1,118 research outputs found
Addendum to "Superimposed Oscillations in the WMAP Data?"
We elaborate further on the possibility that the inflationary primordial
power spectrum contains superimposed oscillations. We study various effects
which could influence the calculation of the multipole moments in this case. We
also present the theoretical predictions for two other cosmological
observables, the matter power spectrum and the EE polarization channel.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses RevTex4, matches published versio
Influence of Atmospheric Turbulence on Optical Communications using Orbital Angular Momentum for Encoding
We describe an experimental implementation of a free-space 11-dimensional
communication system using orbital angular momentum (OAM) modes. This system
has a maximum measured OAM channel capacity of 2.12 bits/photon. The effects of
Kolmogorov thin-phase turbulence on the OAM channel capacity are quantified. We
find that increasing the turbulence leads to a degradation of the channel
capacity. We are able to mitigate the effects of turbulence by increasing the
spacing between detected OAM modes. This study has implications for
high-dimensional quantum key distribution (QKD) systems. We describe the sort
of QKD system that could be built using our current technology.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
「環太平洋の言語」日本班
初巻は別書誌『消滅に瀕した方言アクセントの緊急調査研究
Structure of FcRY, an avian immunoglobulin receptor related to mammalian mannose receptors, and its complex with IgY
Fc receptors transport maternal antibodies across epithelial cell barriers to passively immunize newborns. FcRY, the functional counterpart of mammalian FcRn (a major histocompatibility complex homolog), transfers IgY across the avian yolk sac, and represents a new class of Fc receptor related to the mammalian mannose receptor family. FcRY and FcRn bind immunoglobulins at pH ≤6.5, but not pH ≥7, allowing receptor–ligand association inside intracellular vesicles and release at the pH of blood. We obtained structures of monomeric and dimeric FcRY and an FcRY–IgY complex and explored FcRY's pH-dependent binding mechanism using electron cryomicroscopy (cryoEM) and small-angle X-ray scattering. The cryoEM structure of FcRY at pH 6 revealed a compact double-ring “head,” in which the N-terminal cysteine-rich and fibronectin II domains were folded back to contact C-type lectin-like domains 1–6, and a “tail” comprising C-type lectin-like domains 7–8. Conformational changes at pH 8 created a more elongated structure that cannot bind IgY. CryoEM reconstruction of FcRY dimers at pH 6 and small-angle X-ray scattering analysis at both pH values confirmed both structures. The cryoEM structure of the FcRY–IgY revealed symmetric binding of two FcRY heads to the dimeric FcY, each head contacting the CH4 domain of one FcY chain. FcRY shares structural properties with mannose receptor family members, including a head and tail domain organization, multimerization that may regulate ligand binding, and pH-dependent conformational changes. Our results facilitate understanding of immune recognition by the structurally related mannose receptor family and comparison of diverse methods of Ig transport across evolution
The association between community mental health nursing and hospital admissions for people with serious mental illness: a systematic review.
BACKGROUND:Relapse prevention is an important objective in the management of serious mental illness (SMI). While community mental health nurses (CMHN) might be well-placed to support people with SMI in averting relapse, no systematic reviews have examined this association. AIM:To review the evidence from studies reporting an association between CMHN exposure and hospitalisation of persons living with SMI (a proxy for relapse). METHODS:Searches were undertaken in ten bibliographic databases and two clinical trial registries. We included studies of patients with SMI, where CMHN was the exposure, and the outcome was relapse (i.e. readmission to a psychiatric inpatient facility). Quality assessment of included studies was completed using two risk-of-bias measures. RESULTS:Two studies met the inclusion criteria. Studies were rated as being of low-moderate methodological quality. There was insufficient evidence to conclude that community mental health nursing reduced the risk of admission to psychiatric inpatient facilities. CONCLUSIONS:The review found no evidence that CMHN was associated with higher or lower odds of admission to psychiatric inpatient facilities among patients with SMI. The findings of the review point to a need for further research to investigate the impact of CMHN exposure and relapse in people with SMI. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION:PROSPERO CRD42017058694
Improved Estimates of Cosmological Perturbations
We recently derived exact solutions for the scalar, vector and tensor mode
functions of a single, minimally coupled scalar plus gravity in an arbitrary
homogeneous and isotropic background. These solutions are applied to obtain
improved estimates for the primordial scalar and tensor power spectra of
anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX 2epsilon, this version corrects an
embarrasing mistake (in the published version) for the parameter q_C.
Affected eqns are 105, 109-110, 124, 148-153 and 155-15
Inflationary Perturbations: the Cosmological Schwinger Effect
This pedagogical review aims at presenting the fundamental aspects of the
theory of inflationary cosmological perturbations of quantum-mechanical origin.
The analogy with the well-known Schwinger effect is discussed in detail and a
systematic comparison of the two physical phenomena is carried out. In
particular, it is demonstrated that the two underlying formalisms differ only
up to an irrelevant canonical transformation. Hence, the basic physical
mechanisms at play are similar in both cases and can be reduced to the
quantization of a parametric oscillator leading to particle creation due to the
interaction with a classical source: pair production in vacuum is therefore
equivalent to the appearance of a growing mode for the cosmological
fluctuations. The only difference lies in the nature of the source: an electric
field in the case of the Schwinger effect and the gravitational field in the
case of inflationary perturbations. Although, in the laboratory, it is
notoriously difficult to produce an electric field such that pairs extracted
from the vacuum can be detected, the gravitational field in the early universe
can be strong enough to lead to observable effects that ultimately reveal
themselves as temperature fluctuations in the Cosmic Microwave Background.
Finally, the question of how quantum cosmological perturbations can be
considered as classical is discussed at the end of the article.Comment: 49 pages, 6 figures, to appear in a LNP volume "Inflationary
Cosmology
WKB approximation for inflationary cosmological perturbations
A new method for predicting inflationary cosmological perturbations, based on
the Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin (WKB) approximation, is presented. A general
expression for the WKB scalar and tensor power spectra is derived. The main
advantage of the new scheme of approximation is that it is valid even if the
slow-roll conditions are violated. The method is applied to power-law
inflation, which allows a comparison with an exact result. It is demonstrated
that the WKB approximation predicts the spectral indices exactly and the
amplitude with an error lower than 10%, even in regimes far from
scale-invariance. The new method of approximation is also applied to a
situation where the slow-roll conditions hold. It is shown that the result
obtained bears close resemblance with the standard slow-roll calculation.
Finally, some possible improvements are briefly mentioned.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX; minor changes, reference added (v2);
typos corrected (v3
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