79 research outputs found
On Multi-Disciplinary Standardisation â The Case of Spatial Data on the Web
With the emergence of smart applications multi-disciplinarity is becoming an issue in standards setting, as is the need to involve a broader range of stakeholders in the process. One approach to accommodate these needs is the creation of dedicated multi-disciplinary Working Groups (WGs). Following some theoretical deliberations about todayâs standardisation environment in general and the need for multi-disciplinarity in standardisation we present a case study of one such joint multi-disciplinary WG. It turns out that this joint WG is seen as both necessary and helpful by those involved. It also turns out the broader organisational setting needs to be adapted to better address the needs of such joint WGs
Creating Weyl nodes and controlling their energy by magnetization rotation
As they do not rely on the presence of any crystal symmetry, Weyl nodes are
robust topological features of an electronic structure that can occur at any
momentum and energy. Acting as sinks and sources of Berry curvature, Weyl nodes
have been predicted to strongly affect the transverse electronic response, like
in the anomalous Hall or Nernst effects. However, to observe large anomalous
effects the Weyl nodes need to be close to or at the Fermi-level, which implies
the band structure must be tuned by an external parameter, e.g. chemical doping
or pressure. Here we show that in a ferromagnetic metal tuning of the Weyl node
energy and momentum can be achieved by rotation of the magnetization. Taking
CoSnS as an example, we use electronic structure calculations based
on density-functional theory to show that not only new Weyl fermions can be
created by canting the magnetization away from the easy axis, but also that the
Weyl nodes can be driven exactly to the Fermi surface. We also show that the
dynamics in energy and momentum of the Weyl nodes strongly affect the
calculated anomalous Hall and Nernst conductivities.Comment: Supp. Material adde
Large anomalous Hall effect in single crystals of the kagome Weyl ferromagnet FeSn
The material class of kagome metals has rapidly grown and has been
established as a field to explore the interplay between electronic topology and
magnetism. In this work, we report a combined theoretical and experimental
study of the anomalous Hall effect of the ferromagnetic kagome metal FeSn.
The compound orders magnetically at 725 K and presents an easy-plane
anisotropy. Hall measurements in single crystals below room temperature yield
an anomalous Hall conductivity ,
which is found to depend weakly on temperature. This value is in good agreement
with the band-intrinsic contribution obtained by density-functional
calculations. Our calculations also yield the correct magnetic anisotropy
energy and predict the existence of Weyl nodes near the Fermi energy.Comment: 9 pages and 9 figures including supplemen
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Creating Weyl nodes and controlling their energy by magnetization rotation
As they do not rely on the presence of any crystal symmetry, Weyl nodes are robust topological features of an electronic structure that can occur at any momentum and energy. Acting as sinks and sources of Berry curvature, Weyl nodes have been predicted to strongly affect the transverse electronic response, like in the anomalous Hall or Nernst effects. However, to observe large anomalous effects the Weyl nodes need to be close to or at the Fermi level, which implies the band structure must be tuned by an external parameter, e.g., chemical doping. Here we show that in a ferromagnetic metal tuning of the Weyl node energy and momentum can be achieved by rotation of the magnetization. First, taking as example the elementary magnet hcp-Co, we use electronic structure calculations based on density-functional theory to show that by canting the magnetization away from the easy axis, Weyl nodes can be driven exactly to the Fermi surface. Second, we show that the same phenomenology applies to the kagome ferromagnet Co3Sn2S2, in which we additionally show how the dynamics in energy and momentum of the Weyl nodes affects the calculated anomalous Hall and Nernst conductivities. Our results highlight how the intrinsic magnetic anisotropy can be used to engineer Weyl physics
Giving Researchers a Headache - Sex and Gender Differences in Migraine
Migraine is a common neurovascular disorder affecting âŒ15% of the general population.
Ranking second in the list of years lived with disability (YLD), people living with migraine
are greatly impacted by this especially burdensome primary headache disorder. In
âŒ30% o
Dirac fermions and flat bands in the ideal kagome metal FeSn.
