40,510 research outputs found
(k,q)-Compressed Sensing for dMRI with Joint Spatial-Angular Sparsity Prior
Advanced diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) techniques, like
diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) and high angular resolution diffusion imaging
(HARDI), remain underutilized compared to diffusion tensor imaging because the
scan times needed to produce accurate estimations of fiber orientation are
significantly longer. To accelerate DSI and HARDI, recent methods from
compressed sensing (CS) exploit a sparse underlying representation of the data
in the spatial and angular domains to undersample in the respective k- and
q-spaces. State-of-the-art frameworks, however, impose sparsity in the spatial
and angular domains separately and involve the sum of the corresponding sparse
regularizers. In contrast, we propose a unified (k,q)-CS formulation which
imposes sparsity jointly in the spatial-angular domain to further increase
sparsity of dMRI signals and reduce the required subsampling rate. To
efficiently solve this large-scale global reconstruction problem, we introduce
a novel adaptation of the FISTA algorithm that exploits dictionary
separability. We show on phantom and real HARDI data that our approach achieves
significantly more accurate signal reconstructions than the state of the art
while sampling only 2-4% of the (k,q)-space, allowing for the potential of new
levels of dMRI acceleration.Comment: To be published in the 2017 Computational Diffusion MRI Workshop of
MICCA
Sikap Pelanggan Mengenai Program Crm “Return Guest Program” Di Surabaya Plaza Hotel
Penelitian ini dilakukan untuk mengetahui sikap pelanggan mengenai program CRM “Return Guest Program” yang dijalankan oleh Surabaya Plaza Hotel. CRM merupakan merupakan proses memperoleh, mengembangkan, dan mempertahankan hubungan yang menguntungkan dengan pelanggan agar tetap setia dan membeli lagi produk atau jasa tersebut. Surabaya Plaza Hotel menerapkan CRM dalam sebuah program yang disebut dengan “Return Guest Program”. Program ini dibuat dengan tujuan untuk membangun hubungan jangka panjang dengan pelanggan. Komponen-komponen yang ada dalam sikap pelanggan turut berperan dalam menentukan penilaian terhadap program CRM yang dimiliki oleh Surabaya Plaza Hotel. Teknik analisa yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah deskriptif dengan metode survei untuk mendeskripsikan sikap pelanggan. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan sikap pelanggan positif terhadap “Return Guest Program” yang dimiliki oleh Surabaya Plaza Hotel
Penning traps with unitary architecture for storage of highly charged ions
Penning traps are made extremely compact by embedding rare-earth permanent
magnets in the electrode structure. Axially-oriented NdFeB magnets are used in
unitary architectures that couple the electric and magnetic components into an
integrated structure. We have constructed a two- magnet Penning trap with
radial access to enable the use of laser or atomic beams, as well as the
collection of light. An experimental apparatus equipped with ion optics is
installed at the NIST electron beam ion trap (EBIT) facility, constrained to
fit within 1 meter at the end of a horizontal beamline for transporting highly
charged ions. Highly charged ions of neon and argon, extracted with initial
energies up to 4000 eV per unit charge, are captured and stored to study the
confinement properties of a one-magnet trap and a two-magnet trap. Design
considerations and some test results are discussed
High energy scattering in 2+1 QCD
High energy scattering in 2+1 QCD is studied using the recent approach of
Verlinde and Verlinde. We calculate the color singlet part of the quark-quark
scattering exactly within this approach, and discuss some physical implication
of this result. We also demonstrate, by two independent methods, that
reggeization fails for the color singlet channel. We briefly comment on the
problem in 3+1 QCD.Comment: 20 pages, references adde
Diversity, Distribution and Biological Activity of Soft Corals (Octocorallia, Alcyonacea) in Singapore
The Southern Islands of Singapore are known to contain coral reefs which are high in biodiversity. However, the diversity of soft corals had received little attention to date. This study was conducted to determine the soft coral diversity in Singapore reefs as well as to conduct preliminary bioactivity tests on the organic extracts from these soft corals. A 100-meter line transect was used to survey soft corals at a 3m depth at ten different sample sites. Sclerites from samples were used to identify the soft corals to the generic level. This study uncovered the following genera of soft corals: Carijoa spp., Cladiella spp., Sinularia spp., Lobophytum spp., Sarcophyton spp., Stereonephthya spp., and Nephthea spp. In addition, an unidentified genus of soft coral was observed at Kusu Island. Cladiella spp. yielded the highest number of colonies, and Sarcophyton spp. had the highest coverage in terms of total colony diameter. The brine shrimp (Artemia salina) toxicity assay was carried out to screen for toxicity of the soft coral extracts at concentrations of 10, 100, and 1000 ppm. Results showed high levels of toxicity in extracts of Sarcophyton spp. and Cladiella spp., indicating that these soft corals are potentially good sources of bioactive compounds for drug discovery
