
the onset of chaos in periodically driven two-component Bose-Einstein
condensates, whose small quantum uncertainties allow for exploring the phase
space with high resolution. By analyzing the uncertainties of time-evolved
many-body states, we find signatures of elliptic and hyperbolic periodic orbits
generated according to the Poincar\'e-Birkhoff theorem, and the formation of a
chaotic region at increasing driving strengths. The employed fluctuation
analysis allows for probing the phase-space structure by use of only short-time
quantum dynamics.Comment: 5+2 pages, 4 figure
Dynamical tunneling in mushroom billiards
We study the fundamental question of dynamical tunneling in generic
two-dimensional Hamiltonian systems by considering regular-to-chaotic tunneling
rates. Experimentally, we use microwave spectra to investigate a mushroom
billiard with adjustable foot height. Numerically, we obtain tunneling rates
from high precision eigenvalues using the improved method of particular
solutions. Analytically, a prediction is given by extending an approach using a
fictitious integrable system to billiards. In contrast to previous approaches
for billiards, we find agreement with experimental and numerical data without
any free parameter.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Complex paths for regular-to-chaotic tunneling rates
In generic Hamiltonian systems tori of regular motion are dynamically
separated from regions of chaotic motion in phase space. Quantum mechanically
these phase-space regions are coupled by dynamical tunneling. We introduce a
semiclassical approach based on complex paths for the prediction of dynamical
tunneling rates from regular tori to the chaotic region. This approach is
demonstrated for the standard map giving excellent agreement with numerically
determined tunneling rates.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Quality factors and dynamical tunneling in annular microcavities
The key characteristic of an optical mode in a microcavity is its quality
factor describing the optical losses. The numerical computation of this
quantity can be very demanding for present-day devices. Here we show for a
certain class of whispering-gallery cavities that the quality factor is related
to dynamical tunneling, a phenomenon studied in the field of quantum chaos. We
extend a recently developed approach for determining dynamical tunneling rates
to open cavities. This allows us to derive an analytical formula for the
quality factor which is in very good agreement with full solutions of Maxwell's
equations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Open Mushrooms: Stickiness revisited
We investigate mushroom billiards, a class of dynamical systems with sharply
divided phase space. For typical values of the control parameter of the system
, an infinite number of marginally unstable periodic orbits (MUPOs) exist
making the system sticky in the sense that unstable orbits approach regular
regions in phase space and thus exhibit regular behaviour for long periods of
time. The problem of finding these MUPOs is expressed as the well known problem
of finding optimal rational approximations of a real number, subject to some
system-specific constraints. By introducing a generalized mushroom and using
properties of continued fractions, we describe a zero measure set of control
parameter values for which all MUPOs are destroyed and therefore
the system is less sticky. The open mushroom (billiard with a hole) is then
considered in order to quantify the stickiness exhibited and exact leading
order expressions for the algebraic decay of the survival probability function
are calculated for mushrooms with triangular and rectangular stems.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures. Includes discussion of a three-dimensional
mushroo
The prevalence of extramedullary acute myeloid leukemia detected by 18FDG-PET/CT: final results from the prospective PETAML trial
Extramedullary (EM) disease in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a known phenomenon. Since the prevalence of EM AML has so far only been clinically determined on examination, we performed a prospective study in patients with AML. The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of metabolically active EM AML using total body 18Fluorodesoxy-glucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18FDG-PET/CT) imaging at diagnosis prior to initiation of therapy. In order to define the dynamics of EM AML throughout treatment, PET-positive patients underwent a second 18FDG-PET/CT imaging series during follow up by the time of remission assessment. A total of 93 patients with AML underwent 18FDG-PET/CT scans at diagnosis. The prevalence of PET-positive EM AML was 19% with a total of 65 EM AML manifestations and a median number of two EM manifestations per patient (range, 1-12), with a median maximum standardized uptake value of 6.1 (range, 2-51.4). When adding those three patients with histologically confirmed EM AML who were 18FDG-PET/CT negative in the 18FDG-PET/CT at diagnosis, the combined prevalence for EM AML was 22%, resulting in 77% sensitivity and 97% specificity. Importantly, 60% (6 of 10) patients with histologically confirmed EM AML still had active EM disease in their follow up 18FDG-PET/CT. 18FDG-PET/CT reveals a high prevalence of metabolically active EM disease in AML patients. Metabolic activity in EM AML may persist even beyond the time point of hematologic remission, a finding that merits further prospective investigation to explore its prognostic relevance. (Trial registered at clinicaltrials.gov identifier: 01278069.
The image biomarker standardization initiative: Standardized convolutional filters for reproducible radiomics and enhanced clinical insights
Standardizing convolutional filters that enhance specific structures and patterns in medical imaging enables reproducible radiomics analyses, improving consistency and reliability for enhanced clinical insights.
Filters are commonly used to enhance specific structures and patterns in images, such as vessels or peritumoral regions, to enable clinical insights beyond the visible image using radiomics. However, their lack of standardization restricts reproducibility and clinical translation of radiomics decision support tools. In this special report, teams of researchers who developed radiomics software participated in a three-phase study (September 2020 to December 2022) to establish a standardized set of filters. The first two phases focused on finding reference filtered images and reference feature values for commonly used convolutional filters: mean, Laplacian of Gaussian, Laws and Gabor kernels, separable and nonseparable wavelets (including decomposed forms), and Riesz transformations. In the first phase, 15 teams used digital phantoms to establish 33 reference filtered images of 36 filter configurations. In phase 2, 11 teams used a chest CT image to derive reference values for 323 of 396 features computed from filtered images using 22 filter and image processing configurations. Reference filtered images and feature values for Riesz transformations were not established. Reproducibility of standardized convolutional filters was validated on a public data set of multimodal imaging (CT, fluorodeoxyglucose PET, and T1-weighted MRI) in 51 patients with soft-tissue sarcoma. At validation, reproducibility of 486 features computed from filtered images using nine configurations × three imaging modalities was assessed using the lower bounds of 95% CIs of intraclass correlation coefficients. Out of 486 features, 458 were found to be reproducible across nine teams with lower bounds of 95% CIs of intraclass correlation coefficients greater than 0.75. In conclusion, eight filter types were standardized with reference filtered images and reference feature values for verifying and calibrating radiomics software packages. A web-based tool is available for compliance checking
Integrable approximation of regular islands : The iterative canonical transformation method
Generic Hamiltonian systems have a mixed phase space, where classically
disjoint regions of regular and chaotic motion coexist. We present an iterative
method to construct an integrable approximation, which resembles the regular
dynamics of a given mixed system and extends it into the chaotic region. The
method is based on the construction of an integrable approximation in action
representation which is then improved in phase space by iterative applications
of canonical transformations. This method works for strongly perturbed systems
and arbitrary degrees of freedom. We apply it to the standard map and the
cosine billiard.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
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