A kagome lattice of 3d transition metal ions is a versatile platform for correlated topological phases hosting symmetry-protected electronic excitations and magnetic ground states. However, the paradigmatic states of the idealized two-dimensional kagome lattice-Dirac fermions and flat bands-have not been simultaneously observed. Here, we use angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and de Haas-van Alphen quantum oscillations to reveal coexisting surface and bulk Dirac fermions as well as flat bands in the antiferromagnetic kagome metal FeSn, which has spatially decoupled kagome planes. Our band structure calculations and matrix element simulations demonstrate that the bulk Dirac bands arise from in-plane localized Fe-3d orbitals, and evidence that the coexisting Dirac surface state realizes a rare example of fully spin-polarized two-dimensional Dirac fermions due to spin-layer locking in FeSn. The prospect to harness these prototypical excitations in a kagome lattice is a frontier of great promise at the confluence of topology, magnetism and strongly correlated physics
Best Practices for Publishing, Retrieving, and Using Spatial Data on the Web
Data owners are creating an ever richer set of information resources online, and these are being used for more and more applications. With the rapid growth of connected embedded devices, GPS-enabled mobile devices, and various organizations that publish their location-based data (i.e., weather and traffic services), maps and geographical and spatial information (i.e., GIS and open maps), spatial data on the Web is becoming ubiquitous and voluminous. However, the heterogeneity of the available spatial data, as well as some challenges related to spatial data in particular make it difficult for data users, web applications and services to discover, interpret and use the information in large and distributed web systems. This paper summarizes some of the efforts that have been undertaken in the joint W3C/OGC Working Group on Spatial Data on the Web, in particular the effort to describe the best practices for publishing spatial data on the Web. This paper presents the set of principles that guide the selection of these best practices, describes best practices that are employed to enable publishing, discovery and retrieving (querying) this type of data on the Web, and identifies some areas where a best practice has not yet emerged
Clientsâ psychosocial communication and midwivesâ verbal and nonverbal communication during prenatal counseling for anomaly screening
Objectives: This study focuses on facilitation of clientsâ psychosocial communication during prenatal
counseling for fetal anomaly screening. We assessed how psychosocial communication by clients is
related to midwivesâ psychosocial and affective communication, client-directed gaze and counseling
duration.
Methods: During 184 videotaped prenatal counseling consultations with 20 Dutch midwives, verbal
psychosocial and affective behavior was measured by the Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS). We
rated the duration of client-directed gaze. We performed multilevel analyses to assess the relation
between clientsâ psychosocial communication and midwivesâ psychosocial and affective communication,
client-directed gaze and counseling duration.
Results: Clientsâ psychosocial communication was higher if midwivesâ asked more psychosocial questions
and showed more affective behavior (b = 0.90; CI: 0.45â1.35; p < 0.00 and b = 1.32; CI: 0.18â2.47;
p = 0.025, respectively). Clients âpsychosocial communication was not related to midwivesâ clientdirected
gaze. Additionally, psychosocial communication by clients was directly, positively related to the
counseling duration (b = 0.59; CI: 0.20â099; p = 0.004).
Conclusions: In contrast with our expectations, midwivesâ client-directed gaze was not related with
psychosocial communication of clients.
Practice implications: In addition to asking psychosocial questions, our study shows that midwivesâ
affective behavior and counseling duration is likely to encourage clientâs psychosocial communication,
known to be especially important for facilitating decision-making
Betweenâhospital variation in rates of complications and decline of patient performance after glioblastoma surgery in the dutch Quality Registry Neuro Surgery
Introduction: For decisions on glioblastoma surgery, the risk of complications and decline in performance is decisive. In this study, we determine the rate of complications and performance decline after resections and biopsies in a national quality registry, their risk factors and the risk-standardized variation between institutions. Methods: Data from all 3288 adults with first-time glioblastoma surgery at 13 hospitals were obtained from a prospective population-based Quality Registry Neuro Surgery in the Netherlands between 2013 and 2017. Patients were stratified by biopsies and resections. Complications were categorized as Clavien-Dindo grades II and higher. Performance decline was considered a deterioration of more than 10 Karnofsky points at 6 weeks. Risk factors were evaluated in multivariable logistic regression analysis. Patient-specific expected and observed complications and performance declines were summarized for institutions and analyzed in funnel plots. Results: For 2271 resections, the overall complication rate was 20 % and 16 % declined in performance. For 1017 biopsies, the overall complication rate was 11 % and 30 % declined in performance. Patient-related characteristics were significant risk factors for complications and performance decline, i.e. higher age, lower baseline Karnofsky, higher ASA classification, and the surgical procedure. Hospital characteristics, i.e. case volume, university affiliation and biopsy percentage, were not. In three institutes the observed complication rate was significantly less than expected. In one institute significantly more performance declines were observed than expected, and in one institute significantly less. Conclusions: Patient characteristics, but not case volume, were risk factors for complications and performance decline after glioblastoma surgery. After risk-standardization, hospitals varied in complications and performance declines
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