Small x Behavior of Parton Distributions from the Observed Froissart Energy Dependence of the Deep Inelastic Scattering Cross Section
We fit the reduced cross section for deep-inelastic electron scattering data
to a three parameter ln^2 s fit, A + beta ln^2 (s/s_0), where s= [Q^2/x] (1-x)
+ m^2, and Q^2 is the virtuality of the exchanged photon. Over a wide range in
Q^2 (0.11 < Q^2 < 1200 GeV^2) all of the fits satisfy the logarithmic energy
dependence of the Froissart bound. We can use these results to extrapolate to
very large energies and hence to very small values of Bjorken x -- well beyond
the range accessible experimentally. As Q^2 --> infinity, the structure
function F_2^p(x, Q^2) exhibits Bjorken scaling, within experimental errors. We
obtain new constraints on the behavior of quark and antiquark distribution
functions at small x.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Holographic Bosonic Technicolor
We consider a technicolor model in which the expectation value of an
additional, possibly composite, scalar field is responsible for the generation
of fermion masses. We define the dynamics of the strongly coupled sector by
constructing its holographic dual. Using the AdS/CFT correspondence, we study
the S parameter and the phenomenology of the light technihadrons. We find that
the S parameter is small over a significant region of the model's parameter
space. The particle spectrum is distinctive and includes a nonstandard Higgs
boson as well as heavier hadronic resonances. Technihadron masses and decay
rates are calculated holographically, as a function of the model's parameters.Comment: 20 Pages, 4 eps figures, REVTex. Minor corrections and comments adde
A 42.3-43.6 GHz spectral survey of Orion BN/KL: First detection of the v=0 J=1-0 line from the isotopologues 29SiO and 30SiO
We have surveyed molecular line emission from Orion BN/KL from 42.3 to 43.6
GHz with the Green Bank Telescope. Sixty-seven lines were identified and
ascribed to 13 different molecular species. The spectrum at 7 mm is dominated
by SiO, SO2, CH3OCH3, and C2H5CN. Five transitions have been detected from the
SiO isotopologues 28SiO, 29SiO, and 30SiO.
We report here for the first time the spectra of the 29SiO and 30SiO v=0
J=1-0 emission in Orion BN/KL, and we show that they have double-peaked
profiles with velocity extents similar to the main isotopologue. The main
motivation for the survey was the search of high-velocity (100-1000 km/s)
outflows in the BN/KL region as traced by SiO Doppler components. Some of the
unidentified lines in principle could be high-velocity SiO features, but
without imaging data their location cannot be established.
Wings of emission are present in the v=0 28SiO, 29SiO and 30SiO profiles, and
we suggest that the v=0 emission from the three isotopologues might trace a
moderately high-velocity (~30-50 km/s) component of the flows around the
high-mass protostar Source I in the Orion BN/KL region.
We also confirm the 7 mm detection of a complex oxygen-bearing species,
acetone (CH3COCH3), which has been recently observed towards the hot core at 3
mm, and we have found further indications of the presence of long cyanopolyynes
(HC5N and HC7N) in the quiescent cold gas of the extended ridge.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
Effects of ac-field amplitude on the dielectric susceptibility of relaxors
The thermally activated flips of the local spontaneous polarization in
relaxors were simulated to investigate the effects of the applied-ac-field
amplitude on the dielectric susceptibility. It was observed that the
susceptibility increases with increasing the amplitude at low temperatures. At
high temperatures, the susceptibility experiences a plateau and then drops. The
maximum in the temperature dependence of susceptibility shifts to lower
temperatures when the amplitude increases. A similarity was found between the
effects of the amplitude and frequency on the susceptibility.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Phys. Rev. B (in July 1st
Thermalization in a quasi-1D ultracold bosonic gas
We study the collisional processes that can lead to thermalization in
one-dimensional systems. For two body collisions excitations of transverse
modes are the prerequisite for energy exchange and thermalzation. At very low
temperatures excitations of transverse modes are exponentially suppressed,
thermalization by two body collisions stops and the system should become
integrable. In quantum mechanics virtual excitations of higher radial modes are
possible. These virtually excited radial modes give rise to effective
three-body velocity-changing collisions which lead to thermalization. We show
that these three-body elastic interactions are suppressed by pairwise quantum
correlations when approaching the strongly correlated regime. If the relative
momentum is small compared to the two-body coupling constant the
three-particle scattering state is suppressed by a factor of ,
which is proportional to , that is to the square of the
three-body correlation function at zero distance in the limit of the
Lieb-Liniger parameter . This demonstrates that in one
dimensional quantum systems it is not the freeze-out of two body collisions but
the strong quantum correlations which ensures absence of thermalization on
experimentally relevant time scales.Comment: revtex4, 3 figures. Final version of the text, accepted for
publication (see journal ref.
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